Collins v. Smith, Administratrix

96 S.E.2d 818, 198 Va. 778, 1957 Va. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1957
DocketRecord 4631
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 S.E.2d 818 (Collins v. Smith, Administratrix) 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
Collins v. Smith, Administratrix, 96 S.E.2d 818, 198 Va. 778, 1957 Va. LEXIS 139 (Va. 1957).

Opinion

Whittle, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Gregory David Smith and another infant, each four years of age, lost their lives by drowning in a water-filled excavation for a manhole in a street in Arlington County. It is charged that the accident occurred while the two children, together with others, were wading in surface water on the street after a storm, and fell into the excavation which was not provided with proper safeguards.

Jean W. Smith, mother of Gregory David Smith, qualified as administratrix of her son’s estate and filed a motion for judgment against Oliver S. Hough and Douglas Collins, employees of Arlington County. A jury trial resulted in a verdict of $13,000 for the plaintiff, upon which judgment was entered over the objection of the defendants. We granted the defendants a writ of error.

The record disclosed that in June, 1954, Arlington County was engaged in constructing a storm sewer in North Pollard Street. Defendant Oliver Hough was the supervisor in charge of construction, and defendant Douglas Collins was the foreman in charge of the laborers on the job. In the process of construction it was necessary to install manholes for which several excavations were made in the street. The storm sewer pipe was laid and covered between the manhole excavations, with the ends of the pipe left open to prevent the pipe, in the event of rain “from floating out of the ground”. The manhole excavations, left uncovered, were 42 inches wide, 4)4 to 5 feet deep, and 6 feet long.

On Saturday, June 26th, the day of the tragedy, between the hours of 5 and 6 p. m., there was a heavy rain and wind storm which caused the surface rainwater to pour into the storm sewer, filling the manholes. The water spread out over Pollard Street, thus rendering in *780 visible the outlines of the manhole excavations.

The mother of the deceased infant testified that after the rain ceased, about 6 p. m., she permitted Gregory and his sister to go out and play with other children. The Smiths lived in an apartment on Pollard Street, near the manhole which was the scene of the tragedy. Mrs. Smith did not see the child again until his body, along with that of the other child, had been pulled from the manhole about 8:30 p. m.

The motion for judgment alleged that Hough, supervisor in charge of construction, and Collins, the labor foreman, were charged with the duty of exercising reasonable care to see that the manhole in question was guarded by proper barricades both before and after the storm, and that their failure to perform their duty in this regard was the proximate cause of the death of plaintiff’s decedent.

The case was tried on the theory that if the defendants failed to use reasonable care to have proper barricades placed around the manhole or in the event they failed to use reasonable care to see that the barricades were properly maintained after the storm, then in either event they were liable. Whereas, if reasonable care was used in these matters the defendants were not liable. In argument before us these were conceded to be the issues.

Fifteen assignments of error were filed. However, the defendants abandoned some of these and the points involved on appeal were narrowed to four questions which will be treated in the order in which they were stressed in argument at bar, the first being: Was there any credible evidence of negligence on the part of the defendants?

The plaintiff, in order to maintain this issue, called the defendant Douglas Collins as an adverse witness. He testified that Hough was the supervisor of construction and that he was the foreman of labor on the job; that it was his duty to erect proper barricades around the excavations; that on Friday afternoon, June 25th, he supervised the barricading of this and other excavations which had been dug in the street; that these holes had been barricaded by erecting on each of the four sides thereof a barricade consisting of two upright pieces with a 12-foot 1" x 6" board between them, with lanterns on either end of each barricade.

Collins further testified that no work was done between Friday and Monday but that he returned to the scene of construction on Saturday morning to check the lights on the barricades and to refill the lanterns; that at that time the lanterns were burning and the bar *781 ricades were arranged so that it was impossible to walk into the hole without going over or under the barricades; that between 5 and 6 p. m. on Saturday there was a heavy wind and rain storm which caused the surface water from the rain to pour into the manholes of the storm sewer, filling up. .the manholes, causing the water to spread over Pollard Street and hiding the holes from view.

Collins further testified that the storm ceased about 6 p. m. and that the barricades had been blown down when he returned to the scene at 8:30 p. m. on the evening of Saturday, June 26th, after the drownings had occurred. He stated that he had not returned to the scene earlier because he was engaged in removing limbs and other debris from streets in the area which had been blown there by the storm.

Defendant Hough, also called by plaintiff as an adverse witness, testified that he was supervisor of construction and was familiar with the drainage area; that he left the hole open at both ends so that the pipe placed therein would not “float out” in case of rain. He stated that the barricades were erected on Friday afternoon but that he did not personally put up or check any of them either before or after the storm; that he instructed Collins, the foreman, to barricade the job “to make it safe * * * for the general public and the men that are working there themselves”; that he did not return to the scene of the tragedy on Saturday night after the storm.

Mrs. Helen Simpson, who lived in an apartment overlooking the scene, testified that barricades were not placed around the holes as stated by Collins; that there were only two barricades there prior to the storm, and that these were blown down by the wind.

Mrs. Marilyn Wright, another witness, also- contradicted Collins in regard to the placement of the barricades. She stated that she lived in the vicinity and that only one barricade had been placed near the manhole before the storm.

On cross-examination Richard M. Wirt, Director of Public Works for the county, conceded that defendants Hough and Collins were in charge of and responsible for erecting and maintaining barricades around the open excavations and that it was their duty to check the barricades before and after the storm.

The defendants introduced several witnesses who were experts in this-type of construction. They testified that the placement of four barricades around the hole, as described by Collins, was the usual and customary practice in the trade and considered adequate by con *782 struction engineers. On cross-examination they conceded that a lesser number of barricades would be considered inadequate.

In ruling upon the sufficiency of the evidence on defendants’ motion to strike, the trial court observed: “I think there was plenty of evidence that indicates there were only two barricades placed there.

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96 S.E.2d 818, 198 Va. 778, 1957 Va. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-smith-administratrix-va-1957.