102 Va. 394 | Va. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the court.
The specific allegation of the amended declaration is that during a carnival in the city of Portsmouth the defendant, while running a freight train over its tracks along one of the streets of that city, negligently permitted the plaintiff, a boy eight years and four months of age, to attempt to climb and ride upon one of its cars; that while so attempting to climb upon said car, and while riding thereon, plaintiff was by the default, carelessness, recklessness, negligence, willfulness, and improper conduct of the defendant, violently thrown to the ground and under the cars, by means whereof his left leg was so fractured and injured that it had to be amputated.
The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and assessed his damages at $6,000, whereupon the defendant submitted a motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and evidence, and for other reasons; but the court overruled the motion, and rendered judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant excepted.
The view taken by this court is that there was a total failure on the part of the plaintiff to trace actionable negligence to the defendant, and that in no aspect of the case was he entitled to a verdict; and that renders a detailed notice of other assignments of error unnecessary.
All the instructions given by the court were, in one form or another, predicated upon the supposed negligence of the defendant, and, as there was no evidence tending to establish that fact, upon familiar principles the instructions ought not to have been given. A brief statement of the circumstances and uncontroverted facts bearing upon the casualty will show the utter groundlessness of plaintiff’s demand.
At the time of the accident a freight train of the defendant, consisting of three box ears, attached to the rear end of the
The only member of the train’s crew who saw the accident was a switchman and brakeman, who was standing on the top of the middle box car. He testified that a number of boys were attempting to get on the train, and that, while a policeman was trying to keep them off on one side, he was similarly engaged
It was likewise in evidence that the plaintiff was an intelligent boy; that he lived on a street along which the railroad was located, and was accustomed to trains, and knew of the danger he incurred in attempting to ride on them. He had received repeated warning on the subject, and been punished for disregarding them. A year or two prior to the accident one of the yard conductors, who lived next door to plaintiff, remonstrated with him about riding on these trains, and several days after the accident plaintiff remarked to the physician who attended him that he would not have been hurt if he had heeded the conductor’s advice. He had been ordered off another train of the defendant by a policeman and by one of his own witnesses not more than half an hour before the accident, notwithstanding these reiterated admonitions, while the train in question was passing, he endeavored to persuade one of his playmates to go with him and ride on the cars, and, despite the refusal and expostulation of his friend, made the attempt which terminated so disastrously.
It cannot be affirmed of the plaintiff that he did not possess sufficient knowledge and discretion to understand the nature of his act and the peril he was encountering. But the case does not depend upon the capacity or incapacity of the plaintiff to commit negligence. The primary question is, has the defendant been guilty of negligence ? And that question, upon the evidence, admits of but one answer. To sustain the verdict of’the jury in this case would present the anomaly of subjecting a defendant wholly free from fault to the payment of damages by
It was suggested that the defendant was negligent with respect to the length and speed of the train, and in failing to ring the hell. Of that contention, it is sufficient to observe that no such grounds of negligence are alleged in the declaration, and, if alleged and proved, there would have been no causal connection whateyer between them and the accident.
For these reasons the lower court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant to set aside the verdict, and for that error its judgment must he reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reversed.