Smith, J.,
delivered the opinion of the case.
This case arose as one of the consequences of a collision between plaintiff Edward C. Collins’ Packard automobile and defendant Anderson Elswick’s Dodge truck. At the time of the accident the plaintiff’s car was being driven by Eulice White and the truck was being operated by co-defendant Clayton Williams. The trial of the case resulted in a verdict and judgment for'the plaintiff against both defendants for $2,000 damages [294]*294to the Packard car. To this judgment the defendants were awarded a writ of error and supersedeas.
On the morning of April 4, 1950, Eulice White, an employee of the Packard dealer in Royal City, was directed by the plaintiff to go to Big Rock, in Buchanan county, and drive the plaintiff’s car back to the garage.
As he drove' off White noticed the defendant’s truck driven by Williams enter the highway from the opposite side. White followed in the car about 50 to 75 feet behind the truck at a speed variously estimated from 35 to 45 miles per hour. After the two vehicles had gone about three quarters of a mile the truck slowed down to 20 or 25 miles per hour and turned toward the left until, as White testified, both left wheels were off the pavement. The highway ahead was straight, dry, and' about 19 feet wide. At this place there was very little shoulder on the right, but on the left the shoulder of the highway was between 15 and 20 feet wide and led to several garages situated just off the right-of-way. White testified that he thought the truck was pulling off the pavement on the left shoulder to park so he continued on without slackening his speed. At about the time the car got abreast of the truck, Williams turned the truck sharply to the right across the highway intending to enter a.' private road leading off the hard surface to the right. White hadn’t noticed this side road because it was obscured by a bank. White immediately applied his brakes but hit the truck just back of the cab.
The only eye-witnesses to the accident who testified at the trial were the two drivers White and Williams.
White testified that he was watching the truck but didn’t see any signal to indicate which way the truck was going( and he didn’t blow his horn or slow down because his lane was clear.
Williams stated that he slowed down to 20 or 25 miles per hour and switched on the right-hand signal light about .100 feet before he began to turn and steered to his left straddling the white center line of the. pavement.
After the collision the truck came to rest at about a 45 degree angle to the axis of the highway in the right-hand lane along side of the automobile which was jammed into the bank.
The physical facts' indicate that the truck must have been almost at right angles with the pavement when the crash oc[295]*295curred. The car hit the truck immediately behind the cab and this would account for the fact that it came to rest at a 45 degree angle.
White testified that after the accident he noticed that the truck’s rear signal light was burning, hut he contended that the glass arrow pointer was broken and the burning bulb was visible for only a short distance because it was covered with mud. State Trooper P. S. Spraker, who investigated the accident, stated that the light was burning when he arrived although he didn’t remember whether the glass was broken. He further testified that “it was bent till it would have been very near impossible to have seen it from directly to the rear of the truck.” On cross-examination Williams admitted that the glass arrow was broken out of the signal light, but he contended that the bulb was not covered with mud nor was the light bent.
Summarizing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the jury was warranted in finding the facts to he as follows:
A short distance before reaching the place where the collision occurred Williams slowed down and turned his truck to the left and ran off on the left-hand shoulder. Seeing that his lane was clear White continued on at a moderate speed without sounding his horn. Thereupon, the truck driver turned abruptly to his right, re-entering and crossing the traveled portion of the highway, at which time it was too late for White to do more than apply his brakes and brace himself.
The sole issue presented for our decision in this case is whether or not the evidence shows that the driver of the plaintiff’s car was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
“Contributory negligence of a plaintiff is failure to use reasonable care. Such failure is not presumed, but must be shown by the evidence. Depending as it does upon the facts of the case, it is usually a jury question, and is to be decided by the court only when reasonable men should not differ as to what facts are proved and as to the proper inferences from the facts proved.” Norfolk, etc., Belt Line R. Co. v. Freeman, 192 Va. 400, 408, 64 S. E. (2d) 732.
