Gunn v. Grice

204 So. 2d 177, 1967 Miss. LEXIS 1185
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1967
DocketNo. 44574
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 204 So. 2d 177 (Gunn v. Grice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gunn v. Grice, 204 So. 2d 177, 1967 Miss. LEXIS 1185 (Mich. 1967).

Opinions

PATTERSON, Justice:

This appeal arises from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Montgomery County in the sum of $75,000 against Wardell Gunn for the wrongful death of James Robert Grice, the 14-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer C. Grice. The parents and two sisters of the decedent were plaintiffs below. The defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Young Grice was killed in the late afternoon of August 9, 1962, when the motor scooter on which he was a guest passenger collided with the truck being driven by appellant. The accident occurred on Win-gate Road, a blacktop road, in Kilmichael, Mississippi. This road runs east and west at the point of collision and bears rather [179]*179sharply to the north a few feet east of the site of the accident.

The defendant, at the time of the accident, was driving a pickup truck belonging to his employer in an easterly direction on Wingate Road. Plaintiffs’ decedent and the driver of the motor scooter, Charles Kent, Jr., were riding in a westerly direction at the time of the collision. The point of impact and the traffic lanes occupied by the two vehicles are in dispute.

The first assignment of error is that the •trial court erred in not directing a verdict for the defendant on motion therefor at the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ case for the reason that plaintiffs failed to offer any substantial or credible evidence that defendant’s negligence, if any, proximately caused or contributed to the death of plaintiffs’ decedent.

We are of the opinion this assignment is without merit. The plaintiffs’ evidence and all reasonable inferences arising therefrom are to be taken as true in determining the issue of whether the plaintiffs’ evidence has made a question for the jury. See Moseley v. Bailey, 193 So.2d 729 (Miss.1967) and Shaw v. Phillips, 193 So.2d 717 (Miss.1967), and other cases to the same effect too numerous to cite.

Mr. Grice, father of decedent, testified that he arrived at the scene of the accident prior to the removal of the truck. He observed that the truck was faced in an easterly direction with the right front wheel • in the ditch on the south edge of the road, the left front wheel on the edge of the pavement, the right rear wheel on the shoulder of the road, and the left rear wheel on the edge of the pavement. He testified that skid marks were clearly visible to the rear of the truck and described them in this manner:

The skid marks, as I said, the way I saw it, started from two or three feet over on the boys’ side of the road and went thirty some feet up the road before he could stop, and they was down there just plain, you didn’t have to have a rule or nothing to measure it with, it was just as plain as if you was looking at your hand.

He further testified that on Sunday following the accident on Thursday he, in company with Charles Henry Kent and Jimmy Kent, father and relative of the driver of the motor scooter, went to see the defendant in an effort to determine how the boys were killed, and was told by the defendant that the accident happened in this manner:

He says, “Mr. Homer, I didn’t see them until I hit them,” and says, “I looked around and seen the boys going in the air.” If ever I told the truth, gentlemen, God in heaven knows that’s the truth. He says, “I applied the brakes as quick as I could and I slid up there,” which was some thirty feet up the road.

Further, the witness stated regarding his conversation with Gunn:

Yes, sir, he told me that he just glanced off the road, looking, and that he hit something and he looked around and the boys was going in the air. Now if ever I told the truth, that’s it.

Grice also testified that on this same Sunday he again went to the scene of the accident where he saw some red clay dirt on the north side of the road approximately 11 feet west of where the skid marks began, similar to the 'dirt underneath the fenders of the scooter.

The next witness, Charles Henry Kent, father of the driver of the scooter, testified that the truck was in the ditch on the south side of the road as he observed it about dusk on the evening of the accident. In [180]*180response to a question in regard to the skid marks of the truck, the witness replied:

Those marks began under the left front wheel on the pavement, of the truck, and went to the rear of the truck and on to the west end of the road to where the skid marks stopped out there in the western part of the- road on the north side of the road where the skid marks had first begun.

The following morning he returned to the scene and on this occasion, according to his testimony, observed some red clay dirt west of the position of the truck as it was located the preceding afternoon. This dirt, he testified, was located 6 feet 3 inches south of the north edge of Win-gate Road and 11 feet west of the skid marks put down by the defendant’s truck, and was similar to dirt under the fenders of the scooter. He also found two small pieces of metal just off of the north edge of the pavement and &1/2 feet east of the red clay dirt. His testimony in regard thereto was that these pieces of metal were part of a coupling from underneath the fender of the scooter. He stated that on this occasion he made and recorded measurements of his observations from which he made a sketch of the scene. He used this drawing to refresh his memory while testifying. The sketch was offered in evidence, but on objection that it had self-serving conclusions in it, it was not admitted. The witness testified further that many people came to the scene of the accident though he observed no vehicular traffic pass the wreckage.

The following year, June 1963, this witness accompanied an’ engineer to the scene of the accident, pointed out the general area and gave him the sketch he had formerly made so that a map of the area could be prepared. This witness also testified to the statements alleged to have been made by the defendant on the occasion of the conversation referred to by Grice, to determine the cause of the boys’ death. Kent’s version of the conversation was:

* * * he stated that he was driving down the road there and all of a sudden— he barely remember exactly what happened there, he said he didn’t hardly see them, but he knew that there was a bump and as he felt the bump and saw the little boys he hit his brakes and turned to the ditch, skidded on off in the ditch * * *

Pat Jamison, the engineer mentioned, was next called as a witness. He testified that he prepared a map of Wingate Road at the location where it was said that a collision occurred between a truck driven by the defendant and a motor scooter operated by Charles Kent, Jr. He related that the map was made at the request of the plaintiffs; that it was prepared from his own field notes and measurements — that is, the general scene, the roadway, the trees, the ditch, etc. — but that the information set forth as to the accident, portrayed by an inset on the map, was taken from a sketch given to him by Kent. This inset depicts a focal point designated as “red clay” from which arrows with the distances thereon radiate to various objects or substances to the east designated as “8'6", broken metal, ll'O", left tire skid marks; 9/0", right tire skid mark.” East of the beginning of the left tire skid mark there is an area designated “3'9",

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Bluebook (online)
204 So. 2d 177, 1967 Miss. LEXIS 1185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunn-v-grice-miss-1967.