Burkhammer v. Division of Highways

23 Ct. Cl. 55
CourtWest Virginia Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 6, 1999
DocketCC-95-307; CC-95-308
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 Ct. Cl. 55 (Burkhammer v. Division of Highways) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burkhammer v. Division of Highways, 23 Ct. Cl. 55 (W. Va. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

STEPTOE, JUDGE:

In each of these cases the claimant seeks an award from the Division of Highways (hereinafter the “State”), alleging that the State was negligent in the design, construction, and maintenance of the intersection, in Gilmer County, West Virginia, of two public roads, U.S. Route 33 and W. Va. 47, and that as a result of the State’s negligence, Okey Lowther was killed in a two-car collision, and his sister, Dora Talbott, received permanent injuries.

The Court ordered that the two cases be consolidated for hearing, which began on the 6th day of April, 1999, at Flatwoods, West Virginia, on the issue of liability only.

U.S. 33, broadly speaking, is a road which runs north and south in West Virginia, and W.Va. 47 runs east and west. The easterly end of W.Va. 47 is U.S. 33 so neither road crosses the other, and their meeting place might be termed a “T” intersection.

The intersection is in a rural area, but there are a country market and a filling station on the easterly side. U.S. 33 is the right of way road, with the pavement being 26 feet wide with a good base and shoulders and is asphalt covered with a double yellow line designating the middle of the paved area. W.Va. 47 is asphalt covered but is less wide.

The opening of W.Va. 47 into U.S. 33 is spacious, the intersection having been redesigned and reconstructed in 1983.

The accident took place at about 2:35 p.m. on Tuesday, the 22nd day of November, 1990. The pavements were slightly wet, but there was no evidence that [56]*56water on the surfaces of the roads was a factor in producing the collision. The air was clear except for a light rain; no other vehicles were involved in the accident.

The 1989 Pontiac LeMans, owned and operated by Mr. Lowther, and also occupied by Mrs. Talbott, who was seated on the right side of the front seat, had been approaching from the west, and the driver intended, upon entering the intersection, to make.a left turn into the northbound traffic lane of U.S. 33 and to proceed in a northerly direction towards Weston, their destination. The evidence preponderates that Mr. Lowther stopped where he was supposed to stop, near a “stop sign” in the southwest quadrant of the intersection, which was intended to bring eastbound drivers to a stop to look for other vehicles approaching the intersection on U.S. 33, from each direction, before entering the intersection.

At about the same time a 1975 Chevrolet Camaro, owned and operated by Charles K. Paxson (hereinafter “Paxson”), was proceeding southwardly on U.S. 33 at a speed of or slightly less than the posted speed limit of 55 miles per hour. His front seat passenger was his wife, and their infant daughter was in the back seat, well secured. He was not required by traffic signs to reduce his speed in the intersection.

There were no known eyewitnesses to the accident except for the drivers and the occupants of the two vehicles.

Shortly after the collision, Senior Trooper Michael Robinson, of the West Virginia State Police, arrived on the scene and became the investigating officer. The two damaged vehicles then were in the positions in which they had come to rest after the collision, and the Trooper was able to trace the movements of the two vehicles between the place of collision and the places at which each came to rest. He was also able to identify the point of impact of the two vehicles by some gouge marks in the surface of the road in the intersection, in the southbound traffic lane, probably near the center. He inspected the Lowther vehicle and determined that the point of initial impact was the left front of the vehicle; the point of initial impact of the Paxson vehicle was its front.

Neither driver was cited by Trooper Robinson, who, however, was not satisfied with Mr, Paxson’s statement that immediately before the accident he, Mr. Paxson, was driving between 50 and 55 miles per hour, and he later asked for the assistance and advice of an accident reconstructionist, Trooper Leonard Miller, a trained and qualified accident reconstructionist with three years experience, who testified at the hearing as an expert witness.

Trooper Miller, at some time before or after making his investigation at the scene of the accident, had an opportunity to examine the damaged Paxson car (the Lowther car was not available), and upon the basis of the measurements of its damaged sections, to give a professional opinion that at the time of its collision with the Lowther car, the speed of the Paxson car “could not have exceeded the posted 55 mile an hour [57]*57speed limit.”

Early in May 1991, Trooper Miller and Trooper Robinson met at the scene of the accident and made measurements of sight distances, from the point at the intersection at which drivers intending to enter U.S. 33 from W.Va. 47 actually stopped to determine whether any vehicles were approaching the intersection, on U.S. 33, from the north or from the south, and when it might be safe to enter U.S. 33. One trooper seated himself in his cruiser (#1), at that point, while the other trooper took his cruiser (#2), to a position on U.S. 33 north of the high point on a vertical curve in the surface of the pavement of U.S. 33, a position which was out of sight of the trooper in cruiser #1; then cruiser #2 was driven slowly southbound until the bank of lights on the roof of cruiser #2 was visible to the trooper in cruiser # 1, and the point of first visibility was determined to be 447.50 feet from the trooper in cruiser #1; cruiser #2 was driven southward and downward until its wheels were visible on the pavement; Trooper Miller cautioned, however, that the sight distance between the Lowther car and the Paxson car when the Paxson car first became partially visible to Mr. Lowther on the day of the accident would be a little less than 447.50 feet because of the bank of lights on top of cruiser #2, and opined, as did Lance Robson, hereinafter identified, the sight distance of Mr. Lowther was probably 430 feet.

Trooper Miller also measured the distance between the point at which the Lowther car was probably brought to a dead stop before entering U.S. 33, and the point of collision of the two cars on U.S. 33, and found said distance to be 38.33 feet; and he testified that it would have taken Mr. Lowther 1.9 seconds to go that distance from a dead stop, not counting reaction time.

Lance Robson, a registered professional civil engineer, from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, called by the claimants, and qualified before the Court as an expert in the fields of highway construction design and of accident reconstruction, visited the scene of the accident on December 6, 1993, and at the hearing of this case he testified that the area of U.S. 33 hereinbefore described as the vertical curve north ofthe intersection, but which he said should be called a vertical crest curve, was “a little bit lower or pretty much just on” the specification of the construction plans of 1982 ... and “The worst I found was that at one point it was a hundredth of a foot higher, so I concluded that the road had been built in accordance with the plans.” Mr. Robson used a photograph which he took probably on December 6,1993, from a point at the intersection northward where he testified drivers intending to enter U.S. 33 from W.Va. 47 would stop before entering U.S. 33, to look for approaching traffic on U.S. 33, northward toward the vertical curve on U.S. 33.

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Related

Winston v. United States
24 Ct. Cl. 198 (Court of Claims, 1889)

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23 Ct. Cl. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burkhammer-v-division-of-highways-wvctcl-1999.