Brown, Adm'r v. Peters, Adm'r

202 Va. 382
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1961
DocketRecord Nos. 5166, 5167
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 202 Va. 382 (Brown, Adm'r v. Peters, Adm'r) 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
Brown, Adm'r v. Peters, Adm'r, 202 Va. 382 (Va. 1961).

Opinion

202 Va. 382 (1961)

WILLIAM (BILL) BROWN, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF JOHN BROWN, DECEASED
v.
GRANDVILLE E. PETERS, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF DOUGLAS LEE PETERS, DECEASED. DOUGLAS LEE PETERS, DECEASED, ET AL.

Record Nos. 5166, 5167.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

January 16, 1961.

Present, Eggleston, C.J., and Spratley, Buchanan, Whittle, Snead and

1. Douglas Lee Peters was killed while riding as a passenger in a car driven by defendant Ayers when that vehicle collided with that of John Brown, who was also killed. The collision occurred at night on a three-lane highway, at its intersection with a side road. Brown stopped in the center lane, gave a hand signal for a left turn and pulled into the path of the approaching Ayers car. This latter vehicle was traveling at a speed over 100 miles per hour according to the testimony of one of the passengers in it, a partial deaf mute named Fred Martin. The jury rendered verdicts against both defendants. On appeal Ayers complained that his counsel was not permitted to ask Martin if he had not stated to a man (identified as the insurance adjuster for Brown's insurance carrier) that Ayers' speed was between 50 and 60 miles per hour. This was not error, however, for such evidence was admissible only for the purpose of impeachment, and Martin had before the jury admitted making such prior inconsistent statements and had explained this fact in a fashion evidently satisfactory to the jury.

2. An instruction offered by Brown's administrator to the effect Brown, in making his left turn, could assume Ayers would obey the speed limit was correctly refused since it took no note of Brown's statutory duty to keep a reasonable lookout for oncoming vehicles approaching in plain view.

3. The jury's decision that plaintiff's decedent was not contributorily negligent was conclusive on this issue.

4. Hearsay evidence concerning advice given Fred Martin by his brother not to reveal the true speed of the Ayers' car was correctly refused admission.

5. Though Ayers' counsel complained because his argument to the jury had been limited to 25 minutes, the matter was one within the trial court's discretion according to the facts of the particular case. In the instant case, no prejudice was shown.

6. The jury was fully justified in concluding that the gross negligence of Ayers and the concurring negligence of Brown were the contributory proximate causes of the accident.

Error to judgments of the Clrcuit Court of Amherst county. Hon. C. G. Quesenbury, judge presiding. The opinion states the case.

Henry M. Sackett, Jr. (Williams, Robertson & Sackett, on brief), for plaintiff in error, William (Bill) Brown, Administrator.

William Rosenberger, Jr. (William B. Kizer; Perrow & Rosenberger, on brief), for plaintiff in error, Ernest William Ayers.

Paul Whitehead (J. Frank Shepherd, on brief), for defendants in error, Grandville E. Peters, Administrator, Et Al.

SPRATLEY

SPRATLEY, J., delivered the opinion of the court.

Grandville E. Peters, administrator of the estate of Douglas Lee Peters, deceased, instituted this proceeding against William (Bill) Brown, administrator of the estate of John Brown, deceased, and Ernest William Ayers by motion for judgment to recover damages for the death of his decedent, resulting from the collision of an automobile operated by John Brown with an automobile operated by Ayers, in which Douglas Lee Peters was a passenger. Plaintiff alleged *384 that the death of his decedent was due to the gross negligence of Ayers and to the concurrent contributing negligence of John Brown.

Each defendant filed a response. Ayers denied that he was guilty of gross negligence or any negligence, which proximately caused or contributed to the death of Peters, and the administrator of John Brown denied that his decedent was guilty of any negligence constituting a contributing proximate cause. Ayers further charged that Douglas Lee Peters was guilty of contributory negligence.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants and judgment was entered accordingly. On respective petitions of the defendants, we granted to them writs of error.

There were some conflicts in the evidence; but since the jury resolved all such conflicts in favor of the plaintiff, the evidence will be stated in the light most favorable to the latter.

Douglas Lee Peters, 15 years of age, was killed while traveling as a guest in a 1956 Ford automobile sedan owned and operated by Ernest William Ayers, 19 years of age, when the Ayers' car collided with a 1949 Ford automobile operated by John Brown. The collision occurred about 11:00 p.m., March 7, 1959, on U.S. Highway 29, a hard surfaced road, near Monroe, Virginia, where Highway 29 is intersected on the eastern side by secondary State Highway 671. The weather was clear and the roadway dry. The headlights of both cars were burning.

Highway 29 is a three-lane roadway in the area of the accident, approximately 30 feet in width, and runs in a straight line on an ascending grade about 1190 feet south of the intersection, and in a straight line on an ascending grade about 1050 feet north to the crest of a hill. At the time of the collision, Ayers was proceeding in a northerly direction downgrade. He was accompanied by young Peters and E. W. Woody, Jr., on the front seat of his car, and by Henry Shrader and Fred A. Martin, each 20 years of age, in the rear seat. John Brown, operating the 1949 Ford, with his wife and her sister as passengers, was proceeding in a southerly direction downgrade on Highway 29. He had entered that highway from a side road on the east about 200 to 300 feet from its intersection with Route 671. Upon entering Highway 29, he traveled first in its southbound lane, then moved into the center lane and proceeded slowly a short distance to the intersection, stopped briefly in the intersection, then began to make a left turn across the northbound lane of Route 29, *385 in which the Ayers' car was traveling, and his vehicle was immediately struck on its right side by Ayers' car.

The collision occurred with such force that both automobiles were completely demolished. Fragments of each were scattered over a wide area. Douglas Lee Peters and Woody, occupants of the Ayers' car, and John Brown and the other two passengers in his car were killed. Ayers and the two other youths in his car were injured.

The actual point of impact was in the southern side of the intersection, in the northbound traffic lane of Route 29. The Brown car was knocked backwards 81 feet north of that point on the east side of Route 29, and headed west diagonally across that highway. The Ayers' car traveled a distance of 167 feet after the impact, and stopped north of the point of collision on the west side of the highway, headed south. One of the wheels of the Brown car was torn off and hurled upgrade a distance of 142 feet, striking a house off of the side of the highway with such force that an imprint of the tire was left on the building. The tire came off the wheel and landed in the yard about 5 feet away.

Fred A. Martin, a deaf mute, testified through an interpreter, who had taught him in a school for the deaf and blind. Martin is not totally deaf or totally mute, he can hear a little, and can speak a few audible words. His sight is unaffected. He can read lips well, understands hand signals, and, at times, while testifying responded to spoken questions with articulate words.

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