Hammersmith v. Bussey

67 S.E.2d 609, 136 W. Va. 437, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 35
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1951
Docket10310
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 S.E.2d 609 (Hammersmith v. Bussey) 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
Hammersmith v. Bussey, 67 S.E.2d 609, 136 W. Va. 437, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 35 (W. Va. 1951).

Opinions

Riley, Judge:

Belle Hammersmith, Administratrix of the estate of Louis Hammersmith, deceased, instituted this action in the Circuit Court of Harrison County to recover damages for wrongful death. A verdict at the direction of the court having been returned in favor of defendants, Wayne M. Bussey and Lever Brothers Company, a corporation, plaintiff moved that the same be set aside and a new trial awarded, which motion was later overruled, and judgment entered on the verdict. To this judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this writ of error.

The declaration, as amended, charges, among other things, that on or about the 29th day of September, 1948, while plaintiff’s decedent was exercising due care and caution for his own safety, Lever Brothers Company, a corporation, by its servant Bussey, and the said Bussey carelessly, unlawfully, negligently, recklessly and improperly drove and operated a certain 1948 Plymouth Coach on a public highway, known as State Route No. 73, near its intersection with Corbin Branch road, in Harrison County, and that by and through such action struck and fatally injured plaintiff’s decedent, who was then lawfully on and walking upon and along said highway.

Decedent was killed about one thirty a. m., on September 29, 1948, on State Route No. 73 at a point between [439]*439Boothsville to the north and Bridgeport to the south, a short distance from its junction with Corbin Branch road. Immediately prior to the time that plaintiff’s decedent was killed, he and his son were flagging defendants’ Plymouth automobile for help, decedent having a short time before ditched his own automobile, a DeSoto coach, at or near a culvert in a dip in Route No. 78, a short distance south of the intersection with Corbin Branch road. The Plymouth automobile was being driven south in the direction of Bridgeport by defendant Wayne M. Bussey, who, together with the other occupants of the automobile, Peter Faini and Ralph Calabrese, was employed as a salesman for defendant, Lever Brothers Company, and was returning from a sales meeting held by the corporate defendant in the City of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Corbin Branch road intersects State Route No. 73 from the northeast, at a sharp angle, adjoining the eastern edge thereof for a distance of approximately eighty-five feet. Beginning at a point on State Route No. 73 about two hundred sixty-five feet to the north of the northernmost part of the intersection of Corbin Branch road the highway is practically level. A few feet to the south the grade begins to drop and continues to do so for a distance to and beyond the point where decedent was killed. Seventy-five feet south of the beginning point, just referred to, the highway bears to the right on a curvature of eleven degrees for a distance of one hundred fifty feet to the point of tangent, and from the latter continues straightaway to and beyond the place where decedent was killed. Ninety-nine feet south of the point of tangent is a culvert with cement headwalls.

From the testimony of defendants’ witness, Paul Allen Hornor, a civil engineer, who prepared a map covering a distance along State Route No. 73 of slightly more than three hundred feet on each side of the culvert, drawn to scale of twenty feet to an inch, and from a perusal of the map itself, it appears that for a distance of approximately four hundred twenty feet north of the culvert State Route No. 73 at a station designated .on the map as “0+00”, [440]*440where the elevation is arbitrarily set at 124.1 feet, the elevation of the road drops at stations “0+50”; “1+00”; “1+50”; “2+00”; “2+50”; “3+00”; “3+50”; “4+00”,; “4+ 50”; and “5+00”, to the respective elevations of 123.24; 121.66i; 119.20; 114.41; 109.86; 106.02; 102.73; 100.77; 99.41 and 97.77 feet. The last-mentioned station, “5+00” is about seventy-six feet south of the culvert (“4+24”), so that it can be readily seen that from station “0+00” to the culvert the drop in elevation is slightly more than twenty-three feet. The sharpest drop in elevation occurs between stations “1+50” to “2+50”, being 9.34 feet in one hundred feet, or a grade of more than nine per cent.

Hornor testified that, “Just before you hit the curve [traveling toward Bridgeport], the road starts to drop down and as you go into the curve it drops off rapidly, finally levelling off about seventy-five feet before you come to the culvert.” This witness testified that the road has some superelevation or bank in it around the curve and on the straightaway it is slightly crowned “draining to both sides”; that at the intersection of Corbin Branch road with State Route No. 73, “The road is probably crowned a little higher in the center than on either side. You are practically out of the curve and because of the intersection it had to drop off to fit into it properly.” From a point forty feet north of the point of curve, the vision of the road at the culvert is blocked by the bank on the right. The difference in elevation between the last two mentioned points, Hornor testified, is nineteen feet. At a point opposite the middle of the barn, shown on Hornor’s map as located east of State Route No. 73 and north of the Corbin Branch road, that is, six feet south of the point of curve, Bussey for the first time had a vision of the road at the culvert, and from the map it appears-that from this point to the culvert the distance is two hundred forty-three feet.

After Hammersmith’s DeSoto had gone into the ditch at or near the culvert, the Hammersmiths, according to decedent’s son Joseph, hearing an automobile approach[441]*441ing from the north, started to walk north in the east lane of State Route No. 73 for the purpose of flagging it, in order to obtain help from the occupants thereof. This witness testified that he and his father were in the middle of the east lane at a point twenty feet south of the culvert and twenty-two feet north of the ditched DeSoto, when the Bussey automobile, driven in a southerly direction in the west lane, came into view, at which time they began to wave their arms. This witness testified further that the Plymouth automobile was then being driven at an estimated speed of fifty-five to sixty miles an hour; that it went into a skid and continued out of control for approximately three hundred feet, turning around during the course of the skid one and a half times in the road; and that when the Plymouth was eighty to one hundred feet from them, he attempted to run or jump to the east and south to get out of the way, and in so doing he “brushed by” his father.

As the Plymouth automobile entered the curve from the north on its way down the grade, Bussey testified that he saw the two men, the lights from the ditched automobile and the automobile itself all about the same time, that is, when the Plymouth was approximately one hundred seventy feet away from the ditched car, which witness placed just north of the culvert; that upon applying the brakes the Plymouth skidded, turned around one and a half times, so that the rear fender of the car struck the ditched DeSoto at its left rear. This collision tended to straighten witness’ automobile on the right side of the highway, so that it came to rest with its front right wheel on the western berm of the road. Bussey further testified that for a moment it seemed to him as if he would pin one or the other of the two Hammersmiths between the two cars.

Decedent’s son, Joseph Hammersmith, gave a statement to Corporal Randall that read, in part: “Road dry until we got to this place — we went into ditch.”

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Hammersmith v. Bussey
67 S.E.2d 609 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.E.2d 609, 136 W. Va. 437, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammersmith-v-bussey-wva-1951.