Gleeson v. Virginia Midland Railroad
Opinion of the Court
having made the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
It will be most convenient in the decision of this case to consider the third instruction first. The'objections made to it are three:
(1.) “ It assumes that the accident was caused by an act of God, in the sense in which that term is technically used.” It appears that the accident was caused by a land slide, which occurred in a cut some fifteen or twenty feet' deep. The defendant gave evidence tending to prove that rain had fallen on the afternoon of Friday and on the Saturday morning previous; and the claim is that the slide was produced by the loosening of the earth by the rain. We do not think such an ordinary occurrence is embraced by the technical phrase “ an act of God.” There was no. evidence that the rain was of extraordinary character, or that any extraordinary results followed it. It was a common, natural event; such as not only might have been foreseen as probable, but also must have been foreknown as certain to come. Against such an event it was the duty of the company to have guarded. Extraordinary floods, storms of unusual violence, sudden tempests, severe frosts, great droughts, lightnings, earthquakes, sudden deaths and illnesses, have been held to be “ acts of God ”; but we know of no instance in which a rain of not unusual violence, and the probable results thereof, in softening the superficial earth, have been so considered. In Dorman v. Ames,
(2.) The instruction does not hold the defendant “ responsible for the condition of the sides of the cut made by it in the construction of the road, the giving way of which caused the accident.” We think this objection is also well taken. The railroad cut is as much a part of the railroad structure as is • the fill. They are both necessary and both are intended for one result; which is the production of a level track over which the trains may be propelled. The cut is made by the company no less than the fill; and the banks are not the result of natural causes, but of the direct intervention of the company’s work. If it be the duty of the company (as it unquestionably is) in the erection of the fills and the necessary bridges, to so construct them that they shall be reasonably safe, and to maintain them in a reasonably safe condition, no reason can be assigned why the same duty should not exist in regard to the cuts. Just as surely as the laws of gravity will cause a heavy train to fall through a defective or rotten bridge to the destruction of life, just so surely will those same laws cause land slides and consequent dangerous obstructions to the track itself, from ill-constructed railway cuts. To all intents and purposes a railroad track which runs through a cut where the banks are so near and so steep that the usual.laws of .gravity will bring upon the track the debris, created by the common processes of nature, is overhung by those banks. Ordinary skill would enable the engineers to foresee the result, and ordinary prudence should lead the company to guard against it. To hold any other view would be to overbalance the priceless - lives of the travelling public by a mere item of increased expense in the construction of railroads; and after all, an item, in the great number of cases, of no great moment.
The case of Kearney v. London &c. Railway, L. R. 6 Q. B. 759, 762, 763, (in the Exchequer Chamber,) cited in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error, is directly in point. In that ■case the plaintiff had been injured while walking along a pub-
The principle of these decisions seems to us to be applicable-to this case. If such be the law as to persons who, for their-own purposes, cause projections to overhang the highway not-constructed by them, a fortiori must it be the law as to those who, for their own purposes of profit, undertake to construct the highway itself, and to keep it serviceable and safe, yet who-allow it to be practically overhung, from'- considerations of economy or through negligence.
. Ve think the case of the Virginia Central Railroad Co. v. Sanger, 15 Grattan, 230, 237, to which we are referred by counsel for plaintiff in error, is strongly illustrative of the-principle in this case, to which it bears a close resemblance. Some rocks had been piled up alongside of the track for'the purpose of ballast, and some of them got .. 'upon the track, causing the'injury. In. render mg'"its opinion the. court says:
This view of the obligation of the company of course makes it. immaterial that the slide was suddenly caused by the vibration of the train itself. It is not a question of negligence in failing to remove the obstruction, but of negligence in allowing it to get there.
We are also of the opinion that it was error to refuse to modify the first instruction for the defendant as requested by the plaintiff.
Since thé decisions in Stokes v. Saltonstall, 13 Pet. 181, and Railroad Company v. Pollard, 22 Wall. 341, it has been settled la win this court that the happening of an injurious accident is in passenger cases prima fade evidence of negligence on the part of the carrier, and that, (the passenger being himself in the exercise of due care,) the burden then rests upon '.the carrier to show that its whole duty was performed, and that the injury was unavoidable by human foresight. The rale announced in those cases has received general acceptance; and was followed at the present term in Inland & Seaboard Coasting Co. v. Tolson, 139 U. S. 551.
The defendant seeks to uphold the ■ action of the court in-refusing the modification prayed for, by distinguishing the case at bar. It attempts to make two distinctions:
1. That the operation of the rule is confined to cases “ where-
2. That the injury from an act of God is established as a fact, wherefore the presumption of negligence from the occurrence of the accident cannot arise.
Neither of these attempted distinctions is sound, since, as has been shown, the defect was in the construction of that over which the defendant did have control and for which it was responsible, and since the slide was not caused by the act' of God, in any admissible sense of that phrase. Moreover, if these distinctions were sound, still', as a matter of correct practice, the modification should have been made.
The law is that, the plaintiff must show negligence in the defendant. This is don q prima facie by'showing, if the plaintiff be a passenger, that the accident occurred. If that accident was in fact the result of causes beyond the defendant’s ' responsibility, or of the act of God, it is still none the less truó that the plaintiff has made out his prima facie case. "When he proves the occurrence of the accident, the defendant must answer that case from all the circumstances of exculpation, whether disclosed by the one party or the other. They are its matter of defence. And it is for the jury to say, in the light of all the testimony,- and under the instructions of th¿ court, whether the relation of cause and effect did exist, as claimed by the defence, between the accident and the alleged exonerating circumstances. But when the court refuses to so frame the instructions as to present the rule in respect to the prima facie case, and so refuses on either of the grounds by which the refusal is sought to be supported herein, it leaves the jury without instructions to which they are entitled to aid •them in detérmining what were the facts and causes of the accident and how far those facts were or were not within the control of the defendant. This is error.
Dissenting Opinion
dissented from the opinion and judgment in this case, on the ground that it is in contravention of the long established rules as to what may be considered on an incomplete record.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Gleeson v. Virginia Midland Railroad Company
- Cited By
- 160 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- A land slide in a railway cut, caused by an ordinary fall of rain, is not an “act of God” which will exempt the railway company from liability to passengers for injuries caused thereby while being carried on the railway. It.is the duty of a railway company to so construct the banks of its cuts that they will not slide by reason of the action of ordinary natural causes, and by inspection and care to see that they are kept in such condition; and the failure to do so is negligence, which entails liability for injuries to passengers caused by their giving way. An accident to a passenger on a railway caused by the train coming in contact with a land slide, raises, when shown, a presumption of negligence on the part of the railway company, afid throws upon it the burden of showing that the slide was in fact the result of causes beyond its control.