Burr v. Virginia Railway & Power Co.

145 S.E. 833, 151 Va. 934, 1928 Va. LEXIS 281
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 5, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 S.E. 833 (Burr v. Virginia Railway & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burr v. Virginia Railway & Power Co., 145 S.E. 833, 151 Va. 934, 1928 Va. LEXIS 281 (Va. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

Chinn, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by Mary P. Burr, administratrix of Charles G. Burr, to recover damages for the death of her decedent resulting from injuries sustained in the terminal station of the Virginia Railway and Power Company at Petersburg, Virginia, on the evening of September 12, 1924, charged to have been occasioned by said company’s negligence.

The case has been twice tried. At the first trial there was a judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $10,000.00, which was reversed by the Supreme Court of Appeals, upon a writ of error obtained by the railway company, for errors committed by the lower court in instructions and in refusing to admit certain evidence. See Virginia Railway and Power Company v. Burr, 145 Va. 338, 133 S. E. 776. Upon the second trial the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff in the same amount, but the court set aside the verdict on the ground that [938]*938it is contrary to the law and the evidence, and entered final judgment for the defenI ant; and the plaintiff is now here asking for a review of that j udgment.

The circumstances under which Mr. Burr met his death, as disclosed by the evidence adduced at the last trial of the case and now to be considered, may be stated as follows:

The Virginia Railway and Power Company (hereinafter called defendant) operates an inter urban street railway between the cities of Petersburg and Richmond. Its terminal station in Petersburg consists of a train shed, ticket office, and waiting room. The shed into which the cars are run is a remodeled store building, facing west on Sycamore street, 102 feet eight inches long, and twenty-one feet eight inches wide, inside measurement. The front or western end of the shed is open. The back or eastern end is bounded by a brick wall. On the northern side there is also a brick wall running the entire length. The southern side is not so easily described. It may be said, however, that at the southwest corner of the shed there is an iron pillar, standing immediately at the property line, which supports the building at its west or Sycamore street end. Between this pillar and the western end of the southern wall of the shed is an open space eight and nine-tenths feet wide. The wall then runs east a distance of ten feet to a window-like opening therein, seven and one-tenths feet in width, and approximately two feet from the floor. On the eastern side of this opening the wall is again solid for about twelve feet to the freight platform, where there is another opening in the wall over this platform nineteen and one-eighth feet in width. The freight platform, which adjoins the southern wall on the inside of the car shed and runs back to the rear end of the building, is two feet high. At the rear or [939]*939east end the platform is about three, feet wide, but beginning some six or eight feet from its western end, it tapers off at that end to a width of one and five-tenths feet. There are no steps from the inside of the shed to this platform, and, when a ear is in the terminal, the platform is so close to the southern side .of the ear that the rear door on that side cannot be opened for the entry of passengers.

Adjoining the southern side of the terminal shed, running east and west, is an alleyway ten feet wide, and across the alley to the south, and opposite the open space between the iron pillar and brick wall above referred to, is the entrance to defendant’s ticket office and waiting room.

The car track enters the terminal from Sycamore street on a sharp curve, and gradually straightens out on the inside of the building until it runs in a straight line parallel with the walls of the shed to the rear. The southern raff of the track after it straightens out is five feet from the southern wall of the shed, but the car by which Burr was killed had an over-hang on each side of the track of one foot seven and three-fourths inches, thus leaving a passageway between the car and the southern wall, when the car is standing in the station, three feet four and one-fourth inches wide. When emerging from the station, however, owing to the curve of the track, the car makes a wide side-swing into this space which brings its rear end in close proximity to the wall for a distance of twenty feet or more ■ — the space between the ear and the wall at the closest point being only two and one-half inches.

The floor plan of the terminal shed, showing the track, and with a dotted line showing the lateral swing of the car as it moves out of the station into Sycamore street, is herewith filed for reference.

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145 S.E. 833, 151 Va. 934, 1928 Va. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burr-v-virginia-railway-power-co-vactapp-1928.