The defendants first contend that White violated the provisions of Code section 46-226 and that this precludes the plain[296]*296tiff’s right to recover. This section reads as follows at the time of the accident:
“When overtaking vehicle may pass on driver of a vehicle may overtake and pass upon the right of another vehicle which is making or about to make a left turn and the driver of which has given a signal as required in § 46-234.” (This section was amended by the Acts of 1952, ch. 666, p. 1115).
The defendants rely on the case of Gary v. Artist, 186 Va. 616, 43 S. E. (2d) 833, which discusses the statute set out above. In this’ case Gary was driving his automobile west on Cary street in the city of Richmond and one Edwards was following behind in a truck owned by Jones and Davis, Incorporated. As Gary approached the intersection of Cary and Randolph streets he slowed down and the truck turned to the right to pass the automobile. In making this movement it struck the right front fender of Gary’s, car a glancing blow and veered diagonally across Cary s°treet where it struck the plaintiff, Artist. Artist sued Gary, Edwards, and the owner of the truck and recovered a judgment. Gary alone filed a petition for a writ of error.
The trial court, by Instruction E, instructed the jury in part as follows: “If * * you believe that the defendant, * * * Gary, pulled his automobile to the left or center of said Cary Street without signal, [then] the driver of the ⅝ # * truck, Willie Edwards, was justified in assuming that the Gary car was not intending to make a right-hand turn. And if you further believe that without signal ⅜ ⅝ * the Gary car suddenly attempted a right-hand turn [which] was the sole proximate cause of the 'collision [and] plaintiff’s injury, then there is no liability upon [the owner], or upon the driver of [the] truck * * and you should find your verdict in their favor.”
Mr. Justice Browning had this to say about the instruction, 186 Va., at page 624:
“Instruction E is erroneous because, among other things wrong, it virtually told the jury that Edwards could pass on the right of the automobile in front of him without having the statutory signal given him. Of course, this is in derogation of the term of the statute under the existent circumstances and cannot be permitted.” (Italics supplied).
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Smith, J.,
delivered the opinion of the case.
This case arose as one of the consequences of a collision between plaintiff Edward C. Collins’ Packard automobile and defendant Anderson Elswick’s Dodge truck. At the time of the accident the plaintiff’s car was being driven by Eulice White and the truck was being operated by co-defendant Clayton Williams. The trial of the case resulted in a verdict and judgment for'the plaintiff against both defendants for $2,000 damages [294]*294to the Packard car. To this judgment the defendants were awarded a writ of error and supersedeas.
On the morning of April 4, 1950, Eulice White, an employee of the Packard dealer in Royal City, was directed by the plaintiff to go to Big Rock, in Buchanan county, and drive the plaintiff’s car back to the garage.
As he drove' off White noticed the defendant’s truck driven by Williams enter the highway from the opposite side. White followed in the car about 50 to 75 feet behind the truck at a speed variously estimated from 35 to 45 miles per hour. After the two vehicles had gone about three quarters of a mile the truck slowed down to 20 or 25 miles per hour and turned toward the left until, as White testified, both left wheels were off the pavement. The highway ahead was straight, dry, and' about 19 feet wide. At this place there was very little shoulder on the right, but on the left the shoulder of the highway was between 15 and 20 feet wide and led to several garages situated just off the right-of-way. White testified that he thought the truck was pulling off the pavement on the left shoulder to park so he continued on without slackening his speed. At about the time the car got abreast of the truck, Williams turned the truck sharply to the right across the highway intending to enter a.' private road leading off the hard surface to the right. White hadn’t noticed this side road because it was obscured by a bank. White immediately applied his brakes but hit the truck just back of the cab.
The only eye-witnesses to the accident who testified at the trial were the two drivers White and Williams.
White testified that he was watching the truck but didn’t see any signal to indicate which way the truck was going( and he didn’t blow his horn or slow down because his lane was clear.
Williams stated that he slowed down to 20 or 25 miles per hour and switched on the right-hand signal light about .100 feet before he began to turn and steered to his left straddling the white center line of the. pavement.
