Grubb Motor Lines, Inc. v. Woodson

175 F.2d 278, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2365
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 31, 1949
DocketNo. 5872
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 175 F.2d 278 (Grubb Motor Lines, Inc. v. Woodson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grubb Motor Lines, Inc. v. Woodson, 175 F.2d 278, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2365 (4th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

DOBIE, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff below, Mamie Woodson, filed her complaint against the defendants,, Grubb Motor Lines, Incorporated, and Floyd Shoaf, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, alleging, in substance, that on August 24, 1947, the defendants negligently drove a motor vehicle against her. The defendants’ answer denied that they were negligent and asserted contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff as an additional defense. The case was tried before a jury .and a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $10,000.00.

Prior to submission of the case to the jury, the defendants moved for a directed verdict; the District Court reserved its ruling on this motion. Following the return of the jury’s verdict, the defendants moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Both these motions were then overruled and judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict. From these rulings, denying their motions for directed verdict and for judgment non obstante veredicto, the defendants have taken this appeal to us.

The accident happened a few miles outside Richmond, Virginia, at the intersection of U. S. Highway No. 1 and Hilliard Road, Henrico County. No. 1, at that point, runs north and south; Hilliard Road, east and west. At the time of the accident, No. 1 was a typical four lane highway consisting of two northbound and two southbound lanes. Each lane was 10 feet wide, so that the highway had a total width of 40 feet. The north and southbound lanes were separated by a double white line in the center of the highway, while the two northbound lanes (and, similarly, the two southbound lanes) were separated by a single broken white line.

The plaintiff, a colored woman thirty-seven years old, was proceeding at the time of the accident to the Hermitage Country Club, where she was employed. She alighted from a northbound bus just off the easternmost edge of Highway No. 1; it was then necessary for her to cross No. 1, from the east to the west, in order to reach the Club.

Before undertaking to cross the highway, plaintiff waited until the bus from which she had disembarked had passed in front of her and had proceeded on its way north. She then looked to her left and saw the defendants’ truck, of the tractor-trailer type, travelling northbound toward her, at a distance of approximately 900 feet. (The accident occurred at about nine A. M., the road was straight and the visibility was admittedly excellent.) She then looked to her right and started on across the highway.

While the testimony is inconclusive as to just how far across the highway the plaintiff proceeded, it seems clear that she passed well in front of defendants’ truck and reached, at least, the middle of the western, or inside, northbound lane. She testified that she then looked back to her left and saw the defendants’ truck at the southern entrance to a service station (which proved by measurement to be 167 feet away), at which time the truck appeared to her, according to her testimony, to be “running just as fast as it could go.” Her actions were then described by her as follows:

“After I seen it was so close on me I started to hesitate. I didn’t know whether to go forward or come backward; thinking that I had further to walk forward than I [280]*280had to come backward, I decided to go backward to try to save myself.”

In other words, after hesitating an indeterminable length of time, she attempted to retrace her steps and pass, again in front of defendants’ truck, back to the eastern edge of the highway.'

The defendant Shoaf, driver of the truck owned by the other defendant, Grubb Motor Lines, Incorporated, testified that he applied his brakes and turned his vehicle to the right as abruptly as possible. He was unable to stop, however, and succeeded in getting only the forward part of his tractor safely by the plaintiff. Either the left rear wheel of his tractor or his left trailer wheel ran' over and crushed the plaintiff’s foot.

We come, now, to the question presented by the appeal, i. e., the propriety of the District Judge’s overruling of defendants’ motions for a directed verdict and for judgment non obstante veredicto.

Although the evidence relative to the speed of defendants’ truck presents some conflict, accepting that portion of it most favorable to the plaintiff, we have no difficulty in sustaining a finding by the jury that the defendants were travelling through an'intersection at an excessive rate of speed. Thus, there was ample evidence to support the jury’s verdict insofar as it implies a finding of primary, or initial, negligence on the part of defendants. We do not review the evidence, here, in detail because in the view we take of the case the question becomes relatively unimportant.

This brings us to the defendants’ assertion that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and that the District Judge should have so ruled. We have already mentioned the unsatisfactory state of the proof as to just how far the plaintiff had proceeded toward the center of the highway before she turned and retraced her steps toward the eastern edge. The plaintiff, herself, never under-, took to establish this fact. The only part of her testimony remotely pertinent to this point is her statement that she decided to retrace her steps because she thought she “had further to walk forward than I had to come backward.” This, ' of course, would place her some distance — but an undetermined distance — short of the double line in the center of the highway. Much the same must be said of the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness, Channing Smith, who testified that he had reached the center of the highway, and “I was ahead of .Mrs. Woodson.” But he did not see the plaintiff behind him on the highway and did not attempt to state bow far ahead of her he was.

The defendants’ witnesses, Shoaf, the defendant driver, and Bull, driver of a southbound bus, who witnessed the entire occurrence, both testified that the plaintiff had reached the center, or “about the center,” of the highway before turning back.

When this testimony is considered in the light of the fact that the plaintiff, after turning back, ran fast for at least a second’ or two before running into the defendants' truck somewhere in the outside northbound lane, it is apparent that the plaintiff must of necessity have been, at least, somewhere in the inside northbound lane (if not, in fact, very close to the center of the highway) at the time she turned and retraced her steps.

The traffic situation in the four lanes of Highway No. 1, at that time, was as follows: The bus driven by the witness Bull was some little distance north of the collision point, proceeding south in the outside southbound lane; the inside southbound lane was occupied by a truck at that moment engaged in passing the bus driven by Bull; the defendants’ truck was in the outside northbound lane and never left this lane except to pull to the right, off the hard surface, in an attempt to- avoid the plaintiff; and the inside northbound lane (the one occupied by plaintiff) was completely devoid of any vehicles. The plaintiff, then, was standing in the only one o'f the four lanes in which there was absolutely no traffic, and she would have been entirely safe had she remained anywhere within that 10 foot lane.

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Bluebook (online)
175 F.2d 278, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grubb-motor-lines-inc-v-woodson-ca4-1949.