Bashford v. Rosenbaum Hardware Co.

90 S.E. 625, 120 Va. 1, 1916 Va. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 90 S.E. 625 (Bashford v. Rosenbaum Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bashford v. Rosenbaum Hardware Co., 90 S.E. 625, 120 Va. 1, 1916 Va. LEXIS 153 (Va. 1916).

Opinion

Cardwell, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court. .

This action was brought by Frank Bashford against Rosenbaum Hardware Company (a partnership) to recover damages for .personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, which he alleges were caused by the negligence of the defendants.

At the first trial of the case the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $358.65, which, upon the motion of the defendants, was set aside because the court was of the opinion “that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.” On the second trial, no evidence being offered,a verdict was returned by the jury for the defendants, upon which the court entered judgment, and the case is before us upon a writ of error awarded the plaintiff.

There are no exceptions made a part of the record with respect to instructions given or refused by the trial court, or to the admission or rejection of evidence, so that the [3]*3only question presented is'the propriety of the court’s action in setting aside the first verdict.

It appears that the defendants were at the time of the accident to plaintiff for which he sues in the hardware business in the city of Newport News, having their place of business on the east side of Washington avenue, between Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh streets. They held under lease from one J. D. Bohlken a cellar or basement under his store building just opposite to their store on Washington avenue, and were the sole lessees thereof. Entrance to this cellar or basement was had by means of an opening in the sidewalk in front of the store building occupied by Bohlken, about four feet square, which opening, when not in use, was covered with two iron doors, and the cellar or basement was used by .the defendants as a storage room in their hardware business. When these doors were open there was a chain attached to each of the doors on the ends thereof nearest the building occupied by Bohlken (which is known as the Darling building), which chain constituted the only barrier or protection afforded the public, in so far as the east or west side of said opening was concerned. This opening was almost in the middle of the sidewalk, and when the iron doors were closed the place was safe, but when open, and only then, it became dangerous to pedes.trians passing over or along the sidewalk. Washington avenue is, as it appears, the principal business street of the city of Newport News, and pedestrians are continuously passing to and fro over the sidewalk at the place where the opening therein just described was located.

The plaintiff, a young man about thirty-three years of age, had been employed as foreman for the United States Shipping Company for about seventeen years, his business being to see that the ships of his employer were kept in proper condition, which duties required his presence on the water front, and he was very rarely on Washington avenue [4]*4at the place where he received the injuries of which he here complains — in fact, had not been there for a year prior to the day he received his injuries. On that day, about three o’clock in the afternoon, he was at the Warwick Pharmacy, on the corner of Twenty-sixth street and Washington avenue, the same side of the street as Bohlken’s store, and crossing Twenty-sixth street he proceeded along the sidewalk towards Twenty-seventh street, and upon approaching the Darling building, in which Bohlken had his store, his attention was attracted to certain flags or pennants of various universities and colleges in the window of Bohlken’s .store. Bohlken’s store is in about.the business centre of the city, and the front of the store is divided into three sections, an entrance with a show window on each side, and in the centre of the entrance, on the building line, is a large revolving magazine roller. Just in front of the show window nearest to Twenty-seventh street is located the opening in the sidewalk above mentioned, through which and through which alone the defendants had access to the cellar under Bohlken’s store, the short sides of this entrance being parallel to the building line and the other a shorter distance from the curb, making the smoothly paved sidewalk about 18 feet wide from the building line to the curb.

Upon plaintiff’s attention being attracted to the flags or pennants in the window of Bohlken’s store, he stopped in. front of the window to look at them. This was the window opposite the entrance to defendants’ cellar and the one nearest Twenty-seventh street. Pennants were also displayed in the window nearest Twenty-sixth street, but by reason of the magazine roller stand in front of the centre of the store, plaintiff was prevented from examining them from where he was standing, and not seeing a pennant of the University of Pennsylvania in the window nearest Twenty-seventh street, he stepped back to get a better view of the window nearest Twenty-sixth street, and in doing so [5]*5his foot caught in the chain hanging suspended in the top of the iron door nearest Twenty-sixth street and losing his balance, he fell into the opening. In falling over the chain the iron door was, of course, closed, and the plaintiff’s neck was caught between the two iron doors, holding him thus suspended for several minutes and until he was released by persons who came to his relief. He describes the occurrence as follows: ‘T stepped back one step. My left foot went in the hole.” “I found, myself falling and I turned and tried to grab for the door and missed it and .my weight went down * * * and this foot (right foot) caught under the chain.” “I turned that way (to the left) and that door came down.” “That door hit me under the neck.” When asked if one door hit him from underneath the throat and one hit him from behind, he answered that “this door in front (indicating upon a photograph) strangled me unconscious, and this door (indicating the door next to 27th street) hit me here (indicating the rear of the left side of his neck).” Q. “The door nearest 26th street. The one that hit your throat?” A. “Yes, sir.” Plaintiff does not undertake to say whether both doors were open or only one of them when he fell in the opening, his reply to that inquiry being, “I could not say. I did not notice.”

On the afternoon of this accident to plaintiff defendants had two of their employes, a colored boy, Melvin, and a white boy, Walter Spence, carrying ladders and screens from the cellar under Bohlken’s store to a room on the second floor of their place of business across the street, getting ready for the spring and summer sales of these articles, while another employe, Greshaw, engaged on the second floor, received and placed the ladders and screens as they were brought over by the two boys, Melvin and Walter Spence, which undertaking was still in progress when the accident to plaintiff occurred.

[6]*6There was, as it appears, only one eye-witness to the occurrence — one Thomas Chambers, colored, a witness called by the defendants — who states that he was an employe of Bóhlken, and was standing by the window looking out, and saw Bashford (plaintiff) examining the pennants in the window nearest Twenty-seventh street. At this time, according to the statements of Chambers, a colored boy opened the iron door over the entrance to the cellar nearest Twenty-sixth street and went down into the cellar. Witness further testified as follows:

“I saw him (plaintiff) when he fell down in the cellar.” “What?” Ans. “I saw him fall down in the cellar.” “What was the cellar doing open ?” A.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E. 625, 120 Va. 1, 1916 Va. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bashford-v-rosenbaum-hardware-co-va-1916.