Greer v. State Highway Dept.

159 S.E. 35, 160 S.C. 510, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 12, 1931
Docket13177
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 159 S.E. 35 (Greer v. State Highway Dept.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greer v. State Highway Dept., 159 S.E. 35, 160 S.C. 510, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 100 (S.C. 1931).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

Plaintiff brought his action to recover damages for an injury, by which he lost his leg, and which injury was caused by the alleged negligence, recklessness and willfulness of the defendant Gilliam in the operation of an automobile, which was the property of the State Highway Department, and which was being used by Gilliam, who was an employee of the department. The action is brought under the provisions of the Act of the General Assembly No. 1055, approved March 10, 1928 (35 St. at Targe, p. 2055), and entitled: “An Act to Permit the State Highway Department to be Sued and Naming the Conditions Under Which Suit May be Instituted," etc.

*512 The complaint alleges that all of the provisions of the said Act have been complied with, and that plaintiff did not bring about his injury by his own ngeligence, and did not negligently contribute thereto.

For answer defendants admit Paragraphs I, 2 and 3 of the complaint, and so much of Paragraph 4 as alleges that plaintiff was injured by defendant’s truck at the time and place alleged. They deny all other allegations of the complaint; and allege that plaintiff’s injury was due to his own carelessness and negligence; and to his carelessness, recklessness, and willfulness, “combining and concurring with whatever acts of carelessness and negligence there might have existed on the part of defendants, and contributing as a proximate cause to the injury of plaintiff, and without which it would not have occurred.”

Upon the issues thus joined, the case came to trial before Hon. Ralph T. Wilson, Special Judge, and a jury, at the October, 1930, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Union County, and resulted in a verdict in favor- of the plaintiff against the Highway Department alone.

At. the conclusion of the testimony, defendant’s counsel moved for nonsuit upon the grounds, that the only inference which could be gathered from the testimony was that plaintiff was injured through his own negligence; and upon the further ground that there is no testimony showing that the highway truck, at the time plaintiff was injured, was actually engaged in the construction or repair of the state highways. The motion was denied.

At the conclusion of all of the testimony, defendant’s counsel moved for a directed verdict- for defendants on the ground that there was no evidence that the Plighway Department truck or motor vehicle was actually engaged in the construction or repair of a highway at the time this accident happened. This motion was denied.

The verdict of the jury was in these words:

*513 “We the jury in the case of Jim Greer v. South Carolina State Highway Department, defendant, render a verdict in the sum of two thousand and no one hundredths, including hospital bill.”

On inquiry the foreman stated that they intended to find against the Highway Department alone. No motion was made to reform the verdict. Thereupon counsel for defendants moved for a new trial on the following grounds:

(1) The verdict of the jury is indefinite and uncertain, and does not express the intentions of the jury.

(2) From the peculiar wording of the verdict, the amount of damages found against the defendants cannot be determined.

(3) The verdict is fatally defective, in that it does not express the title of the action; only one defendant being named.

(4) The jury having found that there was no negligence on the part of the defendant Gilliam, it logically follows that the State Highway Department was without negligence and a verdict against the State Highway Department alone is contrary to law.

This motion, also, was denied.

The appeal is from the several orders denying the motions for nonsuit, directed verdict, and new trial, and from the judgment entered on the verdict.

In the judgment of the Court the two cardinal questions presented to it by the appeal are these: Was the truck, which it is admitted inflicted the injury on plaintiff, at the time of the occurrence actually engaged in the construction or repair of any of the state highways? Can the verdict against the State Highway Department alone stand?

The evidence is uncontradicted that defendant Gilliam was in the employ of the State Highway Department as superintendent of construction for Union County. At the time of the collision which.injured plaintiff, he was driving from the office of the department *514 in the City of Union to dinner at his home in the city, in the truck of the department, which was furnished him for his use as such supervisor of work. It is contended that, inasmuch as he was using the truck to take him to dinner, it was not then engaged in the construction and repair of a highway. Under the terms of the Act of 1928, which gives a person injured by a motor vehicle of the State Highway Department the right to sue for damages for such injury, in a suit to recover such damage it must be shown as a condition precedent to the maintenance of the action that the motor vehicle charged with inflicting the injury was at the time actually engaged in the construction or repair of a highway. The evidence shows that the places of work which Gilliam supervised were sometimes remotely separated, and were sometimes distant from his home; that, without the truck furnished him by the department, he would lose much time going from one place of work to another, and to and from his home for dinner. Its use saved time for the department, and enabled him to render more efficient service. In the case of Robinson v. State Highway Department, 159 S. C., 405, 157 S. E., 136, 137, a case similar in principle to this was decided. There a truck of the State Highway Department was carrying employees to work on the highway, and came in collision with plaintiff’s automobile, inflicting injuries to the car of plaintiff for which he brought his action. Defendant, among other defenses, set up that the department truck was not actually engaged in the construction or repair of a highway. The Circuit Judge held otherwise, and sent the case to the jury, who found for plaintiff. On appeal the Supreme Court said:

“The case turns upon the meaning of the words ‘actually engaged’ as they are used in the Act. Those words have been defined often and variously by many Courts. The decisions, however,- are not particularly helpful, for in every instance the definition given depended upon varied circumstances, and many other words used along with them. We *515 are impressed with the definition given in Re Strawbridge, 39 Ala., 368 (referred to in note 98, 1 C. J., 1187), where the Court said: ‘The words “actually engaged,” in common parlance mean “really or truly engaged”' — engaged “in fact,” and, according to the same law of common use, are the opposite or antithesis of “seemingly,” or “pretendedly,” or “feignedly engaged.” ’

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Deese v. Williams
118 S.E.2d 330 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1961)
Flowers v. South Carolina State Highway Dept.
34 S.E.2d 769 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1945)
Chapman-Storm Lumber Corp. v. Minnesota-South Carolina Land & Timber Co.
190 S.E. 117 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1937)
Pettis v. Standard Oil Company of N.J.
179 S.E. 894 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1935)
Kirby v. Gulf Refining Co.
175 S.E. 535 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1934)
Cherry v. Singer Sewing Machine Co.
164 S.E. 126 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 S.E. 35, 160 S.C. 510, 1931 S.C. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-v-state-highway-dept-sc-1931.