Griffith v. Wood

149 S.E.2d 205, 150 W. Va. 678, 1966 W. Va. LEXIS 190
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1966
Docket12539
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 149 S.E.2d 205 (Griffith v. Wood) 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
Griffith v. Wood, 149 S.E.2d 205, 150 W. Va. 678, 1966 W. Va. LEXIS 190 (W. Va. 1966).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge:

This action, instituted in the Circuit Court of Raleigh County on June 24, 1963, is based on the alleged negligence *679 of the defendants, Daily Wood and Pauline Wood, who are husband and wife. The plaintiffs, Lakie I. Griffith and Dennis Griffith, also a married couple, seek a recovery for personal injuries to Lakie I. Griffith, the wife of Dennis Griffith, and for medical expenses incurred and loss of services sustained by her husband, which resulted from the operation by the defendant Pauline Wood of a 1955 Ford Pick-up truck owned by her husband, the defendant Daily Wood, about ten o’clock on the night of June 29, 1962, on or near the intersection of a side road known as the 4-H Road with U. S. Highway No. 19-21 in Raleigh County. The injuries of which the plaintiffs complain were sustained by the plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith, who was riding on the right side of the single seat of the truck and who fell or was thrown from the vehicle when the door on the right side came open while the driver was engaged in making a left turn on the intersection to enter the U. S. Highway from the side road.

At the conclusion of the evidence in behalf of the plaintiffs, the circuit court, on motion of the defendants, by order entered March 22, 1965 struck the evidence in behalf of the plaintiffs and directed a verdict in favor of the defendants, rendered judgment that the plaintiffs take nothing and awarded costs in favor of the defendants. By its final judgment rendered July 23, 1965, the circuit court denied the motion of the plaintiffs to set aside the verdict and award the plaintiffs a new trial. From that judgment this Court granted this appeal on the application of the plaintiffs.

Following the pretrial conference the circuit court entered an order on March 18, 1965, which by agreement of the parties contained a statement that the defendant Daily Wood was the owner of the truck in which the plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith was injured; that the family purpose doctrine applied to his wife Pauline Wood, the driver of the truck at the time of the injury; and that the injury occurred on or near the intersection of U. S. Highway 19-21 and the 4-H road in Raleigh County. The order also contains certain contentions of the plaintiffs that Lakie I. Griffith and Pauline Wood were fellow employees, working in the kitchen of *680 the 4-H Camp and were returning from that place to their homes in the pick-up truck of the defendant Daily Wood; that “as the defendant driver approached the intersection in question, she gave a turn signal, stopped at the intersection, and, due to the angle and grade of the intersection, made a sharp left turn into Route 19; that defendant disengaged the clutch abruptly, causing the truck to spurt forward; that the door on plaintiff’s side flew open, causing the plaintiff to fall; that as she was falling defendant applied the brakes suddenly, causing the door to snap back and strike plaintiff, who was falling to the pavement of the highway;” that the plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith sustained severe bruises, cuts, injury to a nerve in her back, her right hand, the ninth and tenth dorsal area, swelling of the leg, hip and thigh, bruised elbows, and injury to the cervical area, and suffered headaches, and that she sustained permanent injury. The contentions of the defendants, among others set forth in the order, were that the plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith closed the door when she entered the truck and had control of the door; that the occupants of the truck had driven two to four miles as the plaintiff sat next to the door before the accident occurred; that the defendants had no previous trouble with the door; that it was examined by a mechanic and no defect was found; that the defendant driver was guilty of no act of negligence; and that the defendants are free from negligence.

Other than the driver of the truck and the plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith, there were no eye-witnesses to the accident. The evidence of the manner in which the injury occurred and the condition of the truck at and before the accident consists of the testimony of each of the plaintiffs, one of their daughters, and the defendant Daily Wood.

The substance of the assignments of error by the plaintiffs is the action of the circuit court (1) in striking the evidence in behalf of the plaintiffs as to the manner in which the defendant Pauline Wood operated the truck on and near the intersection and the condition of the truck at and before the accident in which the plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith was injured; (2) in refusing to hold that the defendant Pauline *681 Wood violated certain statutes in the operation of the truck and that violation of such statutes constituted prima facie negligence; and (3) in refusing to. apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur to the facts established by the evidence.

The plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith testified that when she got in the truck the defendant Pauline Wood shut the door; that when the truck came near the intersection the driver stopped it and then pulled out fast and swirled around; that as it came out fast the plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith was thrown from the truck; and that she did not sit or lean against the door at any time. She also testified that on the morning after the accident while Pauline Wood was driving her back to the 4-H camp to work she told the plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith that on one prior occasion when she caused the truck to make a sharp turn the door came open and her husband almost fell out of the truck; that she should have told the plaintiff about that matter; and that she did not examine the door or know that there was anything wrong with it. The plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith, on cross-examination, evidently for the purpose of contradiction, was asked a number of questions, some of which were whether she had previously stated that she closed the door when she got in the truck; whether she had stated that she did not know if she was leaning against the door when the truck was making the turn; whether she had stated that the driver of the truck in coming out the road into Highway 19-21 “was coming out very slow”; and whether she had said that she did not know that the driver of the truck had done anything wrong in connection with the accident and that she could not say why the door came open. The plaintiff Lakie I. 'Griffith did not deny or explain the statements in any of these questions but to each of them answered “I don’t recall.” As the trial court directed a verdict for the defendants before they had an opportunity to introduce their evidence they could not and did not offer any evidence to contradict the foregoing statements.

The plaintiff Dennis Griffith testified that the defendant Daily Wood, in a conversation about two weeks after plaintiff Lakie I. Griffith was injured, told him that the truck *682 was “kinda tricky” and that the door “come open sometimes”, and that he said with reference to the truck “Well, mine ought to be fixed.”; that on the same occasion the defendant Pauline Wood told him that when she went to the school house “if the door got to rattling she would stop and fasten it to keep it from coming open, and lock it.”

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.E.2d 205, 150 W. Va. 678, 1966 W. Va. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-wood-wva-1966.