Emery v. Monongahela West Penn Public Service Co.

163 S.E. 620, 111 W. Va. 699, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1932
Docket7126
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 163 S.E. 620 (Emery v. Monongahela West Penn Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emery v. Monongahela West Penn Public Service Co., 163 S.E. 620, 111 W. Va. 699, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 73 (W. Va. 1932).

Opinions

Lively, Judge:

Defendant prosecutes error to a $1,500.00 verdict and judgment thereon awarded as damages for injuries sustained by him when defendant’s street car struck an automobile truck driven by plaintiff.

The collision occurred at a point in the city of Fairmont where Murray Avenue intersects (but does not cross) Pennsylvania Avenue, about noon on January 18, 1930. The weather was cloudy; the streets were icy and there was two inches of snow on the ground at eight o’clock that morning, and a little snow fell between 8:30 and 9 :30; the wind was blowing and the temperature of 20 degrees, registered at eight o’clock, remained constant during the day. Murray Avenue, as it ascends from Pennsylvania Avenue, has a grade of 13.6 per cent.; its pavement is twenty feet wide; there is no curbing on either side of the pavement, but dirt banks about five feet high ascend from each side thereof. A traffic sign marked “Thru Street Stop” stood on Murray Avenue at the intersection where the collision occurred. Defendant’s car tracks paralleled Pennsylvania Avenue but ran along the eastern side thereof, outside of the paved portion of the avenue, within six or eight feet of the point at which Murray Avenue began, and on a grade of seven or eight per cent. A concrete wall, about ten feet high, on Pennsylvania Avenue, and a dirt bank thereon obstructed the view of traffic on Murray Avenue *701 from the motorman on defendant’s car, which was described as a “one-man” car, forty-five feet long and weighing about 54,000 pounds. .

Plaintiff had, a few minutes before the accident., occurred, driven his Dodge truck, loaded with coal, over the crossing at the intersection of Pennsylvania Avenue and Murray Avenue and had ascended Murray Avenue for the purpose of delivering the coal. His truck was equipped with chains and his brakes were in good condition. Having delivered the coal, he attempted to return by way of Murray Avenue; and because his truck “will go tolerable fast in low gear,” he used his emergency brake, and when about forty or fifty feet away from the point where Murray Avenue intersects with Pennsylvania Avenue, his truck began to skid, and he released his brake and applied gas. This method was repeated each time his car would skid until he got within four or five feet of the nearer rail of defendant’s tracks when he saw the street car seventy-five or eighty feet away. Plaintiff relates that, as he came down Murray Avenue, he continued to think of the crossing and tried, but couldn’t run into the dirt bank; that he was driving at a rate of between four and six miles per hour when he started down Murray Avenue and that when he reached the intersection his speed had decreased; that when he saw the street car he put his car in reverse but “the wheels just spinned; didn’t take hold,” and the ear continued to move forward; and that he cut his front wheels to the left or in the opposite direction from which the street ear was coming, and opened the door of the truck to alight when the street car struck, inflicting a broken anide and other injuries to plaintiff.

The motorman testified that just before the collision, his car was on descending grade and for that reason he had turned off the power and was running the car at a speed from twelve to fifteen miles per hour; that' when he first saw the truck, it was “right up on” the near rail and the street car fifty or seventy-five feet away; that he could not have seen the truck sooner; and that, seeing it, he immediately applied his emergency brake and sand and blew the wistle. Other *702 witnesses, seated in various positions in the car, observed the truck when it was fifty or seventy-five feet from their respective seats; and one of those witnesses (Lora'Yager), who sat about three feet from the motorman and who first observed the truck when it was three or four feet from the nearer rail, “felt the jar in the motion of the ear” about thirty or thirty-five feet from the truck; while another witness (for defendant) sitting near the motorman, testified that the truck was across the track and had stopped on the crossing’; that he observed the motorman “put the air on” but “didn’t seem, to take hold” quickly. Layman, a witness for plaintiff, who said that he was seated with John Ilibbs about the center of the street ear, observed the truck near the rail when the truck was fifty to seventy-five feet away from where he was seated ; and Hibbs (as plaintiff’s witness) although not certain whether the motorman was then talking with passengers or making change, stated that he (motorman) was not looking ahead and could have seen the truck “around 75 to 100 feet” away. Alex Tchinski, a witness for defendant, who stood on the left of the vestibule near the motorman, stated he first saw the truck forty or fifty feet from the crossing and that when the truck was about five feet from the track, the street car was fifteen or twenty feet away. Witnesses for both plaintiff and defendant testify that when they first saw the truck (fifty to seventy-five feet away), they remarked that the truck would be “hit,” although they were not asked on what facts their remarks were predicated.

After the accident, the truck was in a ditch near a pole situate about sixteen and one-half feet from the crossing. Just where the street car stopped with reference to the front end of the truck is not clear, a witness for plaintiff testifying that the front end of the truck lacked less than a foot of reaching the pole- and that the rear end of the car was fifteen feet past the front end. of the truck (making the distance in which the street car stopped between 125 and 150 feet) whereas the motorman says he stopped within eighty-five feet.. There is likewise a conflict in the evidence of opinion and of fact on whether the trolley rails were wet or dry when the accident happened, and a consequential variance on the dis *703 tance in which, the car should have been stopped, the variance being' from ten or twelve feet to 225 feet.

Plaintiff’s right of recovery is predicated upon the doctrine of last chance. In McLeod v. Laundry Company, 106 W. Va. 361, pt. 1, Syl., the rule is stated: “The doctrine of last clear chance is a qualification of the general rule that contributory negligence bars a recovery, and the principles of the doctrine is that, although the plaintiff has been negligent in exposing himself to peril, and although his negligence may have continued until the accident happened, he may nevertheless recover if the defendant after knowledge of plaintiff’s danger, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, and having reason to suppose that he (plaintiff) may not save himself, could have avoided the injury by the exercise of ordinary care, and failed to do so;” and the rule “implies a sufficient interval of time for both appreciation of the dan-erous situation and effective effort to relieve it.” Juergens v. Front, 111 W. Va. 670. Of course, if there is nothing other than concurring negligence of both plaintiff and defendant, there can be no application of the last clear chance doctrine. With the rule thus stated, we proceed to discuss plaintiff’s instructions 6, 7 and 8, given by the court, and charged by defendant to constitute error.

Instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.E. 620, 111 W. Va. 699, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emery-v-monongahela-west-penn-public-service-co-wva-1932.