Roanoke Railway & Electric Co. v. Brown

154 S.E. 526, 155 Va. 259, 1930 Va. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 12, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 S.E. 526 (Roanoke Railway & Electric Co. v. Brown) 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
Roanoke Railway & Electric Co. v. Brown, 154 S.E. 526, 155 Va. 259, 1930 Va. LEXIS 163 (Va. 1930).

Opinion

Epes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action brought in the Hustings Court of the city of Roanoke by notice of motion for judgment by John Brown by his next friend (herein referred to as plaintiff) against the Roanoke Railway and Electric Company (herein referred to as the Electric Company) and the Virginian Railway Compapy (herein referred to sometimes as the Virginian and sometimes as the Railway Company), co-defendants. The plaintiff sues to recover $2,500 damages for personal injuries received by him on May 13, 1928, while crossing a bridge constructed by the Virginian to carry Thirteenth street in the city of Roanoke over its tracks, on which bridge the Electric Company had constructed and was operating a double-track street railway line.

On May 13, 1928, the plaintiff, a negro boy twenty years of age, was crossing this bridge (which runs north and south) on a motorcycle, going south. There was an automobile in front of him going in the same direction, which he attempted to pass on its left side. Just as he reached a point on the bridge opposite this automobile, the east end of one of the short floor boards between the rails of one of the street car tracks, which was loose and the filler block under which was rotten, was tilted or thrown up above the surface of the roadway by the automobile running over the west end of the board. Plaintiff’s motorcycle struck this board and he was thrown from it and injured. [265]*265The evidence shows conclusively that the injury to the plaintiff was caused by the defective condition of the flooring of this bridge; and there is no suggestion in the record that the plaintiff on his part was guilty of any negligence which contributed to his injury.

It is conceded by both defendants that the plaintiff, without fault on his part, was injured in passing over said bridge; and the major question at issue is: Are either or both of said defendants liable for the defective condition of the bridge? Both in the trial court and here the contest has been chiefly between the two defendants with reference to their respective liabilities, each in effect contending that the other, and not it, is liable to the plaintiff for the injuries received by him.

The verdict of the jury was: “We, the jury, find for the plaintiff against both defendants and assess his damages at $1,000.” The court overruled the motions made by each of the defendants to set the verdict aside, and entered a joint judgment thereon in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants. Each defendant filed a petition for a writ of error, and a writ of error has been granted to each of them; but they have been heard and are here considered together.

For a number of years prior to and at the time the Virginian Railway was built, the Roanoke Street Railway Company, to whose franchises the Roanoke Railway and Electric Company has succeeded, had constructed and been operating a single-track street railway line in that portion of Thirteenth street here in question, under a franchise granted to it by an ordinance of the city of Roanoke adopted August 9, 1892.

Sections 1 and 2 of this ordinance designate the streets and bridges in which the Roanoke Street Railway Company was thereby authorized to construct its tracks. So much of said designation as is here material (with the addition by us of the italicized words) reads as follows':

[266]*266(1) “On Thirteenth street, S. W., from intersection of Patterson avenue to Riverside boulevard to west side of Development Company’s bridge,” i. e., across the Development Company’s bridge..

(2) “To Shenandoah avenue, N. W., across the Fifth street bridge,” i. e., the bridge commonly called the Park street bridge.

(3) “Thence across the bridge at Shenandoah avenue, N. E.,” i. e., the bridge commonly called the Randolph street bridge.

These three bridges named were the only bridges then traversed by the streets in which the Electric Company was authorized to lay its tracks. The Development Company’s bridge was a bridge over Roanoke river which had been constructed by a private land company, and in 1926 was replaced by what is known as the Memorial Bridge, built just a few feet north of the old Development Company bridge. It does not affirmatively appear by whom the Randolph street and the Park street bridges were built; but presumably they were built by the city, and the argument of counsel treats them as having been built by the city.

The provisions of said ordinance of August 9, 1892, relative to the duty of the Electric Company to maintain and repair said streets and bridges, read as follows:

Section 7. “The said company shall replace all streets excavated, opened or torn up by it, in as good condition as they were prior to the beginning of its operations thereon, and shall at all times keep the space between its tracks, and a space of one foot on each side of said tracks, in as good repair as the residue of said streets; and whenever the said streets shall hereafter be improved by the city authorities by the use of any new material or otherwise, the said company shall make a similar improvement and use the same material between its tracks and for a space [267]*267of one foot on each side thereof. And that whenever any street of the city, already improved by macadamizing or paving, is torn up by the said Roanoke Railway Company to lay down its tracks, that said macadamizing or paving shall be replaced in as good condition as before being torn up, and the actual value, including cost to the city of delivering it at the point used by the company, of the stone used in macadamizing, or the paving material, shall be ascertained by the board of public works, and said amount paid by said Roanoke Street Railway Company to the city of Roanoke.”

Section 11. “The Roanoke Street Railway Company shall pay twenty-five per cent of the cost to the city of keeping the Randolph street bridge and the Park street bridge in repairs.”

By ordinance adopted May 28, 1904, the city of Roanoke granted the Tidewater Railway Company, whose name has been changed to the Virginian Railway Company, the right to cross Thirteenth street. The part of this ordinance here material reads as follows:

“The crossing of Thirteenth street, S. W., shall be over the said railway and by a steel bridge of the same width as the said street; * * * said bridge * * * shall be constructed in all respects to the satisfaction of the city engineer of said city; and said bridge shall be maintained by said railway company under the direction of said city engineer.”

In pursuance of this ordinance, about 1907, the Virginian Railway Company dug a deep cut across Thirteenth street and built this bridge, which has come to be known as the “Virginian Railway Company Bridge.”

When this bridge was built by the Virginian a single-track street railway line was laid thereon to carry the existing line of the Electric Company over it; but the bridge was so constructed as to permit the Electric Company to double-track its line in the future.

[268]*268By ordinance approved December 15, 1906, which has since remained in effect, it is ordained as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.E. 526, 155 Va. 259, 1930 Va. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roanoke-railway-electric-co-v-brown-va-1930.