Fielder v. Service Cab Co.

11 S.E.2d 115, 122 W. Va. 522, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 88
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1940
Docket9071
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 11 S.E.2d 115 (Fielder v. Service Cab 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
Fielder v. Service Cab Co., 11 S.E.2d 115, 122 W. Va. 522, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 88 (W. Va. 1940).

Opinion

Riley, President:

Hazel M. Fielder, administratrix of the estate of Edward Fielder, deceased, who instituted this action against the defendant, Service Cab Company, a corporation, to recover damages for the alleged wrongful death of her decedent, prosecutes error to a judgment in defendant’s favor based upon a verdict directed at the close of plaintiff’s evidence in chief.

The declaration alleges several acts of negligence: That defendant did not drive and operate its taxicab in a reasonable, careful and lawful manner, and at a safe, legal and proper rate of speed; that defendant did not keep a *524 proper lookout for persons and vehicles; and that defendant failed to keep its taxicab under control.

To the ruling of the trial court in directing the verdict, plaintiff assigns two grounds of error: (1) defendant was guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of decedent’s death and decedent had committed.no act of contributory negligence; and (2) if both decedent and defendant had been guilty of negligence contributing proximately to the fatality, plaintiff nevertheless is entitled to recover under the last clear chance doctrine.

Before directing a verdict in a defendant’s favor, every reasonable and legitimate inference favorable to the plaintiff fairly arising from the evidence, considered as a whole, should be entertained by the trial court, and those facts should be assumed as true which the jury may properly find under the evidence. Hambrick v. Spalding, 116 W. Va. 235, 179 S. E. 807. This- rule ex necessitate should guide us in stating the facts and inferences upon which this opinion is based.

The accident occurred about five o’clock in the afternoon of August 2, 1939, at the junction of Miller Road with route 52. After topping the hill on the outskirts of Huntington in traveling toward Wayne, route 52 makes a steep descent. Several hundred feet from the top of the hill, it curves to the right, and thence in a substantially straight line and a southerly direction to the bottom of the hill. Miller Road, a dirt road, joins the highway from the east, by a very sharp, or hairpin, turn, at a point on this descent approximately five or six hundred feet below the curve. This road parallels route 52 for some distance north of the junction as it comes up from a lower level to the june tion point. Route 52 has a concrete pavement twenty feel wide, and a level berm twelve feet wide on each side.

Decedent, a youth past seventeen, was riding on a bicycle down the grade, contemplating turning off into Miller Road in the direction of a boy scouts’ camp. Defendant’s taxicab, occupied by a driver and two passengers, was also traveling south and approaching the intersection. As it reached the end of the curve, the pas *525 sengers saw decedent riding his bicycle slowly near and toward the intersection. About the center of this intersection and the east edge of the paved portion of route 52 the taxicab collided with decedent and fatally injured him.

At the time the taxicab was proceeding down the hill in decedent’s direction, it was going at a speed of not less than thirty-eight miles an hour. Two state troopers, who had investigated the scene and interviewed the driver, testified that the driver had admitted a speed of thirty-eight or forty miles an hour. Norvell and James Maynard, passengers in the car, testified it was going at thirty-eight or more miles an hour; in fact, the latter ventured an opinion that when the collision occurred a speed of forty-five miles ah hour had been attained. The Maynards testified that as the taxicab came out of the curve, decedent was seen riding slowly on his bicycle near the intersection. Norvell said that when the taxicab was about two or three hundred feet from the intersection, decedent made a more or less gradual turn toward the left in the direction of Miller Road, and that about ten or fifteen feet from the point at which Miller Road led into route 52 decedent started to turn. James Maynard said that the taxicab was about two hundred feet from decedent when he first started to turn to the left; that the taxicab driver applied his brakes when the cab was fifty or seventy feet behind decedent; that the left wheels of the taxicab were- leaving the pavement on the left when decedent was hit; and that the taxicab was not very far behind decedent (fifty or seventy-five feet) when decedent swung out. As decedent was seen to turn his bicycle to the left, he gave no signal, did not turn toward the left, and evidently was oblivious of the approaching taxicab.

Decedent’s bicycle evidently came in contact with the taxicab near its front. In fact, James Maynard testified that the right front fender, the windshield post, and the windshield were “cracked and battered.” Both Maynards *526 testified that decedent was traveling slowly, five or six miles an hour.

The state troopers testified that their examination of the scene disclosed no skid marks. However, their examination was made three hours after the collision, at a time when it was so dark that the use of flash lights was required. James Maynard testified that the taxicab began to skid ten or twelve feet below the guardrail, which ran along the easterly side of the road, to a point about one hundred and fifty feet from where the taxicab came to rest in a corn field after striking decedent. Norvell Maynard testified that he saw skid marks which ran from a point slightly below the guardrail to where the taxi came to a stop in a corn field. A Mrs. Thompson, one of the occupants of a nearby house, said she saw skid marks which ran from about twelve feet below the guardrail for a hundred feet to where the decedent had been lying, as shown by the blood on the road. Her niece, seventeen years of age, said she heard the taxicab skid, and saw skid marks about twelve feet from the end of the rail.

Defendant’s counsel introduced in evidence a statement signed by the Maynards to the effect that the taxicab was coming down the hill at about thirty or thirty-five miles an hour on the extreme right of the road, when a boy on a bicycle suddenly cut in front of the cab. This statement, though damaging to plaintiff’s theory of the case, simply goes to the credibility of the Maynards as Witnesses. “It is the peculiar and exclusive province of the jury to decide upon the credibility of witnesses.” 3 Jones, Evidence in Civil Cases, 4th Ed., 1684, and cases cited in note 12. This Court has held in numerous cases that the question of the credibility of witnesses and the weight of testimony is peculiarly for the jury. See cases cited in Sec. 117, Witnesses, Michie’s Digest.

The primary question for consideration is whether or not the jury could have reasonably inferred that defendant, through its driver, was guilty of negligence which proximately caused decedent’s death. Upon careful analysis we think this record, when all reasonable inferences *527 are drawn in plaintiff’s favor, and all facts favorable to plaintiff are assumed, clearly shows that defendant’s taxicab was being driven at an illegal rate of speed beyond proper control and without a proper lookout upon the part of defendant’s driver. In the first place, the hill from its top to a distance below Miller Road was steep.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E.2d 115, 122 W. Va. 522, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fielder-v-service-cab-co-wva-1940.