Doe v. Simmers

154 S.E.2d 146, 207 Va. 956, 1967 Va. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 24, 1967
DocketRecord 6389
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 154 S.E.2d 146 (Doe v. Simmers) 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
Doe v. Simmers, 154 S.E.2d 146, 207 Va. 956, 1967 Va. LEXIS 162 (Va. 1967).

Opinion

Eggleston, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Pursuant to Code, § 38.1-381 (e) [1964 Cum. Supp.], Clara Lyons Simmers filed her motion for judgment against John Doe, an alleged unknown defendant, to recover damages for injuries received by her when the unknown defendant, as the operator of an unknown vehicle, negligently caused her to lose control of her car and run off the road and into a tree. Allstate Insurance Company, which carried the liability insurance on the car which the plaintiff was driving, was served with a copy of the motion for judgment. Answers filed on behalf of John Doe and Allstate denied that the accident was caused by an unknown vehicle and that an unknown motorist negligently caused the accident. The answers further alleged that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. There was a trial before a jury which resulted in a verdict of $12,000 in favor of the plaintiff against John Doe, upon which the trial court entered judgment. John Doe and Allstate have appealed.

Code, § 38.1-381 (e), as amended by Acts of 1964, ch. 477, p. 752, provides that: “If the owner or operator of any vehicle causing injury or damages be unknown, an action may be instituted against the unknown defendant as ‘John Doe’ * * * It further provides for service of process upon the insurance company issuing the policy covering the vehicle operated by the plaintiff by the delivery to it of a copy of the motion for judgment or other pleading.

The principal contention urged on behalf of John Doe and *958 Allstate in the present case is that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence in that it fails to show that the “owner or operator” of the vehicle which is alleged to have caused the accident and the plaintiff’s injuries was “unknown,” and that on the contrary it shows that the vehicle was owned by Concrete Products Company, a local concern, against whom the plaintiff’s claim should have been asserted. That issue was settled in favor of the plaintiff by the jury’s verdict and we find the evidence sufficient to support it.

The plaintiff testified that on April 2, 1965 she left her home in the Ellett community of Montgomery county sometime around noon in her husband’s automobile and was proceeding westwardly along Route 723, at a speed of about 15 miles per hour, when she met two trucks proceeding in the opposite direction. When the leading truck was alongside of the plaintiff’s car, the following vehicle which she described as a “red truck” undertook to pass the leading truck and in doing so came over into her lane of travel; that in the effort to avoid a collision with this truck she immediately applied her brakes, turned her car to the right and ran onto the dirt shoulder; that because the shoulder was wet she was unable to stop her car which continued along the shoulder and struck a culvert and a tree in the ditch on the right-hand side of the road. The plaintiff further testified that she was unable to identify either of the trucks or the drivers.

L. E. Noland, truck driver for the State Highway Department, was the first person to arrive at the scene after the impact. He testified that Mrs. Simmers was at first principally concerned with the damage to the car and repeatedly exclaimed, “[M]y husband will kill me for wrecking this car!” Finally, she told Noland that the accident had been caused by a “red truck” which crowded her off the road, but that she was unable to get its license number and did not know who the driver was.

A state trooper, K. L. Phipps, arrived at the scene shortly after the accident. He testified that the road there is straight and level, paved to a width of 16 feet, with a dirt shoulder on each side. He found marks which indicated that the plaintiff’s car had left the pavement and run a distance of about 150 feet along the shoulder until it went into the ditch and struck the tree. There were no skid marks from the car along the shoulder.

Phipps talked to Mrs. Simmers at the hospital on the day of the accident. He said that she told him that the vehicle which had *959 crowded her car off the road was a red truck with the large letters “CP” painted on the front. However, she said that she was unable to identify its driver. Phipps made an investigation to determine what trucks had been operating in the vicinity at about the time of the accident. He found that a tractor-trailer truck owned by Concrete Products Company of Christiansburg, marked with the letters “CP” had been operating in the vicinity that morning. Mrs. Simmers denied having told the trooper that the offending vehicle carried the identifying letters “CP”.

Felix J. Ward, an adjustor for Allstate, testified that he talked to Mrs. Simmers four days after the accident and she told him that “a big, red-faced trailer-tractor, dump-type vehicle with a ‘CP’ on its front forced her off the road” and that the vehicle was owned by Concrete Products Company. Mrs. Simmers categorically denied that she had told Ward this. Ward further testified that neither he nor his company was able to identify the truck or its owner or the driver of the vehicle which had been involved in the accident.

Jack Via, the general manager of Concrete Products Company, testified that after the plaintiff’s husband had complained to him that her car had been “forced off the road” by one of Concrete’s vehicles, he had inquired into the matter and found no information to indicate that one of Concrete’s trucks had been responsible for the accident.

Alfred J. Collins, who was operating one of Concrete’s trucks in the vicinity on the day of the accident, testified that while he saw the disabled Simmers vehicle he was not involved in the accident.

The employees of the Montgomery Limestone Corporation, a local concern, which was operating a rock quarry from which several trucks had been carrying crushed stone on the day of the accident, were unable to identify the vehicle or its driver which was involved in the accident.

Thus, we see that accepting the evidence on behalf of the plaintiff, as the jury have done, it is quite sufficient to support the finding that no truck owned and operated by Concrete Products Company was involved in the accident and that the “owner or operator” of the vehicle so involved was “unknown” to the plaintiff.

Complaint is made of the refusal of the trial court to grant Instruction B-l, which reads:

“The court tells the jury that this action is brought under a special Virginia statute which allows a motorist to sue an unknown person, and, as a first indispensable element of her case in which *960 there was no contact between vehicles, prove by a preponderance of the evidence that there was in fact another vehicle involved which directly caused the accident and that she was unable to identify the owner or operator of vehicle so involved.
“If, therefore, the plaintiff does not establish either one or both of these facts by a preponderance of the evidence, or if on the whole evidence it is just as probable that there was not another vehicle involved as that there was, or if it is just as probable that Mrs.

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154 S.E.2d 146, 207 Va. 956, 1967 Va. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-simmers-va-1967.