Jimmy Hoffler and Bernard Hoffler v. Richard T. Short

297 F.2d 153, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 2995
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 1961
Docket8358_1
StatusPublished

This text of 297 F.2d 153 (Jimmy Hoffler and Bernard Hoffler v. Richard T. Short) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jimmy Hoffler and Bernard Hoffler v. Richard T. Short, 297 F.2d 153, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 2995 (4th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is taken from a judgment in favor of a third party defendant in an automobile collision case wherein it was held that, under the peculiar circumstances existing at the time of the accident, he was under no duty to stop at a road intersection where a stop sign had been posted. The correctness of this holding is the principal question in the case.

The original plaintiff was Grace Short Pond who was riding as a guest passenger in an automobile driven by her nephew, Richard T. Short. She was seriously and permanently injured as the result of the collision. She brought a suit based on diversity of citizenship against Jimmy Hoffler and Bernard Hoffler, owners of a tractor-trailer, the other vehicle in the collision, which was driven by their employee, Elton W. Saunders. The Hofflers then brought in Short by a third party proceeding, alleging that if they were liable for the injuries to the plaintiff, Short was equally liable for any amount the plaintiff might recover by reason of gross negligence on his part. At the trial Short moved for a directed verdict in his favor at the conclusion of the evidence but the Judge reserved his ruling on the motion and submitted the case to the jury. A verdict was rendered in favor of Mrs. Pond against the Hofflers in the sum of $50,000 in the original suit and a verdict in favor of the HofHers against Short in the third party procéeding. Thereafter, on motion of Short, the Judge set aside the verdict against him in favor of the Hofflers on the ground that except for his failure to stop at the intersection there was no evidence of gross negligence on his part and that under the facts of the case Short was not required under the Virginia law to stop at the in *155 terseetion. 1 Accordingly, the Judge held that Short’s motion for directed verdict should have been granted and entered judgment in his behalf. The Hofflers settled the judgment in favor of Mrs. Pond by paying the sum of $41,500 and appealed from the judgment in favor of Short.

The accident happened at 12:40 P.M. on January 23, 1959 near Franklin, Virginia, at a point where a Y on Route 691, running north and south, intersects Route 58, running east and west, as shown in the diagram below. 2 Route 58 is a three-lane highway. Saunders was driving the Hoffler vehicle in the center lane as he approached the Y from the east so as to turn left into the eastern leg of the Y and proceed south on Route 691. Short was driving north on Route 691 and took the eastern leg of the Y in order to turn right on Route 58 and proceed eastwardly. Saunders was familiar with the road and, assuming that Short would stop in obedience to the stop sign, cut the curve too short in making the turn to the south, came over to the wrong side of the road to some extent and collided with the Short ear on Route 58 a few feet north of its southern line if extended across the opening of the Y. The left front wheel of the trailer came into contact with the left front corner of the Short car.

At that time Short was on the proper side of the road. He approached Route 58 from the south coming down an incline on the eastern leg of the Y, which was 23 feet wide. He passed a “Stop Ahead” sign located on the top of the hill. A conventional stop sign was located at the foot of the hill on the east side of Route 691 forty-nine feet from the point at which the eastern leg of the Y intersects the southern line of Route 58. Short, however, did not stop but continued to drive on at the rate of 15 to 20 miles an hour. He had seen the tractor trailer approaching from his right on Route 58 and, since it was proceeding in the center lane, concluded that the driver intended to make a left hand turn to the south into Route 691. Short then looked to his left for traffic *156 coming from the west but no car came from that direction. He did not see the Hoffler truck as it drew near until it was only five feet from him an instant before the collision occurred. Had Short been looking ahead at the time he could have stopped his car or driven to his right on the road where there was ample room and have avoided the collision, notwithstanding the encroachment of the truck on his side of the road.

The District Judge, in holding that there was no duty on Short’s part to stop before entering Route 58, was influenced by the fact that the stop sign at this point was primarily designed to prevent collision between cars coming from the south on Route 691 with cars coming from the west on Route 58 and also collisions between cars coming from the east on Route 58 with cars coming from the south and making a left hand turn into Route 58. He concluded that a stop at the sign was not necessary to prevent a collision between a car coming from the south and making a right hand turn with a car from the east making a left hand turn if each vehicle kept to its proper side of the road. He relied on certain decisions of the Supreme Court of Virginia which laid down the rule that failure to perform a duty prescribed by the state automobile statute is not negligence as to a particular person unless the duty is owed to that person. 3 Thus in Morris v. Dame’s, Ex’r, 161 Va. 545, 566, 171 S.E. 662, the court had under consideration the liability of the driver of a truck which came out of a road in a railroad yard on to the public highway at a T intersection and crossed the highway in order to turn to the left without giving a signal and collided with a passing vehicle. The Virginia statute provides that before the driver of a vehicle shall make either a left or right turn at a road intersection he shall give a prescribed signal at least 50 feet before making the turn. The contention was made that the driver of the truck was guilty of negligence because he failed to give the signal before entering the highway. In considering this question the Supreme Court of the state announced the following principles to be applied in respect to the duty of drivers of motor vehicles to obey the provisions of the automobile statute. The court said, page 566, 171 S.E. 669:

« * * * These provisions of the statute create a general duty on the part of drivers of motor vehicles to give the prescribed signal before making a left or right turn at a road intersection. But a failure to give the signal cannot be actionable negligence as to any particular person unless the facts and circumstances of the case are such that the duty to give the signal has become a particular duty owing to that person as an individual.
“For the general duty imposed by the statute to become a particular-duty owing to a particular person,, he must be in a position which, under a reasonable construction and interpretation of the statute, brings him within the particular class of persons for whose protection from-injury these provisions of it were-enacted. When the general duty imposed by the statute has become a. particular duty owing to a particular-person, the failure to give the prescribed signal becomes actionable-negligence as to him, provided (1) that the failure to comply with the-statute is not excusable, and (2) that, the failure to give the required signal' is the proximate cause of an injury to him which is one of the consequences contemplated by this provision of the statute and that it was-intended to prevent.

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Bluebook (online)
297 F.2d 153, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 2995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimmy-hoffler-and-bernard-hoffler-v-richard-t-short-ca4-1961.