Hendricks v. Monongahela West Penn Public Service Co.

175 S.E. 441, 115 W. Va. 208, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 40
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1934
Docket7855
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 S.E. 441 (Hendricks v. Monongahela West Penn Public Service Co.) 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
Hendricks v. Monongahela West Penn Public Service Co., 175 S.E. 441, 115 W. Va. 208, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 40 (W. Va. 1934).

Opinions

Kenna, Judge:'

This action for death by wrongful act was brought in the circuit court of Wood County by H. H. Hendricks, administrator of the estate of Emma Edna Hendricks, deceased, who was a child of twelve at the time of her death, against Monorigahela West Penn Public Service Company, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $7,000.00. This verdict was set aside by the successor of the trial judge, who was of opinion that the record disclosed contributory negligence as a *210 matter of law which barred recovery, and judgment entered for defendant. From that judgment, the plaintiff in the trial court prosecutes this writ of error.

• We shall refer to the parties in their positions, respectively, in the trial court.

This is the second time this case has been in this court. A judgment for the plaintiff was reyersed and the case remanded on- a former writ of error decided on the 23rd day of February, 1932. See Hendricks v. Monongahela West Penn Public Service Company, 111 W. Va. 576, 163 S. E. 411. The case, as represented by the record on that writ of error, was exhaustively and ably developed. The printed record comprised 641 pages. There were fourteen separate bills of exceptions upon which, together with other parts of the record, were based twenty-one different assignments of error involving some forty-nine distinct legal questions. Thirteen instructions were tendered on behalf of the plaintiff and thirty-nine for the defendant. Nine of these instructions were given for the plaintiff and fifteen for the defendant. The entire closing argument of counsel for the plaintiff, as well as one of the arguments of counsel for defendant, were reported and are set forth verbatim in the bills of exceptions. The case was before a jury in the trial court for eight days. All of the matters assigned were examined and the recital of the facts mentioned is in no wise intended to deter the zeal of counsel for their clients, but is made merely to draw attention to the fact that it is impossible for this court always to discuss within the scope of an opinion the full minutiae of the legal questions raised upon a record, even after that record and those questions have been fully examined.

A number of the assignments of error had,to do either with the introduction or exclusion of evidence or with the instructions of the court. Excepting, for the time, the single question1 that will be fully discussed hereafter, in our opinion, a close scrutiny of the present record discloses that the case was fully and fairly tried and presented upon correct theories adequately stated, without materially prejudicial rulings on the evidence. Where *211 this appears, the case will not be reversed for technical error. Limbaugh v. Commonwealth, 149 Va. 383, pt. 22, Syl., 140 S. E. 133.

It seems to us the' sole question upon which the decision of .this case turns is whether the driver of the truck in which plaintiff’s decedent rode, was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. On the former writ of error, upon proof not materially different from the proof before us now, the judgment of the trial court was reversed because of instructions given to the jury, which, in effect, told them that the negligence of the truck driver could not be imputed to plaintiff’s decedent. This court was of opinion that because the father was the sole beneficiary of the recovery and because he had habitually sanctioned the little girl’s riding with the driver of the truck on his milk route, the negligence of the driver, if any, became the negligence of the father, and would bar his recovery. Other errors were discussed in the opinion.- Judge Lively said: “There are many other points of error, which will perhaps be unnecessary to determine in view of the reversal on instructions.” On this basis, the former case was reversed and a new trial awarded. Comparison of the former record with the record now before us shows that, with certain exceptions that we believe do not materially affect the merits of the controversy, the proof in the former case was substantially the same as the proof in this case. In the maze of conflict that exists in the record, it is difficult to make a narrative statement of the circumstances of the accident, or to form anything like a description of it, without including matter that is contradicted by one side or the other. Since, on motion to set aside the verdict, the proof must be viewed most benignly in favor of the verdict, the salient facts from that viewpoint may be stated as follows:

Camden Avenue in the City of Parkersburg runs east and west. Its over all width is eighty feet. On the south side 22 feet is paved with concrete: Four or five feet north of this concrete runs the main line of defendant’s track. Still further north is a side track used by the defendant company to permit the passage of its cars, *212 and as a loading switch by a lumber company whose plant is on the north side of Camden Avenue. North of this side track are the sheds of a lumber company which extend over and cover the north portion of Camden Avenue with a roof or shed which does not interfere with the public use of that part of the street, although that use appears to have been infrequent. To the west of the lumber shed is Orchard Street, which intersects Camden Avenue north and south. Just to the east of the lumber shed is Locust Street, which also intersects Camden Avenue, but is not used for traffic at this point north of Camden Avenue. On Locust Street, the driveway (that part of Camden Avenue covered by the lumber company’s shed) running east and west emerges from the east end of the shed, continues to the east for something like 45 feet, and turns south, crossing first the side track and then the defendant’s main line track to reach the paved portion of Camden Avenue. At exactly this point of crossing, and laid across Locust Street at the intersection, is a switch connecting the defendant’s main line with the siding to the north of it. It is at this crossing that the accident occurred.

On the evening of the accident, Harold Kniseley, aged seventeen, regularly employed for that purpose, was making the deliveries on the milk route of H. H. Hendricks. Mrs. Hendricks, a little Hendricks boy and Emma Hendricks, plaintiff’s decedent, were in the truck. Mrs. Hendricks was seated beside the driver and the girl was on her lap, while the little boy was in the back of the truck. The truck proceeded east along Camden Avenue to Orchard Street and at that point turned to the left or north, and got upon that portion of Camden Avenue lying north of the tracks. From there, it continued under the lumber company’s sheds eastward on Camden Avenue, delivered a bottle of milk at the lumber yard, proceeded along the covered driveway to the crossing at Locust Street. The driver, Kniseley, testifies that at this point he slowed his truck down and practically stopped; that he approached the crossing slowly in low gear, and when he got to a point that he could view the track par *213 tially, looked eastward, (to his left). At this point, the view to the west was blocked wholly or in part by a box car on the siding about 62 feet to the west of the Locust Street crossing. He says that he looked to the west but had not reached a point from which he could see the tracks in that direction.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.E. 441, 115 W. Va. 208, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendricks-v-monongahela-west-penn-public-service-co-wva-1934.