Richmond & Danville Railroad v. Tribble's Administrator
Richmond & Danville Railroad v. Tribble's Administrator
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Thaddeus G. Tribble, administrator of Edward Tribble, deceased, brought an action of trespass on the case in the Circuit Court of Culpeper County against the Richmond and Danville Railroad Company, in which he alleges that, in October, 1890, Iris intestate, Edward Tribble, while engaged as a brakeman on the train of the defendant company, was killed through the negligence of the defendant, and therefore the plaintiff sues to recover damages. The particular negligence of which complaint is made is stated in the declaration to' be that the coupling links and pins were unsafe, unsound, and defective; that the caboose or conductor’s car of the train was not wide enough to^ permit the green lights, carried on each side of it in the night-time, to be seen by the engineer of the train when moving upon a straight track; that the whistle of the engine, with which signals are communicated by the engineer, was so defective as to be wholly insufficient for the purpose for which it was designed; that, by reason of a defective link or coupling pin, the train parted, and by reason of the narrowness of the caboose car the signal lights were invisible to the engineer, and that by reason of the insufficiency of the whistle he was not able to communicate the situation to the brakeman, by reason whereof, the train having parted, and the two sections subsequently coming together with great violence, the plaintiff’s intestate, while engaged in the dis
It appears that, upon the day of the accident, the train upon whicli defendant’s intestate was employed left the city of Alexandria, going' in the direction of Lynchburg, over the road of defendant company; that, after passing Culpeper, a station upon its load, and a short distance before reaching Winstonville station, the train, which consisted of an engine and twenty cars, including the caboose, parted between the seventh and eighth cars, the engine and seven cars going forward and the remainder of the train following it; that after passing Winstonville and Mitchell’s stations, at a point about a mile or a mile and a half south of Mitchell’s station, the rear division of the train overtook the engine and the cars attached, crushed into them, and defendant’s intestate was instantly killed. It appears that the defendant’s intestate, at the time of his death, was, together with a fellow-brakeman, who was also killed, upon an open or gondola car, loaded with railroad iron. This car was the ninth in the train, counting from the engine, and, as the- engine moved off' with seven cars attached to it, there was, after the parting of the train, only one car, and that a box car, in front of the gondola upon which the plaintiff’s intestate received the injury. There is a good deal of evidence with respect to the coupling- and pin, the width of the caboose car, and the condition of the-whistling apparatus of the engine, and it may be conceded that
The uncontradicted evidence is that this train was equipped with brakes sufficient for its complete control; that the train parted before reaching "Winstonville, and that the collision occurred a mile south of Mitchell’s station; in other words, that, after the train parted, and before the collision occurred, a distance of at least four or five miles was covered, and that portion of the train upon which the defendant’s intestate was injured, moving only with its own momentum, overtook and collided with the seven cars drawn by an engine, after passing over the distance above stated, on a track a part of which was an ascending grade. It seems that the separation of trains is not of infrequent occurrence, and rule 211 of the defendant company provides as follows: “ If the train should part, the flagman must immediately apply the brakes and stop the cars, and then send forward the most reliable person he can command to make danger signals, until the front portion of the train comes back, while he protects the rear of the train as per rule 99.” As we have seen, the deceased was on the ninth car from the engine. After the parting of the train there was but one ear in front of him, and it is impossible to believe that the accident would not have been known to him had he exercised the most ordinary care in the discharge of the duties of his position. ' That a train in the night-time should part, and the engine and' seven cars move off, and that persons upon the cars constituting the rear portion of it should be wholly unconscious of the accident, is almost incredible. The absence of the smoke, the steam, the noise, and, above all, of the light from the engine, the absence of that
Btjohauax and Habbisoe, JJ., dissent.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Richmond & Danville Railroad Co. v. Tribble's Administrator
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Railroads—Parteé Train—Collision between Sections—Negligence— Fellow-Servants—Proximate Cause of Injury.—In the case in judgment the rules of the railroad company require that, if the train should part, the flagman shall immediately apply the brakes and stop the cars, and the engineman shall keep the front part of the train in motion until the detached portion is stopped. A freight train parted between the seventh and eighth cars from the engine in consequence of defective coupling, of which defect the company had notice. After parting, the engine and front cars kept in motion for four or five miles, and then stopped, the engineer supposing the rear portion had been stopped. The train was equipped with brakes sufficient to control it, but no brakes were applied by the flagman, nor by the intestate of the defendant in error, who was a brakeman on the second car from the front of the detached portion, though if they had put one brake down it would have stopped the train, and in consequence of the failure to stop the detached portion of the train it followed—a part of the way over an up grade—until it collided with the front portion of the train, and killed the intestate. Helé: The proximate cause of the injury was the negligence of the intestate, his fellow-brakeman, or the engineman, and the defects of the machinery were but the remote or secondary cause of the accident, and there can be no recovery by the defendant in error.