Hicks' Administratrix v. Romaine

82 S.E. 71, 116 Va. 401, 1914 Va. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 82 S.E. 71 (Hicks' Administratrix v. Romaine) 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
Hicks' Administratrix v. Romaine, 82 S.E. 71, 116 Va. 401, 1914 Va. LEXIS 45 (Va. 1914).

Opinion

Caed well, J.,

delivered the- opinion of the court.

This action was brought to recover damages for the alleged negligent killing of the plaintiff’s intestate, W. Plummer Hicks, by the defendant traveling in an automobile upon, a public highway. There was a demurrer to the evidence by the defendant, which the trial court sustained and gave judgment for the defendant. Before the end of the term the court overruled a motion by the plaintiff for a new trial on the ground of after-discovered evidence, to which rulings the plaintiff duly excepted, and the rulings of the trial court complained of are before us for review upon a writ of error awarded the plaintiff.

The gravamen of the plaintiff’s declaration and her theory, as brought out in the evidence, is that the decedent, plaintiff’s husband, was knocked down, or while lying in the road was run over and killed by an automobile • driven by the defendant at an unlawful rate of speed, without lights on the car, and without horn or signal device.

Defendant’s grounds of demurrer to the evidence are: (l)That plaintiff had not established by competent evidence that plaintiff’s decedent came to his death by being struck by an automobile driven by the defendant; (2) That the evidence does not establish the fact of any negligence on the part of defendant in relation to any duty he owed to the decedent; (3) That the evidence fails to [403]*403establish any causal connection between acts of the defendant and the death of plaintiff’s decedent; and (4) That if it hadx been proved that defendant was driving his automobile at the point on the public road where decedent was injured at a speed of from twelve to fifteen miles an hour, these acts do not, as a matter of law, constitute negligence, and therefore the negligence alleged in plaintiff’s declaration had not been proved.

It appears from the evidence that the decedent and his family, at the time of his death, lived at the village of Swift Creek, situated about two miles north of the city of Petersburg, in the county of Chesterfield, on the Richmond and Petersburg turnpike, and was employed in a bag factory in Petersburg, to which employment he customarily went each morning, leaving his home.about six o’clock to arrive at his work in Petersburg at seven o ’clock, and returning each evening to his home, usually walking each way on the turnpike. On .the day that he received the injuries causing his death, he left his home at the usual hour in the morning, and went to his work in Petersburg and worked that day until about three o ’clock, p. m., which was about the latest time any of the hands worked on that day—Saturday. That night, between nine and ten o’clock, he was found on the turnpike between Petersburg and his borne in almost a dying condition by one A. Jeff and a colored woman, who were then on their way to Petersburg. A short time thereafter he was carried to a hospital in Petersburg where he died early the next morning, and without having made any statement as to how the injuries to him occurred. There were no witnesses to the happenings which caused the decedent’s injuries, and, therefore, the whole evidence in the case is circumstantial, and the circumstances, in the main, are testified to, on behalf of the plaintiff, by the said A. Jeff alone. One other witness, [404]*404a Mr. Lundie, who arrived on the scene not long after the decedent had been found in the road, was introduced and examined for the plaintiff, but there is nothing in his testimony that affords any light as to the causes of the injury to decedent. Dr. Powell, who attended the decedent after he had been carried to the hospital, was also introduced and examined as a witness for the plaintiff, but the testimony given by him relates only to the character of the wounds received by the decedent and their possible causes.

At the point where the decedent was found the turnpike is from sixty to seventy-five feet wide, and the point about three hundred yards from the north end of Bishop’s bridge, which spans the Appomattox river, and from the bridge to a point where the turnpike makes a long curve towards Richmond, a short distance beyond where decedent was found, there is a considerable ascent, spoken of in the evidence as a hill, but from the point of the curve at or near the top of the hill to Bishop’s bridge the turnpike is straight and the vision unobstructed.

After stating that he lived on the turnpike in Chesterfield county; that about five minutes after nine o’clock p. m. he started to Petersburg, walking along the ’pike, and overtook a colored woman also walking to Peters-burg, the testimony given by said Jeff, as certified in the record, is in substance as follows:

“We went a little further and met a man and a woman walking, leaving Petersburg. Then we got a little further and just before we started doVn the hill to Peters-burg I heard a machine coming up the hill. The darkie was just behind me. I says, ‘Look out, there is a machine coming;’ and I stepped out in the ditch. There is no pathway there, none at all; you have to walk in the middle of the road or get in the ditch. I stepped off [405]*405and the machine brushed right by me. If I had stayed where we were Walking it would have been liable to hit me, but I got out of the way. . . I reckon it was making twelve or fifteen miles. We hadn’t gone very far and on the opposite side of the road I saw something-lying. I went on to go to it. It was about as far as from here to that window back there (indicating) I reckon. It was awful dark; you couldn’t see. I says to the darky. ‘Let’s see what that is, who it is.’ I says: ‘Let’s turn him over.’ She says, ‘No don’t touch him; let’s go and tell somebody.’ So 1 felt in all my pockets and didn’t have a match. I could not recogmze the man because he was so full of blood and it was dark. . . ’ ’ Then after relating that he went for an officer and how he got certain officers to come back with him to where.he left the decedent in the road, and after making a number of unimportant statements, the witness proceeds: “Me and the officer went down and found his (decedent’s) basket from twelve to fifteen feet towards Petersburg from where the body was found—from where his head lay, not where his. feet were. I helped them to pick the stuff up; wasn’t any out of the basket but a piece of meat and some potatoes.....About that time the machine came down the hill that had passed me before. When it passed me going- up the hill it only had these two dim lights, little bits of lights. They went from there and got up to about Rennie’s lane, I think, and started up that lane and stopped. I went up, me and Mr. George Lundie, and tracked them where they went up in there and backed out. When he came back he had the lights lit, these big head-lights. ’ ’

It is well to note just here that the witness later in his testimony discloses that it was not on the night of the accident to the decedent that he claims to' have tracked the automobile up into Rennie’s lane, where it [406]*406stopped and backed out, but on Sunday following the accident, after it had rained continuously from the night before—“a steady rain”—the witness claiming that he tracked an automobile over a macadamized road for a distance of nearly three quarters of a mile, though it was shown by other evidence in the case that other vehicles had passed over the road and perhaps a great many had traveled the same route during this time. George Rennie, who Jeff says was with him when he tracked the automobile to Rennie’s lane, does not testify in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.E. 71, 116 Va. 401, 1914 Va. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-administratrix-v-romaine-va-1914.