90 Va. 539 | Va. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the court.
The judgment was accordingly reversed, and the rule declared to be this: That while a railroad company is bound to keep a reasonable lookout for trespassers on its tracks, and to exercise such care as the circumstances require to avoid injuring them, yet that when an adult person is seen walking on the track, in front of an approaching train, apparently in possession of his faculties, the company has the right to presume that he will seasonably remove himself from his dangerous position, and that if he fails to do so, and is injured, the fault is his own, and the company will be held blameless, in the absence of wilful negligence on its part.
In a recent case in the Supreme Court of North Carolina it was held, in conformity with the-rule, that whether the engine-man saw the plaintiff at a distance of 150 yards or of 10 feet, he was not at fault in acting on the supposition that she would still get out of the way, and that it was immaterial whether the train was moving fast or slow. High v. Railroad, 112 N. C., 385; citing McAdoo v. Railroad, 105 N. C., 140; Meredith v. Railroad, 108 Id., 616; Norwood v. Railroad Co., 111 Id., 236.
Many other authorities might be cited to the same effect,.but it is needless to do so, as the rule is well established in this
In the present case the evidence on the second trial, after the case went back to the circuit court, was substantially the same as on.the first, except tbat the plaintiff sought to prove, on the last trial, by the witnesses, Murray and Whitlock, that the deceased, apparently, was not in possession of his faculties at the time of the accident; and to sustain this theory the following question was asked the witnesses — viz : “Was there enough in the appearance of the deceased to indicate to the engine-man that he was not in possession of his faculties?” To which each answered “Yes.”
The defendant objected to this evidence, but the court overruled the objection, and allowed the evidence to go to the jmy,. to which ruling an exception was takeu.
We are of opinion that the objection ought to have been sustained. The general rule is that witnesses must testify to facts, and not to opinions; and, although there are exceptions to the rule, the present case is not within any one of them. The ground, moreover, of the witnesses’ opinions is anything but satistactory. In substance it was that the deceased, when seen by them at a considerable distance, immediately before the accident, was walking with his head and body bent forward. “He had his whole body bent,” said one of them, “and his walking in that bent position towmrds the locomotive, and his not getting out-of the way, was the indication that he was not in his right faculties.” Another witness, however, for the plaintiff, said “he w’as walking as he usually walked”; and there is not the faintest intimation that he was'ever considered apparently “ not in possession of his faculties,” except that he was a deaf mute, at any time before the accident.
• The truth is, he was simply walking, as persons usually walk on the ends of the cross-ties of a railroad, with head and body bent forward, and it would have been remarkable if he had appeared to the engine-man in any other position. This
But if there was anything peculiar in his movements or appearance, the jury were presumably competent to form a correct conclusion on the subject, unaided by the opinions of others. Undoubtedly there are questions upon which non-experts may give their opinions, as, for example, questions of identity, velocity, distance, and the like, because such questions usually depend upon a variety of circumstances which are incapable of being presented with their proper force and significance to any but the observer; and hence this court has held such evidence admissible on the question of insanity, its value depending upon the intelligence of the witnesses, their means of knowledge, and the reasons they give for their opinions. Cropp v. Cropp, 88 Va., 753. But opinions are never received if all the facts can be ascertained and made intelligible to the jury, or if the matter is such as men in general are capable of comprehending and understanding. 7 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, tit. “Expert and Opinion Evidence,” p. 493.
This rule applies here; for the question was, not whether the deceased was insane, or bereft of his faculties, but whether there was enough in his appearance to indicate any such infirmity on his part to the engine-man; which was a question for the jury to determine for themselves upon the facts of the case, and not upon the opinions of witnesses. To allow a witness to give his own opinion as to one’s mental condition is a very different thing from allowing him to say what, in his-opinion, some one else ought to have thought about it.
But if the evidencé objected to were admissible, it is obvious from what has been said that it would fall short of proving
Judgment reversed.