Hutcherson v. Slate

142 S.E. 444, 105 W. Va. 184, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 35
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1928
Docket6052-6052A
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 142 S.E. 444 (Hutcherson v. Slate) 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
Hutcherson v. Slate, 142 S.E. 444, 105 W. Va. 184, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 35 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge :

The above cases grew out of the same automobile accident and were by consent submitted to the same jury upon the same evidence. In each case the jury exonerated defendant Slate, but found a verdict against the defendant Appalachian Power Company.

The errors alleged here relate to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, to the quantum of the recovery by plaintiff Willie Hutcherson, and to the giving and refusal •of instructions.

Mrs. Dorcas Hutcherson was killed and Willie Hutcherson injured in the wreck of an automobile owned by defendant Slate and driven by his son, Claude. The occurrence was meagerly described by Claude in this way: “Well, I was on the road between Bramwell and Bluefield, and going down a • kind of a hill, on a long stretch and made a little curve, and I saw a truck below, coming, and I blew my horn, and I just kept on going, and he did too, and he was holding the middle of the road. I saw him first on the bridge, and he didn’t .seem to go either way, and after I saw he wasn’t going to get out I cut my car out and got over the hill, and I tried to cut back into the road, and when the car did come back it cut across the road and hit this slab and turned over,” He further stated that the speed of his car was about 25 miles an hour when he saw the truck; that it was about half that rate when he passed it, and about ten miles an hour when he ‘ ‘ cut back” into the road. The road at the place of the accident was hard surfaced to a width of twelve feet. On either side ■of the hard surface were shoulders, three feet in extent. From, these shoulders the road sloped gradually for about four feet into a ditch. The hill referred to has a grade of 5.7%. The bridge is of concrete and fourteen feet wide. The truck was •owned by the defendant Company. According to the evidence of the plaintiffs, the left wheels of the truck were three feet to the left of the center of the road while the automobiles were passing; Claude saw the truck when he was about 300 *186 feet from the bridge; be pulled out to tbe right at 88 feet from tbe bridge until tbe right wheels of bis ear were from three to four feet off tbe bard surface and in tbe soft earth at tbe top of tbe ditch, his left wheels remaining on the bard surface; bis car proceeded in this relation to tbe road for something like seventy feet during which time be passed tbe truck, and upon returning to tbe bard surface (at about sixteen feet from tbe bridge) bis automobile ran across tbe road, struck tbe left wall of tbe bridge, turned completely over tbe side of tbe bridge and fell upside down into tbe ravine below. Claude admitted that be did not apply his brakes as he passed tbe truck, but that be drifted by with bis ignition cut off, and bis ear in gear, and that be did not apply bis brakes or turn on bis ignition between passing the truck and striking tbe bridge.

Tbe driver of tbe truck testified that be bad bis machine on tbe right of tbe road at tbe time Claude passed him. He was supported in this by other witnesses. As tbe verdict of tbe jury is for tbe plaintiffs, we must regard tbe verdict from tbe evidence, which favors them. From that evidence tbe Slate car would not have been forced into tbe position which led up to tbe accident if tbe truck bad yielded half of tbe road. Its failure to do so was undoubtedly a contributing cause of tbe accident, and as such renders tbe Company responsible in damages. Thompson Neg. Sec. 75; Day v. Coal Co., 60 W. Va. 27; Johnson v. Chapman, 43 W. Va. 639. Tbe evidence therefore supports tbe verdicts against tbe Company.

Willie Hutcherson was injured in her right shoulder, her left side and her left knee. No bones were broken, but her shoulder was badly bruised, her knee was gashed, and her left side bruised to tbe extent that she suffered pain from it for several months. Her shoulder and knee pained her for several weeks. These injuries were confirmed by her family physician. On this evidence, which is undisputed, tbe jury gave her $2,000.00 as damages. It has been oft repeated that tbe law furnishes no measure or scale by which to estimate pain, and that a verdict of a jury thereon will not be disturbed unless so great or so small as to indicate bias or *187 prejudice. Landau v. Farr, 104 W. Va. 445, 140 S. E. 141, and cases there cited. What we said in that case is equally applicable here. “The trial court heard the evidence in this case, and observed the conduct and bearing of the witnesses. Its refusal to disturb the verdict is entitled to great weight. 4 G. J. p. 835, sec. 2818. Before we could set aside this verdict, we would have to hold, not only that the jury was influenced by improper motives, but that the trial court abused its discretion in sustaining the verdict. Under the authorities above cited, the evidence does not warrant such a holding.”

The brief of the Company complains of the giving of instruction No. 4 on behalf of defendant Slate and of the refusal of No. 5 offered by the Company. In its motion to set aside the verdict, the Company enumerated certain instructions given by the court as erroneous, but did not specify the Slate instruction. Counsel for Slate contend that under Clark v. Kelly, 101 W. Va. 651, and other decisions of this Court, the Company is deemed to have waived its objection to that instruction. We have in some eases reviewed a particular instruction when the only ground assigned in the motion below was that the verdict was contrary to the evidence. But where specific objection to certain instructions is made and references to the others, is omitted, as in this case, we think the rule invoked by counsel should ordinarily apply to those omitted.

Instruction No. 5 of the Company which was. refused is as follows: “The Court instructs the jury that even though you may believe from all the evidence that the truck of the Appalachian Power Company was to the left of the center of the road when it passed the car being driven by the witness Claude Slate, if you further find that after the automobile and truck had passed, Claude Slate, by the exercise of reasonable care, could have stopped his automobile or turned the same back into the road, and crossed the bridge described in the evidence, and failed to do so,- you are told that such failure to exercise reasonable care, if you so find, was the proximate cause of the accident.”

*188 Counsel for tbe plaintiffs contends that the instruction was properly rejected, on the theory that the proximate cause of the accident was not a vital inquiry, and the Company cannot escape liability even though Slate failed to use ordinary care in the management of his automobile, if the act of the truck driver was an efficient cause of the accident. He cites in support of that argument Brown v. Natural Gas Co., 299 Fed. 463, which holds: “Where negligence of two persons operates to produce an injury, both are liable and inquiry as to proximate cause is not pertinent.” It is settled law that when a joint trespass is committed, apportionment of the negligence among the trespassers is not allowed. It is not material that one trespasser contributed much to the injury and another but little, if the damage would not have occurred but for the concurrence of the two.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.E. 444, 105 W. Va. 184, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutcherson-v-slate-wva-1928.