Hayes Richlands Metal Products, Inc. v. Honaker

114 S.E.2d 622, 201 Va. 912, 1960 Va. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 13, 1960
DocketRecord No. 5084
StatusPublished

This text of 114 S.E.2d 622 (Hayes Richlands Metal Products, Inc. v. Honaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes Richlands Metal Products, Inc. v. Honaker, 114 S.E.2d 622, 201 Va. 912, 1960 Va. LEXIS 177 (Va. 1960).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

J. E. Honaker, sometimes hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, brought this action by motion for judgment to recover of Hayes Richlands Metal Products, Inc., and its alleged agent and employee, [913]*913Charles Mundy, the sum of $50,000.00, charging that the negligence of the defendants caused a collision of plaintiff’s passenger automobile with a motor truck driven by Mundy. There was a trial by jury, which resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $6,000.00, upon which judgment was entered.

The defendants have assigned numerous grounds of error presenting the following questions: (1) Whether the plaintiff was guilty of negligence which was either the sole cause of the accident or a contributing proximate cause; (2) Whether the evidence showed that Mundy was the agent of the corporate defendant at the time of the accident; and (3) Whether the court erred in the granting and refusing of instructions.

In the view that we take of the case, the decisive question is whether plaintiff, as a matter of law, was guilty of contributory negligence which proximately caused the collision. We think the answer is in the affirmative.

The accident occurred on Highway Route 460, in a shopping area between the towns of Richlands and Cedar Bluff, Virginia, on Sunday, September 2, 1956, about 12:15 to 12:30 p.m. The day was clear and the road was dry. The highway, a two-lane road, runs straight east and west at the point of the collision. The paved portion is 31 feet in width. Five hundred and eighty-eight feet east, the road reaches the crest of a hill, and then runs slightly downgrade in a southerly direction. Motor vehicles approaching the place of the accident from the west are not visible to travelers coming from the east until the latter reach the crest of the hill. From the crest approaching vehicles are visible for a distance of approximately 2,000 feet to the west. Motor vehicles approaching from the east are not visible to travelers coming from the west until the vehicles from the east reach the crest of the hill.

On both sides of the highway, in the shopping area, there are buildings removed a slight distance from the road. On the north side a high school building is easternmost. A short distance to the west is a C. & S. Texaco Service Station. Next is a chain grocery store with a parking lot, and then further west several other business buildings. On the south side, about 200 feet west of the C. & S. Service Station, is a building, known as Lowe’s Service Station, and about 25 feet west of it is a drive-in restaurant. Also on the south side and east of the C. & S. Service Station, there is a widely patronized restaurant, operated under the name of “Wimpy Jones.”

[914]*914Hayes Richlands Metal Products, Inc. is a corporation engaged in manufacturing and repairing trucks and other vehicles at Richlands, Virginia. Charles Mundy was employed by that Corporation in the capacity of installation foreman.

On the morning of September 2, Mundy had performed some work upon a two-ton coal truck owned by H. M. McGlothlin, the work not being a part of his usual duties. After completion of the work, he undertook to drive the truck to the C. & S. Service Station for delivery to McGlothlin. He drove the truck eastwardly along the south lane of the highway from Richlands, and when he reached the Lowe Service Station about 200 feet west of the entrance to the C. & S. Service Station, he reduced his speed to an estimated 20 miles an hour, and turned on his directional signal indicating that he would make a left turn across the westbound traffic lane of the highway. He said he looked in front and behind, saw no traffic approaching, changed to a lower gear, reduced his speed to about 10 miles an hour, and drove at' a 45-degree angle across the westbound lane of the highway toward the west entrance to the C. & S. Service Station. As he was crossing that lane, he heard the skidding tires of a car “crying,” looked to the east and saw plaintiff’s car skidding sideways toward him from a distance of about 150 feet. The car struck his truck just as its front reached the entrance to the service station. Mundy did not see any lights on the Pontiac car, nor hear its siren sound until the collision, and did not remember very much of what thereafter occurred.

J. E. Honaker is a resident of Amónate, located on the boundary line separating McDowell county, West Virginia, and Tazewell county, Virginia. He is a part time deputy sheriff in Tazewell county and a conservator of the peace in McDowell county. About 11:30 a. m., he was in a restaurant at Amónate when Robert H. Nicholson became ill. At the request of the ill man and the latter’s son, Willard Nicholson, he took the sick man in his 1955 Pontiac passenger motor vehicle to the office of a doctor. The doctor advised that the elder Nicholson be quickly taken to a hospital. With Willard seated in the right front seat and his father lying on the back seat, the plaintiff started to the hospital by way of Cedar Bluff. Honaker said that as he drove up the hill east of the point of the collision, at about 50 miles an hour, he passed three or four cars; that the lights were burning on his car, and he had turned on his siren when he started to pass the other cars; and that it was his habit [915]*915to blow his siren when he passed cars and cut it off after he had gotten ahead, but that on this occasion, he did not cut it off, because he knew that traffic was usually heavy near the Wimpy Jones Restaurant.

He increased his speed as he went up the hill from 40 to 50 miles an hour to pass other cars, and when he reached the crest, he looked west, saw that his traffic lane was clear; saw the McGlothlin truck, around 600 to 700 feet away, in the eastbound lane, at the “edge” of the white line, its “left tire tilting to the side of the road,” with its directional signal light “blinking” for a left turn. He said that this signal “indicated” to him that the truck “was going to make a left turn at once.” When he first saw the truck, he said he could not tell whether it was moving slowly or standing still. Later he concluded that it had stopped and he increased his speed to between 55 and 60 miles an hour. When he was about 150 feet distant from the truck it turned into the westbound lane of the highway directly in front of him. He immediately applied his brakes and cut to his right, all four wheels locked, the Pontiac skidded 100 to 150 feet, and its left front struck the left front of the truck near the entrance to the C. & S. Service Station. Asked if he increased his speed when he saw the truck in front of him with its light “blinking” for a left turn, Honaker replied, “I thought he would stay there.” He also placed the point where he increased his speed as “the top of the hill.” There were no vehicles between the truck and the automobile.

As a result of the collision, the truck was knocked backwards a short distance; but stopped with one wheel on the concrete entrance to the C. & S. Service Station. The right front tire of the plaintiff’s car blew out as it struck the curbing and it swung around and “wrapped itself around the truck.” The Pontiac then traveled a distance from 50 to 75 feet from the truck and turned completely around, with its front facing east. The Pontiac and the truck were almost completely demolished, and the plaintiff and his passenger, Robert Nicholson, received serious injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.E.2d 622, 201 Va. 912, 1960 Va. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-richlands-metal-products-inc-v-honaker-va-1960.