103 Va. 205 | Va. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the court.
D. H. Bailey, the plaintiff in the court below, was a locomotive fireman in the freight-train service of the Virginia & Southwestern Railway Company. On the 16th day of April, 1903, the crew to which he belonged started from Bristol to Big Stone Gap, and arrived at Clinchport, an intermediate point, some time during the night of that day. At Clinchport the crew received orders to shift some cars which were standing on a siding. The engine and tender were accordingly cut loose from the train at the depot, and all of the crew except the fireman went with the engine to do the shifting.
The switch is situated several hundred yards west of the depot, and at the point of the switch there is a railroad bridge, on the main line, over Stock Creek. This bridge is 263 feet long; its eastern end is about 111 feet from the depot, and its western end is 482 feet from the point of the switch. The total distance from the depot to the switch is 1522 feet. The bridge is about 28 feet hight at its highest point. Upon this switch there was a train of cars, about twenty in number. The purpose of the switching to be done by the crew was to change the position of these cars so as to place one of them which stood near the west end of the cars on the switch track, to the rear, or east end, in position to be loaded. To accomplish this change
After placing the car, which was to be set on the rear end of the switch, next to the engine, the crew proceeded to remove the remaining cars from the switch, and pnt them down on the main line below the point of the switch. Rrom the point of the switch on the main line to the other end of the switch was a down grade, so that all of the cars conld not be brought out at once, but several pulls had to be taken at them. At first abont eight or ten cars were brought out and placed on the main line. Conductor Brown was actively engaged taking the full part of a trainman while this was being done, and it appears that he attended to opening and shutting the switch, while Brakeman Campbell rode on the cars and uncoupled them on the main line, cutting them off on this first pull between the car next to the engine, and the residue of the cars. Then holding on to the ear next to the engine, they went back into the switch and brought out another set of cars, which were pushed down on the main line below the switch, Campbell again cutting them off so as to leave the car next to the engine still coupled thereto. When they had cleared the switch, they dropped the car which they had been holding on to down on the far end of the switch track, and then proceeded to replace the other cars back on the siding. After they had replaced all the cars except those first brought out, which would consequently be the last put in, just before starting back with the engine and tender from the switch track for this last pull from the main line, a conversation occurred between Brown and Campbell, as to the substance of which there is a difference between them, and which was not heard by the engineer or fireman. Brown says that he either told Campbell, or that Campbell suggested to him, that he, Campbell, would go across to the cars on the main line if Brown
From this statement of facts, it will be seen that the real point in controversy is whether or not Brown, the conductor, knew, or ought to have known the position of the cars to which he was to couple the engine, and whether or not the rate of speed at which the engine was moving under his direction was. such as to constitute negligence.
The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff, which the court refused to set aside, and the defendant in the court below, plaintiff in error here, the Virginia & Southwestern Railway Company, having obtained a writ of error, assigns the following-grounds for the reversal of that judgment.
The plaintiff was asked, as a witness in his own behalf:
“Q. If the coupling had been made in the usual or ordinary way, would you, or would you not, have been thrown from the cab ?
“A. FTo, sir,, if they had been coupled in the right manner, I would not have been thrown out.”
To this question and answer there was a general objection which the court overruled. It is claimed in the petition that while the objections relied upon do not appear in the record,*the question and answer were wholly inadmissible for any purpose.
“Q. How did they throw you?
“A. I went out head foremost. It ivas an unusual lick. If it had been hit by a lick that cars ought to be coupled, it wouldn’t have throAvn me. I had hold and Avas looking out for it, and always did look out for anything like that when Ave was shifting.”
This question and ansAver Avere not objected to, so that if the error under consideration was sustained, there would still be evidence in the record covering the identical point, to AAdiich no objection was made.
Objection is also made to the ruling of the court, refusing to alloAV the plaintiff in error to prove by the Avitness, BroAvn, that it Avas not his duty as conductor to gives his brakeman, Campbell, any detailed instruction about going to the end of the cars to which1 the coupling in question was to be made; and a like offer of proof Avhich occurs in the testimony of the Avitness, McCue, which was also rejected by the court.
If the refusal to permit plaintiff in error to introduce the evidence referred to was erroneous, the error was cured by instruction 6 given at the instance of plaintiff in error, in which the court told the jury that the conductor had the right to presume that his brakeman, Campbell, was acquainted with the usual and customary method of performing his duties, and it Avas not the duty of the conductor to give him special instructions with reference thereto. The plaintiff in error could not have been prejudiced by the ruling of the court excluding eiddence tend
Another objection taken to the exclusion of testimony is to the refusal of the court to permit McCue, “an experienced railroad man,” to prove that it was not the duty of the conductor to know exactly where the cars were left that were being shifted.