After the collision the truck came to rest at about a 45 degree angle to the axis of the highway in the right-hand lane along side of the automobile which was jammed into the bank.
The physical facts' indicate that the truck must have been almost at right angles with the pavement when the crash oc[295]*295curred. The car hit the truck immediately behind the cab and this would account for the fact that it came to rest at a 45 degree angle.
White testified that after the accident he noticed that the truck’s rear signal light was burning, hut he contended that the glass arrow pointer was broken and the burning bulb was visible for only a short distance because it was covered with mud. State Trooper P. S. Spraker, who investigated the accident, stated that the light was burning when he arrived although he didn’t remember whether the glass was broken. He further testified that “it was bent till it would have been very near impossible to have seen it from directly to the rear of the truck.” On cross-examination Williams admitted that the glass arrow was broken out of the signal light, but he contended that the bulb was not covered with mud nor was the light bent.
Summarizing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the jury was warranted in finding the facts to he as follows:
A short distance before reaching the place where the collision occurred Williams slowed down and turned his truck to the left and ran off on the left-hand shoulder. Seeing that his lane was clear White continued on at a moderate speed without sounding his horn. Thereupon, the truck driver turned abruptly to his right, re-entering and crossing the traveled portion of the highway, at which time it was too late for White to do more than apply his brakes and brace himself.
The sole issue presented for our decision in this case is whether or not the evidence shows that the driver of the plaintiff’s car was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
“Contributory negligence of a plaintiff is failure to use reasonable care. Such failure is not presumed, but must be shown by the evidence. Depending as it does upon the facts of the case, it is usually a jury question, and is to be decided by the court only when reasonable men should not differ as to what facts are proved and as to the proper inferences from the facts proved.” Norfolk, etc., Belt Line R. Co. v. Freeman, 192 Va. 400, 408, 64 S. E. (2d) 732.
The defendants first contend that White violated the provisions of Code section 46-226 and that this precludes the plain[296]*296tiff’s right to recover. This section reads as follows at the time of the accident:
“When overtaking vehicle may pass on driver of a vehicle may overtake and pass upon the right of another vehicle which is making or about to make a left turn and the driver of which has given a signal as required in § 46-234.” (This section was amended by the Acts of 1952, ch. 666, p. 1115).
The defendants rely on the case of Gary v. Artist, 186 Va. 616, 43 S. E. (2d) 833, which discusses the statute set out above. In this’ case Gary was driving his automobile west on Cary street in the city of Richmond and one Edwards was following behind in a truck owned by Jones and Davis, Incorporated. As Gary approached the intersection of Cary and Randolph streets he slowed down and the truck turned to the right to pass the automobile. In making this movement it struck the right front fender of Gary’s, car a glancing blow and veered diagonally across Cary s°treet where it struck the plaintiff, Artist. Artist sued Gary, Edwards, and the owner of the truck and recovered a judgment. Gary alone filed a petition for a writ of error.
The trial court, by Instruction E, instructed the jury in part as follows: “If * * you believe that the defendant, * * * Gary, pulled his automobile to the left or center of said Cary Street without signal, [then] the driver of the ⅝ # * truck, Willie Edwards, was justified in assuming that the Gary car was not intending to make a right-hand turn. And if you further believe that without signal ⅜ ⅝ * the Gary car suddenly attempted a right-hand turn [which] was the sole proximate cause of the 'collision [and] plaintiff’s injury, then there is no liability upon [the owner], or upon the driver of [the] truck * * and you should find your verdict in their favor.”
Mr. Justice Browning had this to say about the instruction, 186 Va., at page 624:
“Instruction E is erroneous because, among other things wrong, it virtually told the jury that Edwards could pass on the right of the automobile in front of him without having the statutory signal given him. Of course, this is in derogation of the term of the statute under the existent circumstances and cannot be permitted.” (Italics supplied).
At first blush there is understandable justification for the contention of the defendants in the case at bar that the plain[297]*297tiff here is in. the same position as Edwards was in the Gary Case. But a careful reading of Code section 46-226 and the Gary Case, and a close scrutiny of the facts before us disclose that this contention is not correct.
