Braswell v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.

173 S.E. 365, 162 Va. 27, 1934 Va. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 22, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 173 S.E. 365 (Braswell v. Virginia Electric & Power 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
Braswell v. Virginia Electric & Power Co., 173 S.E. 365, 162 Va. 27, 1934 Va. LEXIS 230 (Va. 1934).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff’s decedent was killed when a motorcycle on which he rode came into collision with one of the defendant’s street cars. His administrator has recovered a verdict for $2,500. That verdict the trial court set aside. Its action is challenged and the case is now before us on a writ of error.

The accident occurred in South Richmond on Hull street, just before 8 o’clock on December 13, 1930. Hull street runs north and south and numbered streets, whose numbers increase to the south, cross it at right angles. Cars pass in each direction on a single track which is not in the center of Hull street, but is somewhat nearer the western curb. The street, from curb to curb, is forty feet wide and the western rail of the car track is about twelve feet from its western curb.

Since the verdict was set aside because not adequately [30]*30supported by the evidence, it is necessary that the evidence be examined.

On the night in question, J. C. Bohannon, a witness, and Denis LaPrade rode south on a motorcycle and stopped about a fourth of a block north of 39th street. Bohannon got off and decedent and Noel Dorset got on. LaPrade drove; behind him sat Braswell on the mudguard and behind Braswell on the mudguard sat Dorset. Braswell held on to the seat and Dorset put his arms around Braswell. They started off at a speed estimated to be from five to eight miles an hour and had gotten just beyond 39th street when the witness turned and started walking north towards Richmond, and had gone somewhere between thirty and fifty feet when he heard a crash to which he did not pay much attention. A small boy ran by him and said: “There’s an automobile wreck. Three fellows ran into a street car.” Bohannon then turned and ran to the point of accident, which was about a block and a half away. He said that the north end of the car was from forty-five to fifty feet from the corner of 40th street and that the motorcycle lay against the curb about twenty feet south of its north end. The bodies of the youths had just been taken away. He tells us that there was an automobile parked by the west curb of Hull street somewhere between forty-five and sixty feet north of 40th street. No headlight was burning on the north end of the street car. On cross-examination he said that he might have told Mr. Vaughan, the defendant’s claim agent, that he first met Dorset and Braswell between 37th and 38th streets, that he “wasn’t positive at that time where it was.” The motorcycle was out of condition and would not make more than fifteen or twenty miles an hour.

D. R. Bowlin, another witness, was driving a truck south on Hull street. He saw a motorcycle stop between 39th and 40th streets about in front of 3905 Hull street. One boy got off and two got on. They drove south on Hull street about three-quarters of a block when they [31]*31cut around to the left to avoid a parked automobile and hit the street car. He said that that car had no headlight and he thought it was going the other way. As he remembers the physical facts the north end of the street car stood fifteen feet north of the north curb of 40th street, while the motorcycle and the bodies of the hoys were four or five feet past its front end. The headlight of the motorcycle was still burning. He cut it off, moved the machine over, and helped to move the bodies.

W. O. Eggleston reached the point of accident soon after the collision. He said that the street car had passed 40th street, that it had cleared the intersection, but does not undertake to say how far away it was; that the motorcycle was about two feet to the right of the front of the car; that one of the hoys had been taken away and the bodies of the other two lay between the car and the sidewalk, “just past the motorcycle a little way.”

N. E. Norwood lives at 3910 Hull street, which is in the middle of the 3900 block and about a block and a half from the point of the accident. He was getting into his car at the time it occurred and drove up. There was no headlight burning on the street car. It had passed 40th street and was near the corner but he did not know the distance. The bodies of the boys lay just in front of the street car but over towards the -west and close to them was the motorcycle.

Dorset, who survives, tells us that they were going home; that Bohannon got off the motorcycle and that he and Braswell got on by the 39th street curb with the motorcycle in second gear, which was not changed; that they pulled out to pass the parked car and were struck as they were pulling back into the fairway from the car track. They were going from fifteen to twenty miles an hour at that time. The parked car, which they passed stood about 100 feet from 40th street. The street car had no headlight burning and “after we got close on it, it appeared to be going the other way. By not having any light on the front we judged it to be going the other [32]*32way.” It was giving no signal of approach. As they fell he said that the front end of the street car passed them about five feet and that the other two lay about a foot from its south end. The motorcycle itself ran to the sidewalk and its front wheel came to rest on it. Not a word was said from the time the motorcycle started till the accident occurred.

A. C. Shelton said that no headlight was burning; that the parked car was about thirty-five feet from the street car and that the rear end of the street car was right at the end of the intersection of 40th street. On direct examination he said that the “rear wheel of the motorcycle was lying just about one foot in front of the street car;” that Dorset was lying over on the sidewalk five or six feet from the motorcycle and that “the other two boys were lying right on the motorcycle, hadn’t gotten off of it. The motorcycle was lying on top of Braswell’s leg.”

In his cross-examination this appears:

“Q. He was inside the curbing? Now, was the motorcycle on the north or south side of the front end of the street car? Was it north or south of the front end of the street car? That is, the end towards Bichmond.
“A. It was on the.north. I think they call Hull street north and south. It was the north end of it.
“Q. Was it between 39th street and the street car?
“A. No, sir, it was right beside the street car; wasn’t below it. It was between 40th street and the street car.
“Q. Between the line and the front of the car?
“A. Yes, sir.”

F. L. Thames was coming down 40th street to Hull, intending to board the car. He said it passed 40th street and he remarked to his wife, “You have missed the car.” About that time he heard the crash; that he found the motorcycle lying on the ground, a man on the edge of the curb hollering, and two men lying down. There was no headlight, and the car as it came from the end of the line seemed to be going about thirty miles an hour.

S. M. Taylor also said there was no headlight; that it [33]*33had pretty nearly cleared 40th street when it stopped, hut had not stopped when it struck the motorcycle.

H. C. Bohannon, who was called in rebuttal, said that there was sand on the car track ten or fifteen feet back of the front car wheels.

This is in substance the plaintiff’s case.

For the defendant the motorman, W. L. Elliott, was called.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.E. 365, 162 Va. 27, 1934 Va. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braswell-v-virginia-electric-power-co-va-1934.