Richardson v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.

175 S.E. 727, 163 Va. 394, 1934 Va. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 175 S.E. 727 (Richardson v. Appalachian 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
Richardson v. Appalachian Electric Power Co., 175 S.E. 727, 163 Va. 394, 1934 Va. LEXIS 192 (Va. 1934).

Opinions

Campbell, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Campbell county, wherein the litigants occupied the same positions as they do in this court. This is an action by notice of motion for judgment brought by the plaintiff in error to recover damages for the wrongful death of Peyton H. Richardson as a result of the alleged negligence of the defendant.

The ground of recovery relied upon in the notice of motion is that the death of plaintiff’s decedent was caused by the carelessness and negligence of defendant, by its agents and employees, in placing and allowing to remain lying upon the public highway known as Virginia-United States number sixty, a certain large wooden pole against which an automobile driven by said Peyton H. Richardson (plaintiff’s intestate) collided, and as the proximate result thereof said Richardson was then and there killed.

Upon a plea of not guilty, issue was joined and the case was tried by a jury. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant moved to strike out all of the plaintiff’s evidence, on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to support a verdict. The motion was overruled and defendant thereupon introduced its evidence. At the conclusion thereof, defendant renewed its motion to strike out plaintiff’s evidence. This motion was sustained and a ver-' diet for the defendant was found by the jury. This action of the court in striking out the evidence of the plaintiff constitutes the sole assignment of error.

The following summary of facts, as set out in the petition, is conceded by defendant to be correct in the main:

“The accident occurred on the night of March 26, 1931, at approximately 10:15 o’clock. The weather conditions [397]*397were that it had not been raining, was dry at place of accident, but the night was rather dark and cloudy.

“The place of accident was in Campbell county on Virginia-United States highway number sixty (State route 10), which is a part of the State highway system, and which runs in a general east and west direction, and at a place thereon between Concord and Lynchburg about six and one-half miles east of Lynchburg. The exact place of accident being just west of the intersection of said route sixty with a dirt side road running northwardly from route sixty, said side road being usually referred to by witnesses as the old Richmond-Concord road, or the old Six Mile Bridge road.

“The right of way of route sixty is fifty feet wide. The road was composed of a macadam surface eighteen feet wide at time of the accident * * * which macadam surface was flanked on the northern side (we are not concerned with the southern side) by a dirt shoulder, generally six feet wide, but of sufficient width at the place of accident for the pole to have been placed thereon seven feet from the northern edge of the macadam.

“The shoulder was hard, smooth and in good travelable condition. It was generally almost flush and even with the macadam, at some places being flush with the macadam and at others being a few inches lower; it gently sloped away from the macadam to the toe of a little bank or rise on the northern side of the road. There was no appreciable depth to any gully, drain or ditch referred to by any witness as being on the shoulder next to the bank or elsewhere. This shoulder constituted not only a usable and travelable portion of the road, but was actually used and traveled upon; and tracks thereon showed that not infrequently the right wheels of vehicles traveling west around the left curve, near the western end of which the pole was lying, ran upon this shoulder.

“The plaintiff’s decedent was driving his Chevrolet coach, 1929 model, westwardly along route sixty; traveling from Appomattox towards Lynchburg. He had with him two [398]*398friends, Mr. Robert P. Anderson and Miss Rosa Casey, who, together with the decedent, constituted all the occupants of the car. They all occupied the front seat but did not crowd or interfere with the driver who had plenty of room.

“The car was in good condition and its brakes, lights, steering apparatus, etc., were in good order and its lights were burning. The road clearance of the front axle did no.t exceed nine inches. The over all width of the car was. five feet seven inches, its length was thirteen feet, and its-girth over all was twenty-two feet four inches.

“The pole was approximately thirty or more feet long; its diameter at the small end was seven to nine inches and at the butt or large end the diameter was twelve or fourteen inches. The small end of the pole was bevelled back for six to eight inches and as the pole lay on the ground its small end was east towards Concord while its butt end was west towards Lynchburg. Owing to crooks in the pole the small end thereof did not lie flat on the ground, but was cocked up with an open space under same estimated by witnesses, to be from four to five inches, making the top of the small end of the pole about fourteen inches above the ground.

“There was located on the northern right of way line of the road one of the usual State highway small concrete •markers or monuments rising above ground about twelve to-eighteen inches and buried for about eighteen to twenty-four inches in the ground, this marker denoted the end of the curve as plaintiff’s decedent was traveling or the beginning of the curve to a person traveling eastward. The rise- or bank at this marker was about three feet high; the bank at the monument being thirty-three inches above the northern edge of the macadam and thirty-eight inches above the drain or lowest part of the shoulder. This marker was set three feet north from the top edge of the bank along route sixty and about twenty-three feet west of the intersection of the side road with route sixty. The bank ascends westwardly gradually from nothing at the intersection for. approximately twenty-three feet to a height of thirty-three ■ inches at the marker. The rise northwardly from route [399]*399sixty immediately opposite the monument was more precipitous, rising from nothing at the lowest point of the shoulder for about seven to eight feet to approximately thirty-eight inches high at the monument.

“So far as is known or shown by the evidence, the decedent never used this road on but one occasion prior to the accident, and that was when he made a trip from Monroe to Appomattox and return about three months before the accident.

“As plaintiff’s decedent traveled west he approached the place of accident around a left curve of approximately thirteen degrees, * * * and his right wheels got off the macadam onto the northern shoulder at some point east of the pole but exactly where is uncertain. He was not meeting or undertaking to pass any vehicle. As a part of the accident the car did get upon this northern bank of the road, turn over, and strike against the concrete marker which, after the accident, was leaning westward; and in some way the car descended off the bank onto the northern shoulder of route sixty and came to rest on its wheels astride the pole, with the front of the car facing east towards Concord; its right wheels being south of the pole and its left wheels being north of the pole. The manner in which it went or got upon the bank is in dispute, and whether it hit the pole first or went up the .bank first being also in dispute. There is no conflict in the testimony as to the speed of the car, the same being between twenty-five and thirty miles per hour.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 S.E. 727, 163 Va. 394, 1934 Va. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-appalachian-electric-power-co-va-1934.