117 Va. 826 | Va. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought by A. A. Springs to recover damages of the Virginia Railway and Power Company for personal injuries suffered by him in a collision with one of the defendant company’s cars at Ocean View, in Norfolk county.
At the trial of the cause, and after the. plaintiff had introduced his evidence, the defendant company demurred thereto upon a number of grounds stated in writing, which demurrer the court sustained and entered its judgment for the defendant company. To that judgment this writ of error was allowed.
Defendant in error owns, including its right of way, and operates a line of double track electric railway from Norfolk city, through Ocean View on to Willoughby Beach, while a branch line at Virginia Bay station, which is west of the main station at Ocean View, turns sharply to the left going to Pine Beach. Ocean View is a summer resort where quite a number of people spend the summer months, living in cottages located principally on each side of defendant in error’s railway tracks, there being a roadway bn each side adjacent to the railway tracks and the cottages
, On the morning of August 4, 1913, plaintiff in error crossed the railway tracks and went to the beach, going along First street to where it reaches the bay, looking for fish, and on his return, when he reached the intersection of First street and the roadway or street on the north' of the railway tracks, he turned westward and walked along the granolithic pavement towards the crossing in front of his cottage. Before leaving the sidewalk he could see down the tracks to Virginia Bay station, there being slight, if any, obstacles to a view. He then left the sidewalk about thirty feet east of his crossing and started diagonally across the roadway or street to a point where it intersected with the street on the north side of the railway tracks, and when he reached the middle of the street he had a perfectly fair view all the way to Virginia Bay station, a distance of 700 feet or more, where the railway tracks turn towards Pine Beach. At that point, according to his own testimony, his hearing being impaired, he stopped and looked to see if any car was ap
Although twice stated in the petition for this writ of error that “the defendant admitted gross negligence,” the record does not bear out the statement. On the contrary, one of the express grounds of the demurrer to the evidence was as follows: “(1) The evidence fails to show that the defendant was guilty of any negligence in the premises.”
Running its car which struck plaintiff in error, “at a dangerous rate of speed” is the sole ground of actionable negligence alleged against defendant in error. As to the speed of the car, plaintiff in error in testifying in the case gave no estimate as to its speed, while other witnesses for him who undertook to speak in comprehensible language vary in their estimates of the speed of the car at from 25 to 35 miles an hour; while' others use such expressions as “going a considerable rate of speed,” “pretty rapid,” “running like lightning.” None of these witnesses; however, gave any evidence capable of conveying to the
As said by the court in the case of Foley v. Boston, &c. R. Co., 193 Mass. 332, 79 N. E. 765, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1076: “Mere expletive or declamatory words or phrases as descriptive of speed or acts unaccompanied by any evidence capable of conveying to the ordinary mind some definite conception of a specific physical fact, and depending generally upon the degree of nervous emotion, exuberance of diction and volatility of imagination of the witness, and not upon her capacity to reproduce by language a true picture of a past event, are of slight, if indeed they are of any, assistance in determining the real character of the fact respecting which they are used.”
In this case the maximum estimate of the speed of the car in question, given by any one of plaintiff in error s witnesses who undertook to speak in comprehensive language on the subject, is thirty-five miles per hour. Still the question remains whether this indicated gross negligence, or indeed any negligence, on the part of defendant in error operating an interurban electric railway line over its own right of way, upon which latter question we need not and do not express an opinion, for the reason that plaintiff in error is not entitled to a recovery of damages for the injuries of which he complains, because of his own gross contributory negligence, appearing from his own evidence in the case, which negligence, on his part, continued up to and concurred with the negligence of defendant in error, if any, at the very moment of the accident causing his injuries; so that it is not even contended by plaintiff in error that any question of the “last clear chance” is involved in the case.
