Bryant v. Fox's

116 S.E. 459, 135 Va. 296, 1923 Va. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 116 S.E. 459 (Bryant v. Fox's) 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
Bryant v. Fox's, 116 S.E. 459, 135 Va. 296, 1923 Va. LEXIS 15 (Va. 1923).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

There was a collision between a motor truck owned by the plaintiff in error (hereinafter called the defendant), and a motorcycle driven by Pox, which resulted in his death. The defendant in error (hereinafter called the plaintiff) qualified as Pox’s administrator and moved for judgment, alleging that the death of his intestate was due to the defendant’s negligence.

Upon the first trial the jury failed to agree, but upon the second found a verdict for the plaintiff upon which the judgment here complained of was entered.

One assignment is that the trial court erred in refusing to sustain a motion to set aside the verdict upon the ground that it was contrary to the law and the evidence and unsupported by the evidence. '

The facts material for the consideration of this assignment, bearing in mind that the verdict has determined all the substantial conflicts in the testimony, are these:

The truck of the defendant was being driven westwardly over a bridge which crossed a number of railroad tracks, and in attempting to pass a horse and buggy being driven in the same direction, the driver changed the course of the machine by driving on the left of the vehicle in front of him, towards the south, and while the truck was thus on the southern side of the roadway, and within a distance variously estimated from four to eight feet from the southern edge of it, collided with a motorcycle which was being driven eastwardly by the plaintiff’s intestate. The roadway of the bridge was twenty-eight feet six inches wide, was covered with planks laid diagonally, the ends of which joined in the center of the [300]*300roadway and thus clearly defined such center line. The buggy which was about five feet wide was close to the north side of the bridge. The truck was about six feet in width. It thus appears that it was possible for both of these vehicles to travel side by side upon the northern half of the bridge (which was fourteen feet three inches in width) and could travel in perfect safety by using two or three feet over the center of the roadway and towards the south side of it.

The defendant denied all negligence, claiming that as the driver of the truck attempted to pass the buggy just after he had swerved the machine to the left for this purpose, an engine drawing a train which was then passing under the bridge suddenly emitted a great cloud of smoke which was so dense as to obscure the vision, and that almost immediately after this the motorcycle was driven against the machine with great force because of the reckless speed at which it was moving.

There were several witnesses, who were within sight of the scene of the collision, who disagreed with the defendant’s witnesses as to the density of this smoke cloud or screen, and their testimony indicated that there was nothing unusual in the density of the smoke upon the bridge and that it disappeared quickly. The outstanding fact upon which the jury doubtless based its conclusion was that the motor truck was on the southern half of the drive way traveling west, while it should have been as far to the right (north) as was reasonably practicable, while the motorcycle, traveling east, was well over upon the southern side of the roadway where it properly should have been.

Much emphasis is placed by the attorney for the defendant upon the smoke screen, and while that circumstance is invoked as excusing the driver of the motor truck, he alludes to the same circumstance as a reason [301]*301for condemning the driver of the motorcycle. If the smoke arose suddenly (and the defense is based upon this view) then its suddenness obstructed the vision of the driver of the motorcycle as much as it obstructed the vision of the driver of the truck. Under the evidence, however, the jury might have fairly concluded that there was nothing unusual about the smoke, and that it was not the proximate cause of the casualty. If it was there before the driver of the truck began his effort to drive around the buggy and he was then unable to see through it, his negligence is manifest, while if it came up suddenly the deceased had no opportunity to stop or reduce his speed. Considering the evidence as a whole, there is evidence to justify the jury in concluding that whether his vision was obscured or not, the negligence of the defendant’s driver is manifest because at the time of the accident his machine was being driven diagonally upon the south (his left) side of the road with its front wheel four, six, or at most eight feet distant therefrom when there was no necessity for occupying such a position in passing the buggy. This negligence being manifest, the resulting question is, whether the plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of contributory negligence. This is a fairly debatable question. He was, however, on that part of the roadway which he had a right to believe was clear of vehicles approaching from the opposite direction, and as the evidence of the defendant shows that the collision was sudden and unanticipated, this question as to whether the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence is one about which fair minded men may fairly differ.

These being the circumstances the issue presented is an issue of fact and therefore the conclusion of the jury will not be disturbed here unless there be some reversible error in the procedure.

[302]*302This leads us to consider some of the other errors ■which are assigned, among them the overruling of a demurrer to the notice of motion upon the ground that the negligence is insufficiently charged. The allegation in the notice reads, that the defendant’s employee “did negligently and recklessly run into and collide with one John A. Fox, now deceased, who was riding a motorcycle on the overhead bridge on Washington street extended, near the city of Alexandria, Virginia, * *.”

However it may have been theretofore, since the Code of 1919 became effective such an allegation is sufficient, for the last clause of Code, section 6118, expressly prohibits a court from sustaining a demurrer “to a declaration alleging negligence of defendant because the particulars of the negligence are not stated, but such particulars may be demanded by the defendant under section six thousand and ninety-one.” The note of the revisors is to the effect that this clause is new and purposely changed the former rule.

The defendant availed himself of his right to call for a bill of particulars. The plaintiff in response thereto alleged a violation of the rules of the road, promulgated by the Highway Commission, in that (1) “defendant’s employee attempted to pass to the left of the horse and buggy in front of him, going in the same direction, at a time when the way ahead was not clear of approaching traffic, that is to say, for three hundred feet; and (2) at a time when the deceased, John A. Fox, was in the act of meeting and passing said horse and buggy.” He also alleged a violation of Code, section 2143, in that “defendant’s employee drove his truck to the left of the roadway at a time when the roadway was not plainly visible for three hundred feet, without allowing ample room for the passage of the deceased’s motorcycle.”

[303]*303We are urged, in the application of the evidence in this case to this bill of particulars, in view of this statute and the rule of the road relied on, to hold that the plaintiff has failed to show a case which entitles him to recover, and that the court should have so instructed the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.E. 459, 135 Va. 296, 1923 Va. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-foxs-va-1923.