Drudge v. Cooper

58 S.E.2d 878, 190 Va. 843, 1950 Va. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 1, 1950
DocketRecord 3646
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 S.E.2d 878 (Drudge v. Cooper) 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
Drudge v. Cooper, 58 S.E.2d 878, 190 Va. 843, 1950 Va. LEXIS 174 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Hudgins, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Bertha P. Drudge avers in her petition for this writ of error that the judgment of $2,500 she obtained against *845 Eleanor B. Cooper and others is grossly inadequate, and prays that the verdict be set aside, the judgment reversed and the case remanded for trial on. one issue only—the quantum of damages.

Two issues were presented to the jury: (1) Whether the defendants were guilty of actionable negligence. (2) What damages, if any, the plaintiff was entitled to recover.

Plaintiff’s testimony tends to establish that on August 15, 1948, she and her two children, Richard H. Perkins, Jr., Shirley Ann Perkins, 17 and 14 years of age respectively, and her former husband, Richard H. Perkins, Sr., en route from Virginia Beach to plaintiff’s home in Chesterfield county, stopped at Ocean View Park, in the city of Norfolk, to take a ride on an amusement device commonly known as the “Sky Rocket.” This is the same device which was formerly called “Roller Coaster,” “Leap the Dip,” and “Figure Eight.” It has a stationary track, with a number of high pinnacles, low steep dips and tortuous curves, both ascending and descending. A train of three small cars coupled together are operated on the track. Each car contains three seats, each seat accommodating two passengers. Across the front of each seat is an iron bar designed for passengers to steady themselves as the car goes up and down the steep dips and around the curves.

One end of'the bar is attached to the side of the car in such manner that it can be raised for the purpose of permitting passengers to enter or leave the car. When properly functioning and while the car is in motion, the loose end of the bar is locked in a down position across the laps of the passengers so that the holding support for them is stable and rigid rather than movable. When not locked the bar may be moved up or down.

As the cars move from the loading platform, they drift by gravity into a well where the locking mechanism on the side of the car is designed to be tripped by means of a projecting steel arm on the side of the track which locks the bars in a rigid and down position.

*846 The seventeen-year old boy got in the front seat of the middle car. Plaintiff and her daughter got in the middle seat of the same car. Plaintiff testified that when the cars started down the first dip the bar “started pulling us up over the top of my little boy’s head.” She became frightened and screamed to her little girl “ ‘For God’s sake, turn loose the bars and hold on to the side,’ and about the time I spoke it started up another curve, and that is when the bars threw us backwards and I hit my head on the back of the seat. I think it must have been the back. It is the only way I can figure what it was.”

■ Plaintiff’s contention is that failure of defendants to see that the bar across the seat occupied by her was locked, and failure to warn her of the danger of holding to the bar when it was unfastened was negligence which was the proximate cause of her injury.

The testimony for defendants tends to show that the mechanism of this amusement device was properly inspected, was in good working order, and that the bar across the laps of plaintiff and her daughter was down when the car left the loading platform and started up the first incline.

The evidence as to the liability of defendants was in sharp conflict and it was within the province of the jury to return a verdict for either plaintiff or defendants. On the question of liability the court gave three instructions for plaintiff which fairly submitted her theory of the case to the jury.

After the jury had accepted plaintiff’s theory of the case as to the liability, it then became its duty to ascertain the amount of plaintiff’s damages. The evidence on this issue may be summarized as follows:

When plaintiff,. complaining of a bruise on. her héad, stepped out of the car defendants’ employee took her to the office. From there, on the advice of the doctor, she was taken to DePaul Hospital in Norfolk, where she was examined and treated. There was no abrasion of the skin, po concussion or bone injury, but there was a large “knot” ' on the back of her head. Doctor Wm. H. Whitmore *847 X-rayed her while she was in the hospital and found that she was suffering from a form of arthritis, or joint disease, which involved the 5th, 6th and 7th vertebrae. The arthritis was not caused by the injury to plaintiff’s head.

Four days after the accident, upon request of plaintiff, she was taken to the Medical College of Virginia Hospital where she was treated by Doctor James T. Tucker. His diagnosis, based upon the history of the patient and his examination, was that she had “a sprained neck and sprained low back,” which could have been caused by the accident. He prescribed a Thomas collar for her neck and a Taylor back brace. She stayed in the hospital until September 5th, and thereafter was treated by Doctor Tucker in his office.

Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that her expenditures and loss of time due to the injury sustained on August 15, 1948, totaled $1,836.45. The case was not tried until April 6, 1949. In October, 1948, she was involved in an automobile accident in which she received another injury to her head. On October 4th, she consulted Doctor L. B. Sheppard, an eye specialist in Richmond, complaining of double vision, dizziness and headaches following her ride on defendants’ “Sky Rocket.” Doctor Sheppard stated that plaintiff had normal vision in each eye, but double vision within a distance of approximately two feet and that she had consulted an eye specialist several years prior to that time. As far as he could tell, there was no “physiological connection” between the injury suffered by plaintiff on August 15, 1948, and the condition of her eyes. It follows that Doctor Sheppard’s bill for examination of the eyes was not properly chargeable to these defendants.

Plaintiff also contends that due to the injury she lost two and a half months from work and thereby sustained a loss of earnings totaling $737.50. It is difficult to determine from plaintiff’s testimony what proportion of the two and a half months lost from work was due to injuries sustained on August 15, 1948, and what proportion of such loss was due to other causes for which defendants were *848 not responsible. She was not definite and clear as to the amount of her earnings and the amount she made when she worked overtime. Prior to August 15, 1948, she was treated by a local doctor for nervous, emotional and physical disturbances due to menopausal changes.

When all the evidence on the issue of the quantum of damages is considered, we cannot say that the jury’s verdict for $2,500 is grossly inadequate.

We said in Glass v. David Pender Grocery Co., 174 Va. 196, 5 S. E. (2d) 478: “Each case must be considered on its own merits and in view of the peculiar facts of that ‘case.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E.2d 878, 190 Va. 843, 1950 Va. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drudge-v-cooper-va-1950.