We do not believe that Code section 46-226 is applicable to the facts of the case before us. This section refers to a condition where one vehicle overtakes another vehicle in front which is' making or about to make a left turn and both vehicles are proceeding in the same direction. In the case at bar the facts do not disclose this to have been situation. There was ample evidence to justify the conclusion that Williams had already completed his left turn and had pulled his truck off the road on the left shoulder of the highway before White ^proceeded to pass him. In other words Williams had removed his truck from the traffic pattern in which he and White had previously been traveling. White did not pass to the right of Williams, he merely continued to drive straight down the highway as he had been doing. White was, therefore, not engaged in overtaking and passing another vehicle in front of him, as contemplated by both the statute and the construction placed thereon by the Gary Case, at the time he went by the truck.
If we follow the defendant’s interpretation of the statute, it is not difficult to visualize a most ludicrous situation. Let us assume a set of facts somewhat similar to those in this case. Suppose Williams had made his left turn without giving the required statutory signal, had pulled completely off the pavement and had parked on the left shoulder. If we follow the defendant’s contention to its logical conclusion, what would be the result? We would find ourselves in this predicament: Since Williams did not give the required statutory signal for a left turn, White would have been compelled to bring his car to a complete stop on the highway, although his lane of traffic was clear and there was nothing to indicate that he should do anything but continue on his way. We do not believe that the legislature intended to require NWhite to do what the defendants say he should have done under the circumstances present in this case. Nor does the Gary Case so hold.
The defendants further allege that White violated the provisions of the following sections of the Code which they contend imputes contributory negligence to the plaintiff as a matter of [298]*298
White was not guilty of negligence as a matter of law in driving within the statutory speed limit behind ' a truck whose operator had not communicated any intention of- changing his course. White estimated that his speed prior to the time the truck slowed down was 45 miles per hour and stated that he did not slow down. Williams said that he was going about 35 to 40 miles per hour. Since White was following behind Williams, it is obvious that White was not going faster than Williams. Williams testified that he slowed down to 20 or 25 miles per hour and gave the signal for a right turn about 100 feet away. Presumably he meant 100 feet before he began to turn. The fact is subject to mathematical verification that White was either driving at a rate less than 45 miles per hour when Williams slowed down- or he slowed down himself, otherwise he would have crashed into the back of the truck before it had removed itself from the path of the car. Traveling at the rate of 25 miles per hour Williams would have covered the 100 feet before he began to turn in approximately 2.7 seconds.- Going at the rate of 45 miles per hour White would have covered a distance of 178 feet during the lapse of 2.7 seconds and would have been more than 100 feet ahead of the truck before it began to obvious impossibility. This proves beyond peradventure that White was either going considerably slower than 45 miles per hour or he slowed down appreciably, possibly unconsciously, when the truck ahead slowed down.
It is a statutory rule that the driver of a motor vehicle has the right to follow a vehicle in front of him as close as it is reasonable and prudent to do under the circumstances. What-is a reasonable distance must, in each instance, depend upon the [299]*299particular facts involved. Except when reasonable minds cannot differ, what distance was required to be maintained and whether that distance was in fact maintained are questions for the jury. Mandro v. Vibbert, 170 F. (2d) 540.
On the question of White’s failure to give a warning as required by Code section 46-225, we have already pointed out that he was not passing or attempting to pass a vehicle proceeding in the same direction, therefore, this section is not applicable here. Lennon v. Smith, 173 Va. 322, 2 S. E. (2d) 340. Code section 46-224 is not applicable either for the same reason.
In conclusion, the jury was warranted in finding that this accident occurred not because of any fault on the part of White, hut because Williams after having pulled off on the left shoulder re-entered the traveled portion of the highway in a perilous manner without taking the trouble to see if his way was clear.
We cannot say that the jury’s verdict is plainly wrong and that the plaintiff is guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. Therefore, the judgment complained of is affirmed.
Affirmed.