Hunt v. Division of Highways

23 Ct. Cl. 317
CourtWest Virginia Court of Claims
DecidedJune 29, 2001
DocketCC-96-492
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ct. Cl. 317 (Hunt v. Division of Highways) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Division of Highways, 23 Ct. Cl. 317 (W. Va. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

STEPTOE, JUDGE:

[318]*318Claimant, Jeremy Tait Hunt, brought this action for permanent physical injuries he sustained when the vehicle in which he was a passenger went off a bridge on Sate Route 49 in Thacker, Mingo County. The driver of the vehicle and claimant were traveling northbound between Edgarton and Matewan. At this location, State Route 49 is maintained by respondent, the Division of Highways, The Court is of the opinion to disallow this claim for the reasons more fully stated below.

FACTS OF THE CLAIM

The incident giving rise to this claim occurred on June 26, 1993, at approximately 12:30 p.m. On the day in question, the sixteen year-old claimant was a passenger in a 1991 Ford Escort driven by Celia Michelle Murphy.1 The vehicle was owned by Ms. Murphy’s father, Larry Murphy. Ms. Murphy and the claimant were traveling northbound on State Route 49 at a speed of about thirty to thirty-five miles per hour, in the opinion of Ms. Murphy. The unposted speed limit for this road was fifty-five miles per hour. Ms. Murphy regularly traveled this portion of road of State Route 49 on her way to and from high school. She was very familiar with the road. At the time of the incident herein, claimant and Ms. Murphy were proceeding from her residence in Edgarton towards Matewan with the final destination being the Huntington Mall.

At this location, State Route 49 is a two-lane road with double yellow lines indicating the center of the road and white lines on the edges of the pavement. Ms. Murphy testified that the road was in a state of disrepair. She asserted that there were ruts in the pavement. The weather on the day in question was rainy and the roads were wet. As Ms. Murphy drove over a crest at the top of a hill on State Route 49, she p roceeded do wnhill t owards t he Gr apevine Br idge a 11 he b ottom. When t he vehicle began moving downhill, Ms. Murphy testified that the vehicle began to hydroplane and she lost control of the vehicle. She panicked, shut her eyes, and took her hands off the steering wheel. Ms. Murphy further testified that after she released the steering wheel, she remembered the claimant having grabbed the steering wheel. At that point, the vehicle left the surface of the road, went to the right of the Grapevine Bridge, proceeded in the air across Grapevine Creek and Lick Fork Road, struck the northeastern side of the embankment at the north end of the bridge, flipped in the air, and landed on its top on Lick Fork Road directly beneath the Grapevine Bridge. Ms. Murphy sustained personal injuries which were not permanent in nature. Ms. Murphy recalled that she did not have the automatic shoulder harness across her body, but she did have on the lap belt. She did not believe that claimant had on his lap belt.

[319]*319The claimant herein was very familiar with State Route 49 at the scene of this accident. He went back and forth to high school using this stretch of roadway. On the day of this incident, he explained that he was tired as he had worked that night before and his mother took him to Michelle Murphy’s home so the two of them could go to the Huntington Mall. He testified that it was raining at the time. He was in a reclined position in the passenger seat in the vehicle with both of his seat belts, the lap belt and the shoulder harness, in place. He recalled that he heard Ms. Murphy scream, he then raised up in his seat, leaned forward to try to place his hands on the dashboard, and realized that they were already going off the bridge. He stated that he “didn’t have time to even say nothing (sic). I was just overwhelmed by what was happening. It just was unreal.” In his opinion, the vehicle was going 40-45 miles per hour immediately prior to the accident. Claimant testified that there were two sags in the pavement in their lane of travel, one located about six to eight inches from the yellow line and the other located about one and one-half to two feet from the white line. He remembers being in the vehicle under the bridge after the accident, but he could not see because of an injury to his forehead. He described Ms. Murphy as being “hysterical and freaked out.” He felt numb, his face wás sore, and he was having trouble breathing so he “kind oflaid still.”

Emergency personnel were alerted by some people who were at the scene under the bridge. The emergency crews arrived at the scene in order to transport both claimant and Ms. Murphy. Claimant was taken to an area where a medical helicopter flew him to St. Mary’s Hospital in Huntington, Cabell County, because of the severity of his injuries.

Claimant i n this action contends that the respondent was negligent in its maintenance of State Route 49 and the Grapevine Bridge on State Route 49 on the date of the accident described herein above. Claimant asserts that respondent failed to properly maintain the road surface of State Route 49, specifically on the downgrade portion approaching the Grapevine Bridge, and that this failure caused the vehicle in which claimant was a passenger to hydroplane. Further, claimant alleges that respondent failed to replace a portion of the guardrail that was missing on the Grapevine Bridge and that this guardrail would have prevented the vehicle in which he was a passenger on June 26, 1993, from going over the embankment and landing in the area below the bridge, causing him to suffer severe injuries.

Respondent’s position is that the proximate cause of the accident was the failure of the driver to maintain control of her vehicle; the speed of the vehicle at the time of the accident; the action of the claimant in grabbing the steering wheel; and the condition of the tires on the vehicle. As to the issue of the maintenance of the bridge, respondent asserts that the guardrail was not a factor in this claim for two reasons: first, the area where the vehicle in which claimant was a passenger went off the Grapevine Bridge on State Route 49 was an area where the missing guardrail would not have extended; and second, even if the guardrail were present, the accident [320]*320still would have occurred and the vehicle still would have gone into the ravine resulting in the injuries to the claimant.

This accident was investigated by a member of the West Virginia State Police, Trooper First-Class Michael Allen Smith. At the location in question, Trooper Smith took about thirty photographs of the scene which were admitted into evidence. Statements from the claimant and Ms. Murphy were taken on another occasion by another trooper. Trooper Smith concluded in his Uniform Traffic Accident Report that the driver of the vehicle, Ms. Murphy, was exceeding a safe speed limit due to the fact that she lost control of the vehicle, it was raining, and the surface of the road was wet. He came to this conclusion because there were no observable skid marks and the vehicle had crossed the area over Grapevine Creek and Fork Lick Road before striking the other side of the embankment. Although the speed limit for State Route 49 at this particular location is 55 miles per hour, Trooper Smith acknowledged that there was a difference between the speed limit and a safe speed. He was of the opinion from his observations at the accident scene that Ms. Murphy should have been operating the vehicle at a slower speed. It is his opinion that “a driver has to adjust for any conditions he might encounter. Just because the speed limit is say for instance 55 or 75 on the highway, you know, if safety doesn’t warrant that speed, you shouldn’t go that speed.” Ms. Murphy was not issued a citation by Trooper Smith for this incident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Ct. Cl. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-division-of-highways-wvctcl-2001.