Colonial Motor Freight Line, Inc. v. Nance

221 S.E.2d 132, 216 Va. 552, 1976 Va. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1976
DocketRecord 741177 and 741188
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 221 S.E.2d 132 (Colonial Motor Freight Line, Inc. v. Nance) 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
Colonial Motor Freight Line, Inc. v. Nance, 221 S.E.2d 132, 216 Va. 552, 1976 Va. LEXIS 166 (Va. 1976).

Opinions

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Kathleen L. Nance recovered a judgment against Colonial Motor Freight Line, Inc. and Glosson Motor Lines, Inc. for damages sustained by her in an automobile accident. A writ of error was granted the appellant companies limited to a consideration of whether their negligence, or that of either, was causally related to the accident.

The accident occurred on March 11, 1973, about 5:30 p. m. on U. S. Route 360 at a point approximately five miles west of Richmond. The highway consists of two eastbound and two westbound lanes divided by a median strip. There is also an additional eastbound lane which is used for making left turns. The road has a black asphalt [553]*553surface and is straight and level. The weather was cloudy at the time, but the road was dry. The vehicles involved, which were all proceeding east, were: (1) a 1971 Chevrolet Impala four-door sedan, which was being driven by Mrs. Nance, and which was pulling a 19 foot long 1973 Cheetah travel camper; (2) a tractor-trailer truck owned by Colonial Motor Freight Line, Inc., and driven by Sherman Lee Davis; and (3) a tractor-trailer truck owned by Glosson Motor Lines, Inc., and driven by Dossie Eugene Soles. Present, but not involved, were two other tractor-trailer trucks owned by Glosson, and a Datsun automobile operated by John L. Ogle, III.

Prior to the accident the vehicles were positioned as follows: The Nance vehicles were in the outside or driving lane of the highway. Behind her and in the same lane was the Colonial truck, followed by the other two Glosson trucks, operated by A. C. Legrand and Howard Wyatt, Jr. In the passing or inside lane was the Glosson truck operated by Soles, and behind Soles was Ogle. The Colonial truck pulled over into the passing lane, passed the Nance vehicles and proceeded ahead. After Colonial passed, Mrs. Nance lost control of her vehicles. They wrecked and overturned and, while rolling down the highway directly in front of the Glosson truck driven by Soles, were struck by this truck.

The accident was investigated by Chesterfield Officer T. R. Gleason who took numerous pictures and observed the various markings on the highway. He testified that “[t]he automobile and camper dropped off the right-hand side of the roadway . . .”, at a point where there is an eight inch drop to the shoulder. He said that “there was a faint trail where the camper went off, and just after it went off it immediately came back on and went back across the roadway at more or less a 45-degree angle” before overturning. He estimated that it was 150 feet from the point where the camper came back on the highway to where it ultimately came to rest. He found the car and camper upside down, blocking the entire passing and left turn lanes. Gleason further testified that tire marks made by the Glosson truck (Soles) also extended 150 feet, and indicated that its driver had his brakes “tied down intensely”. He said that the impact between the Glosson truck and the Nance vehicles occurred in the extreme left lanes; that the marks showed that the Glosson driver was pulling to the left; that the Nance car was struck by Glosson while it “was up on its side, in the process of turning over”; and that the imprint of the car’s left front tire and rim was found in the radiator of the Glosson truck.

[554]*554Colonial’s driver Davis said that he was operating a tractor-trailer directly behind the Nance vehicles at a speed of 50 to 55 miles per hour. He said that a Glosson truck came up in the passing lane and that its driver, Soles, apparently observing that the Nance vehicles were moving slowly and that Davis would be boxed in, gave Davis a signal to pass. Davis said that Soles “flashed his lights for me” and that when Davis was about three or four car lengths from the camper he pulled into the passing lane and passed the Nances. Davis testified that when he went by Mrs. Nance the Glosson truck “was a good safe distance behind me”, estimated by him to be two to three lengths of a “rig”, which he said is 55 feet long.

Mrs. Nance, who was 56 years old, testified that she and her husband had pulled the camper to Burkeville to a funeral because they “wanted to get driving experience”. The camper had been purchased two weeks prior to the accident and March 11th was only the second time she had ever driven the car with the camper attached. She said that her speed was 45 miles per hour; that she had been instructed to remember “never to slam on the brakes and never to jerk the wheel”; and that, since the camper was wider than a car, she was also told to watch “through the side view mirror to be sure that I was within the white line”. Her complete explanation at trial of how the accident occurred is as follows:

“Well, I was driving along, and the first trailer zipped past me. I would say he was going 60 to 65 miles an hour. He passed me like I was standing still, and I felt my trailer swerve, and I looked in my side view mirror and saw this other trailer coming up on me, and my husband reached over and very gently squeezed my wrists, and that’s all I remember.”

On the night of the accident Mrs. Nance was interviewed in the hospital at a time when she was upset and had been sedated. Officer Gleason testified that she told him:

“I saw that truck up beside me and I must have jerked the wheel, I remember my husband putting his hand beside me to steady me—it was the second time I had pulled the camper trailer. I pulled last Sunday with no trouble.”

In a discovery deposition Mrs. Nance’s account of the accident was:

“Well, that’s what happened, the tractor-trailer passed me at a high rate of speed, my camper swerved, another trailer came up [555]*555on me and my husband reached over and grabbed my arm, and that’s all I know.”

The plaintiff never claimed that the operation of her vehicles was affected by wind pressure from the passing Colonial truck, or that the truck veered over into her lane. From Mrs. Nance we have only the bare statement that the Colonial truck passed and that she felt her camper swerve, and her further statement that the Colonial truck had passed and gotten by her when she first noticed the swaying. She was asked: “And that was the point, as I understand it, that the next recollection you have is your husband pressing his hand on your hand, is that correct?” She replied: “No, as the trailer began to swerve, immediately as the first tractor-trailer passed, the camper began to swerve, and I looked in my side view mirror and saw this other tractor-trailer right upon me, and I felt the force, and that’s when my husband reached over.”

Mrs. Nance remembers nothing of what occurred after her husband grabbed, squeezed or touched her arm.

Regarding the location of the Glosson truck when Mrs. Nance felt the swerve, it was her “guess” that she saw the nose of the truck in her side view mirror, “right by my camper”. The plaintiff made no complaint of the speed of the Glosson truck.

Glosson’s driver, Soles, testified that he was driving in the passing lane of Route 360 with the intention of passing the Colonial truck when he noticed the car and camper in front of Colonial. Soles said that had he then passed Colonial he would have boxed its driver in behind a slow moving vehicle, so he gave the Colonial driver “the light”, and the latter came out into the left or passing lane and passed the camper.

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Colonial Motor Freight Line, Inc. v. Nance
221 S.E.2d 132 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.E.2d 132, 216 Va. 552, 1976 Va. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colonial-motor-freight-line-inc-v-nance-va-1976.