There had been direct evidence that it was the duty of the conductor to know. It was proved that the company had no rule upon the subject; and McCue was expected to testify from his general information with respect to the operation of other roads. He was asked this question: “Where, as in this case, the conductor was attending to the shifting of the cars and also to the switching, would it or not be his duty to know the exact place where the cars had been left to which he was going back to couple?” To which question and any answer thereto, the plaintiff by counsel objected, and the court sustained said objection, and refused to allow the witness to answer. Thereupon, without any distinct avowal by counsel for defendant, the court understood from the question and general drift of the examination that, if permitted to do so, the defendant would prove by the said witness McCue, that in general railroad practice, it would not be necessary or incumbent upon the conductor to give specific directions to the brakeman to go with his light to stand at the end of the train for the purpose of assisting in making the coupling, but that, according to general railroad rules and practice it would be considered by the conductor that the brakeman would know that it was his duty to go to the end of the cars with
So much of this exception Eo. 3 as refers to the duty of the conductor to give specific directions to the brakeman has already been sufficiently disposed of in discussing the assignment of error with reference to the question asked Conductor Brown; and as to so much of it as has reference to the duty of the conductor to know the exact place where the cars had been left, it is to be observed that the gravamen of the charge of negligence upon the part of the conductor is that he permitted the engine to approach at a dangerous speed the cars to which the coupling was to be made, and that it was his duty to know, not the exact position of those cars, but to have such a reasonable knowledge of their situation as would have enabled him to make the coupling with safety. ' The question in terms asks the witness, would it or not be the duty of the conductor “to know the exact spot at which the cars had been left to which he was going back to couple.” To this question the witness would have made the categorical answer, that “it was not his duty to know the exact spot,” an answer which would have been, or might have been, absolutely true as a response to the question in the precise terms in which it was propounded, and yet have been utterly misleading.
The action of the court in allowing the witness, Skeen, to testify as to the expectancy of life of a man of the age of defendant in error, and in allowing the introduction before the jury of certain mortality tables, is assigned as error.
The instructions asked for by the plaintiff and given by the court correctly state the law. Indeed, no objection is urged to any of them, except Ro. 4, which relates to the measure of damages, and which has been sufficiently disposed of in dealing with the admissibility of the testimony of the witness Skeen.
The defendant asked for several instructions, all of which were given, except Ro. 8. Ros. 5 and 6, however, were modified by the court. As originally asked, Ro. 5 was in the words following :
“The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the-evidence that it was the duty of W. R Campbell, the brakemanr under the circumstances in this case, to have gone with his lam-tern to the end of the car to which the engine was going t'cf couple, and that he failed to go to the end of said car, and that the accident to plaintiff resulted from such failure of said brakeman to perform such duty, they will find for the defendant.”
The modification consisted in inserting the word “solely” after the word “resulted,” so as to make it read, if “the accident to plaintiff resulted solely from such failure of said brakemare to perform such duty, they will find for the defendant.”
The purpose of the amendment is obvious. There was evi
The same principal controls the amendment introduced by the court in the second branch of this instruction, and we are of opinion that the amendments made by the court were proper, and this assignment of error is overruled.
The court also, of its own motion, gave an instruction which we think is, under the evidence in this cause, plainly right, and the objection to which is, therefore, overruled.
This brings us to the consideration of instruction Bo. 8 asked •for by the defendant, and refused by the court. It is as follows:
“The jury are further instructed that although they may believe from the evidence that it was the duty of Conductor Brown to know the location of the cars that he was going back to couple to, and that he neglected this duty and did not know the location thereof, yet if they believe from the evidence that said conductor believed, and, under all the circumstances of this case, had the right to believe, that Campbell, the brakeman. would be, with his lantern, at the end of the car to which they expected to couple, and further believe that if said Campbell had been at the end of said car with said lantern, the accident would not have occurred, they will find for the defendant.”
As we have already seen, if Brown, who was the vice-principal, was guilty of a fault which entered into and constituted a part of the negligence which resulted in the injury of the plaintiff, then the railroad company is responsible, although Campbell, the brakeman, who was a fellow-servant, was also in fault, the court in such cases holding that where injury to a servant has been caused by the fault o.f a fellow-servant, concurring with the negligence of the master, the latter is liable as though he only was at fault. The fault of this; instruction is that it is predicated upon the concurring negligence of the conductor, who was the vice-principal of the master, and of a fellow-servant.
There was a motion to set the verdict aside as contrary to the evidence, which was properly overruled. The testimony, considered as upon a demurrer to evidence, establishes the negligence of the plaintiff in error as being the proximate cause of defendant in error’s injury.
The motion in arrest of judgment was also properly overruled.
There was no demurrer to the declaration, and we are not prepared to say that it could have been adjudged insufficient had a demurrer been interposed. If the declaration was less specific in its allegations of negligence than it should have been, we are still of opinion that a judgment upon it should not be arrested. Concede that the evidence went beyond the averments of the declaration, yet it is apparent that the plaintiff in error has suffered no prejudice upon this account, but that it presented its entire case to the jury. The objection should have been made
“The objection now made for the first time should have been made in the court below, so that the plaintiff in that court might have had an opportunity to have moved the court to have adopted the one or the other of the courses provided by the statute. Having failed to do this, we do not think that the question can be raised here for the first time, and this assignment of error must be overruled.”
In that case it appears that the objection was made for the first time in this court, while in the case before us it was made in arrest of judgment. The difference is one of degree rather than of kind. The point is, that it should have been made, in
We' are of opinion that there is no error in the record for which the judgment should be reversed.
Affirmed.