Brooks v. Hufham

106 S.E.2d 631, 200 Va. 488, 1959 Va. LEXIS 130
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 26, 1959
DocketRecord 4845
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 106 S.E.2d 631 (Brooks v. Hufham) 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
Brooks v. Hufham, 106 S.E.2d 631, 200 Va. 488, 1959 Va. LEXIS 130 (Va. 1959).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Marshall Hufham, owner and occupant of a Buick automobile that was being driven by his brother, Leroy Hufham, was severely injured when that car collided with a Chevrolet sedan occupied by *489 Joseph Butler Pierce, Joseph Thomas Wiggins, and Early Anderson Whittaker. Leroy Hufham, Joseph Butler Pierce, owner of the Chevrolet car, and Joseph Thomas Wiggins died as a result of the collision.

A. S. White qualified as administrator on the estate of Joseph Thomas Wiggins, and Billy C. Brooks qualified as administrator on the estate of Joseph Butler Pierce. Marshall Hufham instituted action for damages against both administrators, and Early Anderson Whit-taker. The litigants will at times be referred to as plaintiff and defendants in accordance with their positions in the trial court. Plaintiff’s motion for judgment contained four counts. Count 1 alleged that Pierce was the driver of the Chevrolet car, Count 2 that Wiggins was the driver, Count 3 that Whittaker was the driver, and Count 4 alleged that all three were driving the Chevrolet “in furtherance and as a part of a joint venture and undertaking by them.”

Each administrator filed an affidavit, answer and grounds of defense denying that his decedent was operating the Chevrolet car individually or as agent for either of the other occupants, and Whit-taker filed a similar affidavit, answer and grounds of defense. It was thus incumbent upon plaintiff to prove who was the operator of the car and that the negligence of the operator was a proximate cause of the collision.

When the hearing of all evidence was concluded, the three defendants moved the court to strike the evidence on the grounds that it was insufficient to prove who was driving the Chevrolet car or to establish that negligence on the part of that driver, whoever he may have been, was a proximate cause of the collision. The motion was sustained as to Wiggins’ administrator and Whittaker. It was overruled as to Pierce’s administrator, yet in making that ruling the court expressed doubt as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a finding against that defendant. The case was put to the jury as to that defendant’s liability and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, upon which judgment was entered.

Numerous assignments of error were taken by the administrator but his chief assignments challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and judgment. They are to the effect that the evidence fails to prove who was driving the Chevrolet car when the accident occurred or that its driver was guilty of negligence that was a proximate cause of the collision.

*490 The accident occurred on November 30, 1956, about 9:30 p.m. on State route 134 in York county, Virginia. Route 134, a two-lane, hard-surfaced road runs generally in a westward direction from Sinclair Circle in the city of Hampton towards Yorktown and to its intersection with route 17. Rosetti’s Drive-In, a negro tavern and pool room, which has a very wide entrance and ample parking space between the building and highway, is situated on the north side of route 134 about six miles from Sinclair Circle. The collision occurred in front of Rosetti’s where the highway is straight and divided by a broken white line.

On the day of the accident Leroy Hufham was visiting plaintiff who lived in Portsmouth; when plaintiff ceased work about 3:30 p.m., they both took a “shot glass” of whiskey each, “had supper,” visited a friend and went to a burlesque in Norfolk. When they left the burlesque about 7:30, they decided to visit Floyd Lindsey, one of plaintiff’s fellow workers who lived in Yorktown.

Plaintiff had been driving his Buick car and did so until the ferry on which they crossed Hampton Roads docked at Old Point. There he asked his brother to drive, and plaintiff then went to sleep on the back seat of the automobile. When they arrived at Sinclair Circle on route 134, Leroy asked plaintiff for directions. He was instructed to proceed along route 134 and told by plaintiff to let him know when they reached route 17. Plaintiff said that he could not doze because his brother was talking to him, but he leaned back and tried to rest as his brother drove on beyond Langley Field. He described how he was aroused and what he heard and saw when the accident happened as follows:

“I was leaning against the back seat, sort of trying to rest and I heard him holler and brakes squealed and I opened my eyes and lights coming right at me and everything went black.”

After giving this account on his direct examination of what he was doing, heard and saw, he thereafter on cross-examination said that the speed of their car was “about forty-five, fifty, somewhere along there” miles an hour and that they were proceeding along the west bound lane toward Yorktown.

Whittaker was so seriously injured that he could remember nothing that happened after about nine o’clock that evening; he did not know who was driving, in which direction they were proceeding, or any particulars of the accident.

*491 After the impact plaintiff’s Buick came to rest on its side, headed east, on the shoulder of the west bound lane. The Chevrolet was turned upside down with its wheels in the air, off the hard surface of the road about thirty-four feet from the debris and near a telegraph pole toward the far western end of the wide entrance into Rosetti’s place.

Tommy Bay top, who was in Rosetti’s and heard but did not see the collision, testified that when he went out, Whittaker was lying on the ground between the left side of the upturned Chevrolet and the telegraph pole. He did not look into the automobile until after it was set on its wheels by turning it over to its right. He then observed that Wiggins was next to the right door on the front seat, and Pierce was leaning up against him with “his head laying on him” and both legs under the steering wheel. This witness also stated that the men were removed from the right side of the car because the door on the left was tight and could not be opened after the car was placed on its wheels.

Pierce lived with his father; Margaret Brown, his aunt, who lived on Bethel road in sight of the Pierce home, testified that about nine o’clock Pierce and his two companions left her home in the Chevrolet car. They had been there for only a short time. Her house is about .65 mile distant and toward Yorktown from Rosetti’s tavern. The movements of the car and its three occupants during the thirty minutes that elapsed after they left Margaret Brown’s and before the collision are unknown through Margaret Brown said that Pierce had dressed “to go down to the pool parlor he said.” She did not know who was driving the car when the three left, but in reply to questions, she said that they had not been drinking when they came to or left her home.

William Coles testified that Pierce had been in Rosetti’s fifteen or twenty minutes before the accident, that he had played a game of pool with him, and that he heard the crash shortly after Pierce left. However, Meredith Hines, the operator of Rosetti’s, stated he saw Pierce shooting pool about two and a half hours before the accident but had not seen him thereafter.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.E.2d 631, 200 Va. 488, 1959 Va. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-hufham-va-1959.