It may be true, as the learned counsel for plaintiff in error contends, that, under the conditions prevailing in Ocean View during the summer season when its road
In this case, plaintiff in error, testifying with somewhat unusual candor, stated that he was walking on a granolithic walk facing the direction from which the car was coming, just before he undertook to cross over the railway tracks; that this walk was on the opposite side of the railway from his home, and he had to cross over the railway in order to reach his home; that in front of his'house was one of the numerous plank crossings over the railway tracks; that he left the granolithic walk on which he was traveling at a point about 30 feet east of where the plank walk across the railway from the front of his house would have reached the granolithic walk, and undertook to walk in a diagonal direction to the crossing; that when he had gone, as he estimated the distance, only eight or ten feet, he looked to see whether a car was coming and seeing none he “never looked again until he was struck.” When asked, “Was it at the time you left the granolithic walk that you looked for the cár?” he answered, “The last time I looked* I looked several times when I was on the sidewalk, because all I have to do is to hold up my head, and I saw people way down.” Again he says: “After I got into the street from the boathouse there was nothing.to prevent them
In Wash. &c. R. Co. v. Lacey, 94 Va. 460, 26 S. E. 834,. the plaintiff testified that he had looked before crossing the railway track, but the defendant company made the contention that he did not look when looking would have been effectual, and the opinion of this court, speaking through Buchanan, J., says: “Such looking is not that contemplated by law. The mere fact of looking and listening is not always a performance of the duty incumbent upon the traveler, for he must also exercise care to make the act of looking and listening reasonably effective. He must not approach the track at such a rate of speed that when he reaches a point where he can see or hear the train it is too late to protect himself from injury. He must exercise ordinary care in attempting to cross or in crossing the track, and care is never ordinary care unless it is proportionate to the known danger. . . . The track itself is a proclamation of danger. It is his duty before going upon it to use his oyes and ears. He should look in both directions from which a train could come, and listen, and, if his faculties warn
The doctrine thus clearly stated in that case has been sanctioned and approved in a number of later decisions by this court, as well as in very many decisions of courts in other jurisdictions—in fact, it is the generally accepted doctrine in all the courts of the country.
Speaking of the well established principle that the duty to look and listen is imposed upon a traveler on a highway approaching a railroad crossing, the court’s opinion in Southern Ry. Co. v. Jones, 106 Va. 412, 56 S. E. 155, says that this duty to look and listen for approaching trains is a continuing duty, “and if there is any point at which, by looking and listening, a person injured could have avoided the accident, and he failed to do so, then his contributory negligence defeats a recovery for the injury. If he could have seen and did not see an approaching train, then he failed to discharge the duty which the law imposes.”
To engraft upon this well established rule the qualification contended for by plaintiff in error, viz., that the duty to look and listen before crossing a railway track continues only “until a prudent man will appreciate no further danger,” would be to destroy the rule in toto, for in every such case it would doubtless be contended that at some undetermined or undeterminable point the time would have come when a prudent man would apprehend no further danger, and the location of that point would be a question for the jury. The language of the decided cases to which we have adverted admits of no such qualification of the rule. In effect these cases hold that the duty to look and listen before attempting to cross a railway track, which the law; imposes upon the traveler upon a highway, continues as long as the occasion for the exercise of the duty continues, and say, in express terms, that if there was any point at which by looking and listening the person injured could have avoided the accident and he failed to do so,
In the instant case, according to plaintiff in error’s own showing, had he performed the duty of looking and listening for an approaching car, which the law imposed upon him, he could and would have seen the car that struck him in time to have kept off the railway tracks and thus have avoided the accident that caused the injuries he complains of. As remarked, it is not contended that the last clear chance doctrine is involved here, and no such contention could have been made with ány sort of propriety, in view of the fact that up to the moment of the accident plaintiff in error had as good a chance as the defendant in error to avoid it, and assuming for the sake of argument only that the motorman or conductor of the car saw, or, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have seen, plaintiff in error approaching the railway tracks in front of the car, in plain view of him had he looked, there was nothing whatever to indicate to them that he was oblivious of the danger which confronted him. Under these circumstances, had these employees of defendant in error seen plaintiff in error approaching the railway tracks, of which there is no evidence, they would have had the right to presume that he was not going upon the tracks. Southern Ry. Co. v. Davis, 108 Va. 378, 61 S. E. 748; Backus v. Norfolk, &c. R. Co., 112 Va. 292, 71 S. E. 528.
The judgment of the circuit court is right and is affirmed.
Affirmed.