Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Blunt's Administrator

163 S.E. 329, 158 Va. 421, 1932 Va. LEXIS 267
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 24, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 163 S.E. 329 (Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Blunt's Administrator) 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
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Blunt's Administrator, 163 S.E. 329, 158 Va. 421, 1932 Va. LEXIS 267 (Va. 1932).

Opinion

Gregory, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

C. M. Blunt was killed by one of the street cars of the Virginia Electric and Power Company, and his administrator instituted this action to recover damages for the wrongful death of the deceased. A verdict in his favor was rendered by a jury, and approved by the trial court.

Blunt, at the time he met his death, was a resident of the western section of the city of Richmond. He was in good health and fifty-five years of age. He was employed by the Southern Railway Company in its South Richmond shops, and had worked for the railway company for twelve years prior to his death. He was working at this time on a shift from three-thirty o’clock in the afternoon until eleven-thirty at night. On July 9,1929, after finishing his work at eleven-thirty that night, he boarded a street car about eleven-fifty [426]*426P. M. About twelve-ten A. M., on the same night, he was killed at-the intersection of Broad and Seventh streets by a small one-man street car, which was moving east at a slow speed. After he was struck by the car, he was dragged a distance of approximately fifty-two feet and his body was firmly caught and held by the underhang of the car. Broad street, where Blunt met his death, runs east and west and in its center the Virginia Electric and Power Company maintains a double street car track. The south track is used for east-bound street cars and the north track for west-bound cars. Immediately adjoining the north track on which west-bound cars move at the intersection and immediately east of Seventh street, is a safety zone for the use of persons who desire to board a west-bound car. From the southeast corner of Broad and Seventh street are two white lines which run parallel across Broad street and between these lines pedestrians are directed to walk if they desire to cross Broad street at this point. These lines are described by some of the witnesses as a safety zone. Blunt was struck by an east-bound car at or near the eastern white line. Seventh street is also occupied by a double track street car line and it runs approximately north and south. There was no traffic officer on duty at the crossing and there is no evidence that any traffic light was in use at the time Blunt was struck by the car. The east-bound car was standing on Broad street just west of. Seventh to permit south-bound traffic to pass on Seventh street and a north-bound street car to pass on the same street. Along the south side of this car while it was waiting for the Seventh street traffic to pass was standing an automobile for the same purpose. When the traffic going south and north on Seventh street had cleared, the east-bound car and the automobile started to cross Seventh street. The street car was moving slowly and the automobile was also moving slowly. In the automobile, which was being driven by one Lee, was M. E. Bebout, who testified as follows:

[427]*427“As we got to Seventh and Broad the street car was coming east on Broad, had stopped at Seventh and Broad. We stopped to let an automobile go south. It was two fellows standing on the south side of Broad street on the corner and a man about two feet from the curb in the safety zone going north on Broad. As the Forest Hill car went across, that car going east started up and we started up right behind it; and just as we got beside it two ladies were on the street car; one of them hollowed and asked us to take them home. As she hollowed the motorman looked back, and the next thing somebody started hollowing: ‘There is a man underneath the street car’! We stopped at the curb and went back. At that time it was three other fellows there, and this man was underneath the street car, and we helped get him up.” Again be stated that:

“After the street car went north, the east-bound street car then started, and then Mr. Lee started, and just as we got in the car tracks, at the car tracks, one of the ladies hollowed at us. About that time the motorman looked back. As we got across somebody started hollowing ‘there is a man underneath the street car!’ We pulled up to the curb and stopped.”

He further testified that the motorman did not ring a bell or sound a gong; that the street car was moving slowly; that he saw the motorman look back and in a very short time thereafter someone hollowed that a man was under the car.

Charles Banks, an eye-witness to the tragedy, gave this account of how it happened: “I was coming from the Sanitary Restaurant with my coffee. It was after twelve o’clock. I was coming diagonally across the street, diagonally across Seventh street. Just as I got up on the curb stone on the opposite side of the street, I seen a street car and this man. The man looked like he was trying to come over to the safety to catch a car on the opposite track, and he got [428]*428about two or three feet from the safety zone to the middle of the track when the car struck him.”

He further testified that the car had crossed the rail (Seventh street line) “when I saw the car bearing down on the man;” that at that time the car was about ten feet from the man; that the car had reached the Seventh street tracks before Blunt went upon the east bound track on Broad street; that Blunt had reached the middle of the track when he was struck; that the car was moving slowly; that the lights were burning in the car and the headlight was burning and that cars in crossing the intersection make considerable noise.

The defendant in error introduced in evidence section 63 (a) of an ordinance, approved July 16, 1926, entitled “an ordinance to amend and re-ordain chapter 40 of the Richmond City Code of 1924,” as follows:

“Roadbeds or highways are primarily intended for vehicles, but pedestrians have the right to cross them in safety, and drivers of street cars and vehicles shall exercise proper care not to interfere with such persons or injure them or their property.”

The defendant in error also offered in evidence section 5 of an ordinance, approved February 7, 1928, entitled “an ordinance to amend and re-ordain chapter 43 of the Richmond City Code of 1924” which is as follows:

“No street car shall incommode crossings or stop at crossings on any street or elsewhere to solicit passengers. It shall be the duty of the motorman of the cars to give reasonable notice to drivers of vehicles and pedestrians of their approach, also to afford a reasonable opportunity for them or either of them to avoid collision or accident.” • Code, section 2145, paragraph 73 (a) provides that: “The roadbeds of highways within cities and towns are primarily intended for vehicles, but pedestrians have the right to cross them in safety, and drivers of street cars and vehicles [429]*429shall exercise proper care not to interfere with such rights nor to injure them or their property.”

And (b) “When crossing highways or streets within incorporated towns or cities, pedestrians shall not carelessly or maliciously interfere with the orderly passage of vehicles and shall cross wherever possible only at intersections or crosswalks. Pedestrians in crossing any street at intersection with another street, shall at all times have the right of way over vehicles making right turns into street being crossed by such pedestrians.”

And (c) “At such intersection where no traffic officer is on duty, pedestrians shall have the right of way over vehicles.”

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.E. 329, 158 Va. 421, 1932 Va. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-electric-power-co-v-blunts-administrator-va-1932.