Bogstad v. Hope

100 S.E.2d 745, 199 Va. 453, 1957 Va. LEXIS 210
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 2, 1957
DocketRecord 4709
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 100 S.E.2d 745 (Bogstad v. Hope) 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
Bogstad v. Hope, 100 S.E.2d 745, 199 Va. 453, 1957 Va. LEXIS 210 (Va. 1957).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

John B. Hope, hereinafter called plaintiff, obtained a verdict for $25,000 against Duane E. Bogstad, hereinafter called defendant, for personal injuries sustained when he was struck at a street intersection in the city of Norfolk by an automobile operated by defendant. From judgment entered on the verdict, defendant appealed.

Errors assigned assert that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and the court erred in the giving and refusal of instructions.

[ 1 ] Summarized, the pertinent evidence follows:

Hampton Boulevard, which extends in a northerly and southerly direction, is the main traffic artery connecting the United States Naval Base to the north with downtown Norfolk to the south. It is about ninety-nine feet in width,, which includes an island, twenty-seven feet wide in its center. To each side of the island there are three marked traffic lanes twelve feet in width for the use of south bound and north bound traffic. Convoy Escort Piers, a naval installation, is to the west of the boulevard, and the entrance to this area is over a wide, hard-surfaced street that intersects Hampton Boulevard from the west. The intersecting street from Convoy Escort Piers continues on through the island but does not extend to the east of the boulevard.

This intersection and the surrounding area are well lighted, and a traffic control device is suspended over the lanes devoted to south bound traffic where the hard-surfaced street intersects. The cycle of this lighting device is red to green to amber to red, and it displays lights to the north along the boulevard and lights to the west along the street to Convoy Escort Piers. In the intersection over the lanes devoted to north bound traffic, there is also a suspended traffic device which displays lights to the south and to the west.

*455 Plaintiff and his companion, Bobby L. Amey, enlisted men in the Navy, whose ship was tied up at Convoy Escort Piers, spent the evening of July 16, 1956, in downtown Norfolk. Shortly after midnight they returned by bus traveling northwardly on Hampton Boulevard. When they arrived at the bus stop on the east side of the boulevard opposite the entrance to Convoy Escort Piers, they alighted. According to their testimony, which is substantially the same, a number of other sailors were on the bus, and they alighted along with Hope and Amey. Plaintiff and Arney crossed the north bound traffic lanes of the boulevard to the island which extends northwardly from the intersection. They walked across the island to its western curb and to a point in line with a prolongation of the walk on the northern side of the street leading into Convoy Escort Piers. At that time several sailors whom they did not know had also alighted from the bus and were preceding them walking westwardly across the south bound lanes of the boulevard and nearing its western curb. Arney and Hope, when at the western edge of the island, looked at the traffic light and it was red for south bound traffic. They also looked to their right and saw defendant’s car about 250 to 300 feet away traveling southwardly in the outer or most westerly traffic lane. At that moment they stepped from the island and undertook to cross the south bound lanes of the boulevard. When they reached the eastern line of the center lane, they looked again to their right and saw that defendant’s car had turned from the outside lane and was coming in a somewhat southeasterly direction toward them and only about 100 feet away. Arney was probably the first to observe the proximity of defendant’s car for he exclaimed, “Look out,” and grabbed Hope’s arm. Both attempted to retrace their steps to the island but were struck by the vehicle when about six feet from the island curb.

Harvey Whitus, William Brown, and another, sailors returning to Convoy Escort Piers, were several feet behind Hope and Amey when the latter two stepped from the island and undertook to cross the boulevard. Whitus said that he saw three or four sailors ahead of Hope and Arney crossing the street and nearing the western curb. He noticed Hope and Arney “just after they were oif the curb” of the island “about half way across the first lane” and at that time the automobile was “about ten feet or so from them.” At the moment he saw the car he heard someone holler “Look out” and noticed that plaintiff and his companion “were in a scramble to get out of the *456 way of the car when he hit them.” He estimated the speed of the car at about thirty miles per hour and also said that it left skid marks of about twenty feet in the traffic lane next to the island, and the car stopped with its front “about at the end of the island.”

William Brown testified that while on the island, he heard someone exclaim “look out.” He saw Hope and Amey in the street about five or six feet from the island attempting to avoid the car which was a few feet from them in the lane next to the island. The skid marks left by the car he estimated to be about thirty feet in length.

W. O. McCoy, who was standing about ninety feet from the point of impact, heard “the squeaking of brakes and a thump like boys being struck.” He looked up immediately and noticed that the traffic light facing Convoy Escort Piers was then red. When he reached Hope and Arney, they were lying practically under the traffic light about ten feet in front of the car which left skid marks that he stepped off and said were twelve paces.

J. J. Williamson, a police officer who came to the scene, measured the automobile skid marks which he described as heavy and dark; he found them to be 64 feet in length, extending, at a slight angle from the center lane to the inside lane. Questioned about defendant’s' sobriety, he said that Bogstad stated to him “that he had had a few beers before he went on duty and also had a few beers when he got off duty” about twelve o’clock. He could smell a heavy odor of alcohol on his breath at the time.

T. L. Barker described Bogstad’s eyes as being somewhat blurred, his actions and speech as being “pretty jittery,” and said Bogstad “kept mumbling a few words and kept talking of being sorry”; he also thought he could smell the odor of alcohol on Bogstad’s breath.

W. L. Bordeaux testified that he noticed a skid mark angling slightly to the east in the lane next to the island, heard Bogstad say that he had been drinking about four o’clock when he went on duty and “after he got off duty he had had something to drink.” Bordeaux also said he “smelt a pretty strong odor of alcohol on his breath.”

M. J. Harris, who was the first city police officer at the scene, said that the defendant “had the odor of alcohol on his breath,” but he did not prefer any charge against him of “being under the influence of alcohol,” for he did not consider him drunk.

Bogstad, a baker in the United States Navy who also works at the Chief Petty Officers’ Club, left the club about twelve o’clock on the *457 night of July 16, 1956, to return to his home which is to the east of the boulevard and about a mile south of the intersection.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E.2d 745, 199 Va. 453, 1957 Va. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bogstad-v-hope-va-1957.