Agsten v. Lemma

193 S.E. 545, 119 W. Va. 330, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 122
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1937
Docket8586
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 193 S.E. 545 (Agsten v. Lemma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agsten v. Lemma, 193 S.E. 545, 119 W. Va. 330, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 122 (W. Va. 1937).

Opinion

Fox, Judge :

In an action at law, in the Court of Common Pleas of Kanawha County, the plaintiff recovered a judgment *331 against Luigi Lemma, Cecil Lemma and Curtis Brewer, which upon writ of error to the Circuit Court of said county was affirmed. To this action of the Circuit Court, Luigi Lemma and Cecil Lemma prosecute this writ of error.

The plaintiff instituted his action against Luigi Lemma, Cecil Lemma, Curtis Brewer, William (Billy) Wentz, Tom Waldorf, Aubrey Dean and Nitro Ice Company, a corporation. At the conclusion of the testimony separate motions were made by the defendants for a directed verdict in their favor. This motion was sustained as to William (Billy) Wentz, Aubrey Dean, Tom Waldorf and Nitro Ice Company, and was overruled as to the other defendants. The case therefore went to the jury against Luigi Lemma, Cecil Lemma and Curtis Brewer.

The action grew out of damages sustained by the plaintiff when a brick, thrown or otherwise propelled from a truck operated by Cecil Lemma, the son of Luigi Lemma, struck and passed through the windshield of the automobile operated by the plaintiff, striking him in the face, and causing him to lose control of his car; the result being that his car was damaged and severe injuries were sustained by him in his person. The truck and automobile involved were being operated, at the time of the accident, on a public highway in said county.

The facts, as developed by the evidence are: Luigi Lemma borrowed from the Nitro Ice Company a one and one-half ton Ford truck for the purpose of transporting cement slabs and broken bricks from Nitro to his farm a few miles from that point. He employed two colored boys, George Waddy and Lewis Waddy, to operate the truck. Some time during the day of the accident, without the knowledge of Luigi Lemma, his son,' Cecil Lemma, aged about eighteen years, associated himself with the enterprise. In the afternoon, on the third trip to the farm, Cecil Lemma was driving the truck, and the two colored boys were sitting with him in the cab seat in the front part of the truck. On their way, at a point near a field across Armour Creek, they fell in with Curtis Brewer, Billy Wentz, Aubrey Dean and Tom Waldorf, school mates of Cecil Lemma, who were invited by Lemma to *332 accompany him on his trip to the farm. These boys placed themselves on the body of the truck to the rear of the cab. The truck had been stopped at this point to enable Lemma to straighten up some cement slabs which were becoming displaced, and there is evidence that at this time one or more bricks were thrown by one or more of the invitees from the truck into a pond created by high water. Shortly after this, when the truck was climbing a hill, running in low gear and at a slow speed, Cecil Lemma stepped on the running board of the truck and looked back and saw, or could have seen, the rear portion of the truck and the four boys. After the truck reached the top of the hill and started down the other side, and when near the place of the accident, two of the boys on the rear of the truck kicked or threw a brick from the truck onto the highway. Tom Waldorf says he kicked one brick onto the road, and that the boys watched it until it stopped rolling; that Curtis Brewer then said “I can do that, too”, and threw a brick. Brewer admits he threw a brick. Both of these acts occurred closely together and near the 40th street intersection with the Tyler Mountain road. Cecil Lemma and the two colored boys in the cab all say they knew nothing of these bricks being kicked or thrown from the truck, and after the brick struck the plaintiff’s car, ran the truck some three or four hundred yards before the boys in the rear of the truck could communicate to them that an accident had occurred. Upon hearing of the accident, Lemma turned the truck and returned to the scene.

At the time the brick was thrown from the truck the plaintiff was driving his automobile in the opposite direction from that of the truck. His car was passing the truck at that particular time. The brick which Brewer threw did not strike the road, but apparently did strike the windshield of plaintiff’s car and passed through the same, striking him. A brick was found in the car after the accident. The evidence and the circumstances force the conclusion that the brick which caused the accident to the plaintiff was thrown by Curtis Brewer, and we interpret the jury’s-finding as establishing that fact.

Other circumstances not directly connected with the *333 accident, but following shortly thereafter, should be noted. When Cecil Lemma and Curtis Brewer found the brick in plaintiff’s car they removed the same and Lemma stamped it in the mud at the side of the road. After-wards, the brick was found and identified, and when asked to explain his apparent effort to conceal it, Lemma said he was “Just nervous and scared. It was the first thing that popped into my mind”, and, referring to the same brick, “Well, when I saw it I had a good idea where it came from”. It appears, however, that when Lemma and Brewer were asked about this brick they freely disclosed what had been done and returned to the scene of the accident with a member of the State Police, and located and identified the brick. It appears, also, that when the four boys who were on the rear of the truck were questioned by the State Police the night of the accident they were evasive and non-committal, particularly Brewer. His explanation of his conduct was “Well, I was afraid of what they would do to me for throwing the brick.”

The declaration charges that the truck was improperly loaded. There is some conflict as to the manner of loading and as to whether or not there were side boards. Taking the evidence as a whole, it fails to establish that the manner in which the truck was loaded contributed in any way to the accident; it likewise fails to establish that the brick which struck plaintiff’s car was propelled in any manner other than that used by Curtis Brewer.

On this evidence the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff against the Lemmas and Curtis Brewer. In doing so, it necessarily found that the brick which caused the accident'was thrown by Curtis Brewer, and if it was thrown by him, all other claims and conjectures in connection therewith are necessarily eliminated. There is nothing in the evidence even remotely connecting Brewer with the accident except his admitted act of throwing the brick; therefore, the conclusion that the jury found against Brewer for the reason it believed he threw the brick which caused the accident is inescapable. So finding, the jury must have further found that the evidence warranted a verdict against the Lemmas by reason of *334 their connection with the act of Brewer which was the direct cause of the accident.

The evidence fails to show that either of the three persons responsible for the operation of the truck, Cecil Lemma and the two Waddys, had direct knowledge of the act of Brewer in throwing the particular brick which caused the accident, or the throwing of any bricks while the truck was being operated on the highway. There is the direct and positive evidence of the three who sat in the cab seat of the truck that they knew nothing of the actions of the boys in the rear end of the truck. These statements are not contradicted either by evidences or the circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.E. 545, 119 W. Va. 330, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agsten-v-lemma-wva-1937.