American Tobacco Co. v. Harrison

27 S.E.2d 181, 181 Va. 800, 1943 Va. LEXIS 229
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 11, 1943
DocketRecord No. 2690
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 27 S.E.2d 181 (American Tobacco Co. v. Harrison) 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
American Tobacco Co. v. Harrison, 27 S.E.2d 181, 181 Va. 800, 1943 Va. LEXIS 229 (Va. 1943).

Opinion

Browning, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This controversy grows out of an automobile accident. The parties will be generally referred to as they were related in the trial court, though sometimes as individuals.

The plaintiff is the nine year old daughter of Mrs. Mildred Harrison, and she lived with her mother and grandmother at 1615 Park Avenue, in the city of Richmond. Her grandmother is Mrs. Caroline Powell Williams. The home is situated on the south side of the Avenue between Lombardy Street on the east and Vine Street on the west.

The accident happened on March 11, 1941, at about 1:00 o’clock p. m. The plaintiff was returning to Collegiate School, which is on Monument Avenue, after having had lunch at her home during the mid-day recess. She was struck by a truck belonging to the defendant, the American Tobacco Company, which ■ was being operated by the defendant, John P. Bradshaw, Jr., an employee of the company. The child was permanently injured. Bradshaw was driving eastwardly on the south side of the street. He was traveling at a lawful rate of .speed. His automobile was mechanically in good order and he brought it to a stop almost immediately after the impact. The sole question at issue is whether he was negligent in not keeping a proper lookout, which would have enabled him to observe the child and avoid striking her.

There were two suits. One brought by the mother of the child alleging damages on account of liabilities for hospital, doctors and nurses charges, etc., and the other by the infant, by her next friend, for damages sustained by reason of her injuries. These suits were consolidated and tried together. There were two trials, the first resulted in a disagreement of the jury. In the second there was a verdict in favor of the defendants in the mother’s case and in the child’s case there was a verdict for $4,000.00 in favor of the [803]*803plaintiff. Both verdicts were approved by the trial court. We are now concerned only with the latter verdict and judgment.

As we have so frequently said, the prevailing party has the right to have the facts stated and considered in the light most favorable to him.

The defendant, Bradshaw, turned in to Park Avenue from Vine Street and was proceeding east on the south side when the plaintiff ran from her home, 1615, down the steps and down the sidewalk and then into the street about 12 feet where he struck her.

The defense is threefold. First, that Bradshaw’s vision was obscured by the presence of parked automobiles at or near the point of the accident, which prevented him from seeing the plaintiff, second, that the plaintiff herself was negligent in running into his automobile, and third, that the negligence of the plaintiff’s mother in permitting the child, in violation of the law, to cross the street between intersections and that such negligence is imputed to the child.

The first point of defense, we think, comprehends the important feature of the case. The evidence is conflicting as to whether there were parked cars so located as to have had the effect attributed to them.

J. M. Dolan, a witness introduced by the plaintiff, was driving west on Park Avenue and had gone about ten feet west of Lombardy Street, which was in the opposite direction to that of Bradshaw. He saw the child descend the steps and pursue her way to the point of the accident. He said his eyes were focused on her from the time he first saw her to the moment of the tragedy. She ran all of the way. He saw her hurtled in the air. He said when he started from Lombardy Street west his was the only car in that block of Park Avenue, that there was a car parked west of the child on the south side of the street. Mrs. Katherine Bemiss McGuire, who lives at 1622 Park Avenue, diagonally across the street from the plaintiff’s home, said that she was looking from the window of the second floor front room of [804]*804her house, the sound of the impact having attracted her attention, and she saw the child on her hands and knees in the street; that there was a parked car in front of Bishop Denny’s house, which is number 1619, on the south side of the street and she only noticed the one car on that side of the street. It will be noted that Bishop Denny’s house is on the southwest corner of the block, where Vine Street intersects with Park Avenue, at which intersection Bradshaw turned east and which is approximately 168 feet from the point of the accident.

Gaynelle Christian, a domestic servant, employed in the Tilghman home at 1612 Park Avenue, was looking from the living room front window to watch a Tilghman child which she was minding, and she saw the plaintiff come out of the door of her home. This witness moved 8 or 10 feet to the front door to speak to her charge when she heard a sound as though something were falling on the pavement and she saw the child lying in the gutter with her head towards the curb between numbers 1611 and 1613. She saw her picked up and put in the defendant’s truck and then she walked across to the Harrison home to inform the child’s grandmother of the accident. This question was asked her:

Q. “Will you please state whether or not as you crossed from 1612 to 1615 there was any car parked in the space you walked up to 1615 on the southern side of Park Avenue? ”
A. “No sir, there was absolutely nothing because I couldn’t have gone across the street at the angle I started if there had been a car right there because I would have to see it.”

Later she said, when asked if she saw any car parked west of 1615, that she did not remember seeing any.

Maud Pierce was a colored servant at the plaintiff’s home. She answered the door bell when the Christian woman rang it and she said that she was positive that no car or cars were parked in front of 1615 or on down the street.

[805]*805Now there was a definite conflict between this testimony and that of the defendants on the very crucial fact of the presence of parked cars and their location.

The defendants urge that the witness, Nuckols, a laundry truck driver, testified positively that there was a parked car in front of 1615 or where the child was struck and that there was one down close to the comer of Lombardy Street. His statement, however, “but it was a good vacant space between this car and the other car” impairs the strength of the testimony so far as the effect they attribute to it is concerned.

We are mindful also that the witness, Weldon Price, who was a servant in the Lewis boarding house, on the corner of Lombardy Street, looking obliquely from the dining room window on the Park Avenue side, said that there were three cars parked on the south side of Park Avenue and he fixes them in front of each other, one at 1611 and one at 1,613 and one he said was “almost up to Bishop Denny’s.”

We mention this testimony in some detail because counsel for the defendants insist so strenuously that there is only one way out of all this and that is the way he points out for the defendants, and which the jury just would not see. He urges that the evidence shows that the defendants were absolutely not guilty of any primary negligence. We must emphasize that the conflict which we have pointed out has been resolved by the jury in favor of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.E.2d 181, 181 Va. 800, 1943 Va. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-tobacco-co-v-harrison-va-1943.