Driscoll v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.

181 S.E. 402, 166 Va. 538, 1935 Va. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 19, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 S.E. 402 (Driscoll 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
Driscoll v. Virginia Electric & Power Co., 181 S.E. 402, 166 Va. 538, 1935 Va. LEXIS 264 (Va. 1935).

Opinions

Browning,

J., delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is before this court upon a writ of error granted to Joseph C. Driscoll, the plaintiff in the court helow, complaining of a verdict and judgment in favor of the Virginia Electric and Power Company and W. E. Blanton, defendants, in said court.

In such relationship in that court they will be generally referred to hereafter.

The defendant company has operated for a number of years its interurban cars over its track, constructed on or about the middle of the highway, extending between the cities of Bichmond and Petersburg, under a franchise granted to a predecessor company by the Board of Supervisors of Chesterfield county, and later also under an agreement with the Commonwealth of Virginia, acting through the State Highway Commissioner. The derivation of the defendant’s rights in the way over which its trackage traverses is mentioned because it is stressed by the plaintiff in his briefs, though it is thought that it has little to do with the issues before us.

On each side of the defendant’s track is a concrete highway eighteen feet wide. Traveling south from Bichmond towards Petersburg, as was the plaintiff on the day of the accident, the right-hand or west concrete highway is used by the traffic. Going north in the direction of Bichmond from towards Petersburg the right-hand or east concrete highway is so used.

The total distance across the track from concrete to concrete is thirty-five feet. The width of the track from [540]*540the center of one rail to the center of the other is four and three-quarters feet. At intervals there are track crossings to enable traffic to pass from one concrete highway to the other and in some instances these crossings lead directly to streets which strike the concrete highways at right angles. Along the highways and some of these streets there are settlements more or less populated.

One Zeller operated a dairy and one of the routes for the delivery of his products was in the vicinity which we have somewhat described. The plaintiff had been employed by Zeller for some weeks and at the time of the accident he was accompanying a Mr. Ford, who was the regular driver of the milk truck on that route, for the purpose of acquainting himself with the route and the customers to be served, which was preparatory to the plaintiff’s taking over the truck and serving the trade on the route. This he was to have done two days later than the day of the accident. He had been serving his apprenticeship under Ford for five or six days prior thereto. The accident occurred on the morning of February 27, 1933, between 11:30 and 12 o’clock.

A mile or more south of the limits of the city of Richmond, in Chesterfield county, there was a crossing known as Concord avenue, extending east from the concrete highway. The milk truck was driven by Ford and the plaintiff sat at his right side on a milk crate, in the truck, next to an open door space, on his right. The open space extended up from the floor of the truck.

The truck was proceeding southwardly towards Peters-burg on the west concrete highway approaching Concord avenue, and the defendant’s car operated by its motorman, W. E. Blanton, was also going southwardly en route to Petersburg. Opposite Concord avtnue the driver of the truck made a left turn eastward to pass over the crossing. In his effort to accomplish this his truck was struck by the oncoming interurban car. The driver, Ford, was killed and Driscoll’s left leg was cut off between the ankle [541]*541and the knee and he suffered some brain injury. This suit was predicated upon the alleged negligence of the defendants, of which, the particulars will be presently noticed.

The defendant company denied any negligence in the operation of its interurban car and affirmed tHat it was guilty of no act or omission which proximately caused or concurred to cause the accident and the consequent injuries to the plaintiff. Its defense was further based upon the alleged contributory and concurrent negligence of the plaintiff and the driver of the truck which proximately caused or contributed to cause the accident. .

- At the trial of the case, when the plaintiff had concluded his evidence, the defendant moved the court to strike it out as being insufficient to sustain a verdict in the plaintiff’s favor. This motion was overruled and upon the conclusion of all the evidence the motion was renewed to strike out the plaintiff’s evidence which motion was subsequently enlarged to embrace or include all the evidence. The court sustained the latter motion and instructed the jury that in order for the plaintiff to recover he must prove his case by the preponderance of the evidence and having withdrawn from the jury all the evidence that there was no evidence upon which it could find a verdict for the plaintiff. Under this instruction the jury found a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff lodged exceptions to the several actions of the court and asked that he be permitted to argue the case to the jury upon the evidence of the defendant, adhering to the position that the defendant was bound by its motion, before it was enlarged to strike all the evidence, to strike only the plaintiff’s evidence. The plaintiff tendered a number of instructions embodying his view of the law as applied to his conception of the facts and their legal effect. These instructions were refused.

In our opinion it is unnecessary to further advert to these questions of court procedure and rulings.

The plaintiff’s theory of the case is that the motorman [542]*542saw the truck traveling south on the right-hand side of the west concrete highway some distance north of the point, 670 feet north of the Concord avenue crossing, and when the car reached the latter point the truck had then “turned into the crossing”; that its passage over the crossing, at a reasonable and lawful rate of speed, became blocked by the northbound automobile traffic on the east concrete highway, when the interurban car was 385 feet north of the crossing, which situation was seen by, or should have been seen by, the motorman; that the motorman saw, or should have seen, the automobile traffic passing north which obstructed the plaintiff’s way while the truck was on the crossing; that it was the duty of the motorman to bring the car under control so as to avoid the accident which he could have done, as the car could have been stopped within 200 feet or less at the rate of speed at which it was going; that the car ran on at unslackened speed until it collided with the truck, which was forced down the track and beyond the crossing a distance of some eighty feet, nearly severing, on its way, a standing pole some twelve inches in diameter and demolishing the truck with the resultant death of the driver and injuries to the plaintiff; that there was no duty upon him to assume that the car would “so run him down in broad daylight”.

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Related

Harrell v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.
12 S.E.2d 833 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1941)
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Ford
186 S.E. 84 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.E. 402, 166 Va. 538, 1935 Va. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driscoll-v-virginia-electric-power-co-va-1935.