Cavender v. Cline Ice Cream Co.

131 S.E. 862, 101 W. Va. 3, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 131
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1926
Docket5419
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 131 S.E. 862 (Cavender v. Cline Ice Cream Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cavender v. Cline Ice Cream Co., 131 S.E. 862, 101 W. Va. 3, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 131 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Miller, Judge:

In this action plaintiff recovered in the trial court a verdict and judgment for $6,5.00.00 damages for personal injuries alleged to have been the result of the negligence of defendant’s servant, the driver of its automobile.

*5 The declaration alleges that defendant, “through and by its servants, carelessly, negligently, unlawfully and wrongfully ran and drove its said automobile at a great rate of speed and with great force of violence against the front or side of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding and struck said automobile in which plaintiff was riding a very violent and severe blow with its said automobile and knocked the automobile in which plaintiff was riding over a steep embankment, ’ ’ whereby she sustained the injuries complained of.

The declaration sets out plaintiff’s theory of the case; while the defendant contends that the driver of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding as a passenger, by his own carelessness and negligence, drove his automobile from the road, or so near the edge thereof that it slipped off, causing the injuries complained of.

The refusal of the trial court to instruct the jury to find for defendant, is assigned as error. This instruction was based on defendant’s theory that negligence on the part of defendant’s servant was not proved; and that the accident was wholly due to the negligence of the driver of the car in which plaintiff was riding.

The car in which plaintiff was a passenger was owned and driven by one Clarence Mudd. The occupants of the car were the plaintiff, Mr. Mudd, Mrs. Adams, who was plaintiff’s daughter, and Mrs. Adams’ little girl. Mr. Mudd, Mrs. Adams, and the plaintiff testified positively that defendant’s car struck their automobile and drove or shoved it from the road. They all say that Mudd stopped his car before it was struck. The cars were moving in opposite directions. Mudd gives as his reason for stopping, that he did not think there was room for the two cars to pass at the point where it appeared they would meet; though there was evidence that the road was 150 inches wide at the point where his car left it. The evidence tends to show that the combined width of the two cars was not over 122 inches. Plaintiff testified: “When we came in sight of the car, it was coming at a really fast rate of speed, a wild rate, rather. * * * I thought he was going to stop there. Instead of doing that he ' came right straight on. Mr. Mudd hollered at him when he came out *6 there. He did not strike the front of our car; he ground in between. Really, there wasn’t room to get through. I think if the jury would measure, they would see that there wasn’t room. The car scraped our car and as they went on' it turned us completely over. * * * They came along and struck our car. * * * He came along and pushed o.ur side over. * * * All I know is that some part of the car did come in contact with our car and ground and pushed and started us over the hill.” Mudd testified that he was driving in the middle of the road when he first saw defendant’s car approaching; that he turned to the right, to within about sis inches of the edge of the road; that when he saw there was not room for the cars to pass, he threw his car into the road, “about eight inches or possibly five, and stopped”; that “as their car came facing me, and their car started to pass, I said something about, ‘What are you fellows doing.’ Just then my car gave a lurch just like a giant had pushed it over and turned it upside down.” Mrs. Adams testified: “There was not a head-on collision, but it seemed to me, thinking it over right away, — it seems to me that they seemed to strike a slight stroke. This car was going like this on the road, going very rapidly, and perhaps a light tap here. Then just a grinding and shoving in between and the dragging on the car.”

Defendant’s driver'and its other employee riding with him both say that Mudd’s car did not stop; and that while they were forced to run into the ditch against the bank at the side of the road, their car did not touch Mudd’s car, but in passing left a space of twelve to eighteen inches between the ears. Keffer, defendant’s driver, testified that he was going about five miles ah hour, and that Mudd’s car was making between five and ten miles.

In view of the character of this evidence it was, of course,for the jury to say whether there was any contact between the cars. But defendant’s counsel contend that it would be a physical impossibility for a Ford roadster to “crowd” a Hupmobile roadster, weighing twice as much, from the road, if the latter was standing still at the time. The testimony of plaintiff and Mrs. Adams is that defendant’s car was traveling “at a fast rate of speed” at the time of the accident; *7 and altbotigh their evidence is to the effect that defendant’s car struck Mudd’s car on its side and in passing crowded or pushed it from the road, we cannot conceive by what line- of reasoning we would have to conclude that it would be impossible for defendant’s car to shove the other car far enough on the earth road to cause it to fall over the embankment, considering all the facts in evidence. Three witnesses swear positively that the accident occurred in that manner. A question of fact was raised by the evidence, one to be determined by the jury and not by the court from any known law of physics.

In 1 Moore on Facts, section 150, it is said: “So frequently do unlooked-for results attend the meeting of. interlacing forces, that courts, in such eases, should not indulge in arbitrary deductions from physical law and fact, except when they appear to be so clear and irrefutable that no room is'left for the entertainment, by reasonable minds, of any other. * * * An appellate court will not set aside a verdict based on the testimony of witnesses which can reasonably be reconciled with the physical facts, notwithstanding the court may believe the weight of the physical evidence opposes that given by the witnesses.” See, also, the numerous cases cited by the text writer above quoted from. But here we do not find that the physical facts oppose plaintiff’s evidence, or her theory that Mudd’s car was shoved from the road.

And we are asked to hold as a matter of law that the proximate cause of the accident was the alleged crowded condition of Mudd’s car; that it was negligence’for three adult persons to ride in a seat 38 inches wide. The jury had before them the weight of each of the passengers in the car, together with all the other circumstances attending the accident, and it was for them to say whether or not the manner in which the car was loaded contributed to the accident.

Defendant introduced with the evidence of Keffer, its driver, some Kodak pictures taken by him a week or ten days after the- accident, at the place where it occurred, showing two automobiles standing side by side on the road. The court limited the use of these pictures to showing the surface appearance of the road, and the natural surroundings, but per-r *8 mitted defendant to prove the width of the road at that point and the width of the two cars involved1 in the accident. Defendant insists that the photographs should have been admitted for the purpose of showing that the cars could pass at that point.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 S.E. 862, 101 W. Va. 3, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cavender-v-cline-ice-cream-co-wva-1926.