Hunsucker v. State Highway Dept.

182 S.C. 441, 189 S.C. 652
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 28, 1937
Docket14423
StatusPublished

This text of 182 S.C. 441 (Hunsucker v. State Highway Dept.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunsucker v. State Highway Dept., 182 S.C. 441, 189 S.C. 652 (S.C. 1937).

Opinion

. The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

The plaintiff sues to recover damages for the death of her husband, R. Knox Hunsucker, which she alleges was caused by “the negligent operation of a truck in charge of the State Highway Department, while the said vehicle was [443]*443actually engaged in the construction or repair of the said highwáy.”

The only specification of negligence set out in the complaint is as follows:

“That * * * on the 19th day of February, 1934, R. Knox Hunsucker was riding along Highway No. 401 — about five miles south of the Town of Bennettsville, when a truck engaged in the construction or repair of the said highway negligently collided with the automobile in which the said R. Knox Hunsucker was riding, inflicting upon him wounds of which he died on the 19th day of February, 1934.”
The complaint contains the usual allegations that the injuries and death of Hunsucker were not brought about, nor contributed to by any negligence on his part, “nor by the negligence of any other person whomsoever, than the defendant {jtate Highway Department of the State of South Carolina.”

Claim was duly filed and payment' refused.

The case was tried by Judge Dennis and a jury at the May, 1936, special term of the Court of Common Pleas for Marlboro County, and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $3.000.00.

At the call of the case a motion was made to quash the venire of the jurors on the ground that, “The jury tickets in the jury box do not comply with the law in that they are not folded in such a way that they cannot be read without unfolding them.” The motion was overruled.

Motions for nonsuit, for directed verdict, and for new trial were made at proper times, and all of them were denied. This appeal followed and is based on twenty-two exceptions, but appellant’s attorneys, in their brief, say that the issues made by them, and now to be determined by us, are comprised in four propositions, viz.:

I. The motion for nonsuit should have been granted. Exceptions 3-7, inclusive.

[444]*444II. The motion by defendant for directed verdict should have been granted. Exceptions 8-14, inclusive.

III. The motion for new trial should have been allowed. .Exceptions 16-22, inclusive.

IV. The venire should have been quashed. Exceptions 1 and 2.

We may consider the first three questions together since they turn upon the determination of a question embodied in all of them, viz.: Is there any evidence of actionable negligence on the part of the highway department which was the proximate cause of the injury which culminated in the death of plaintiff’s intestate?

The narrative of the incidents which brought about the litigation may be thus stated:

R. Knox Hunsucker was traveling on highway No. 401 between Society Hill and Bennettsville at a point in Marlboro County about 5 miles south of Bennettsville. tie was riding in an automobile driven by L. T. Tison, by invitation of Mr. Tison. A truck belonging to the State Highway Department, which had been engaged in repairing a bridge on the highway, and which had ceased work on account of rain, was traveling on the same highway in the same direction — toward Bennettsville — as was the car' in which Mr. Tison and Mr. Hunsucker were riding. A car was in a held on the side of the highway, where it had evidently skidded. As was their duty, the occupants of the truck, who were emplees of the Highway Department, stopped with the view of aiding the stalled car. The car in which Tison and Hunsucker rode was following the truck. At the time the truck stopped another car was approaching it and the Tison car, going from the direction of Bennettsville toward Society Hill. The car in which Tison and Hunsucker were riding struck the highway truck on its left rear side with the right front side of the Tison car.

[445]*445The question of alleged negligence of the defendant, upon which the respondent relies tO' sustain the judgment it has received, is stated to be that the driver of the truck stopped it, and was backing it down the road toward the car stalled in the field, and struck the Tison-Hunsucker car and inflicted injuries from which Hunsucker died.

The pivotal question is: Did the truck back and strike the Tison car; if it did was it done negligently? Or was the truck standing still and the Tison car struck it and caused the injuries from which Hunsucker died?

When the plaintiff closed her testimony in chief, the only evidence on this vital point had been given by the witness W. P. Rogers, for plaintiff. Summarized, it is: He was at a mail box on the highway some 300 yards from where the collision occurred and on the opposite side of the road. Saw the car sitting in the field about 20 feet from the road. Saw the truck and the T'ison car pass, going in the same direction, the car following the truck at a distance of about 200 or 250 yards, both traveling at about 30 miles an hour. A man was sitting in the car in the field which was facing toward the road. The truck passed the car in the field about 15 or 20 feet before it stopped. The truck stopped and started to back. Another car was coming toward Society Hill. The Hunsucker car hit the highway truck.

“Q. At that time was the truck backing? A. I don’t know.
“Q. Did you see it when it started backing? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you ever see it stop backing? A. No, sir. * * *
“Q. Tell the position of the other car that was going toward Society Hill at the time of the collision. A. It was not quite even with them as far as I could see.
“Q. Now you have testified that the highway truck started backing, now tell the jury in your own way what the high[446]*446way truck was doing and what the Hunsucker car was doing at the time they got together. A. The highway truck was backing and the Hunsucker car was going forward.”

This testimony was adduced on direct examination. On cross-examination this witness said: There was nothing to hinder the man who was driving the Hunsucker car from seeing the highway truck; it was straight open road and open country on both sides.

“Q. You saw the highway truck stop and start to back back? A. That is right.
“Q. Was it backing at the time the collision took place? A. I don’t know.” (Italics added.)

Thus stood the evidence upon which plaintiff relied, at the close of her testimony, to show that defendant was guilty of negligence in operating the highway truck which was the proximate cause of the collision, which inflicted the injuries which caused the death of her intestate, and to prove that the decedent did not bring about his injuries, nor negligently contribute thereto, but that such injuries were due to the negligence of the defendant State Highway Department of South Carolina, and not by the negligence of any other person whomsoever.

A scanning and parsing of this testimony discloses acute contradictions of the witness Rogers, by himself, upon the •question whether the truck was backing at the time of the •collision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 S.C. 441, 189 S.C. 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunsucker-v-state-highway-dept-sc-1937.