Lawson v. Dye

145 S.E. 817, 106 W. Va. 494, 63 A.L.R. 271, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 210
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1928
Docket5911
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 145 S.E. 817 (Lawson v. Dye) 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
Lawson v. Dye, 145 S.E. 817, 106 W. Va. 494, 63 A.L.R. 271, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 210 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

Lively, President:

Lawson’s one-ton Ford truck collided with Dye’s Studebaker touring car and Lawson sued for damages to Ms truck, which as shown by the bill for repairs, amounted to a little over $132.00. The negligence charged is that Farnsworth, the driver of Dye’s car, was running at an excessive speed, and that when the two ears were approaching each other at a short distance apart, he turned his ear to the left, instead of turning to the right, thereby negligently bringing about the collision. The jury found for defendant and judgment was entered accordingly from which Lawson prosecutes this writ of error.

Lawson’s father started from his farm in his one-ton Ford truck to drive down the public road to-Point Pleasant, on January 10,1925, accompanied by his wife. This public road was about 26 feet wide and had been recently gravelled to the corporate limits of the city of Point Pleasant, thence hard surfaced through the city. His evidence is that he drove on the right-hand side of the road going down and had reached a point several hundred feet from the end of the gravelled road when defendant’s Studebaker car, operated by Farnsworth as a taxi, with four passengers came up the road making an unusual noise and running, as he judged, at 45 or 50 miles per hour, swinging to his left as he left the hard surface, then to his right, and when he reached Lawson’s truck instead of swinging to the right, again went to the left striking plaintiff’s car. Plaintiff’s truck was turned around *496 and ran into the bank on the left side of the road going up, climbing a small bank, running' over a stump, and into the corner of the porch of a house. The Stüdebaker car was badly damaged and the physical marks on it showed an impact on the right side between the radiator and door. The damage to plaintiff’s truck was at its front end. Defendant’s driver and one of his passengers (foreman of a construction crew in the vicinity) tell a quite different story. They say they were not traveling over 20 or 25 miles an hour, and before they left the hard surface observed plaintiff’s truck in the distance approaching on the left side of the road coming down, which was the side generally used and had become packed; that they drove on the right side going up, checking the speed until they were going perhaps ten miles per hour, but plaintiff still kept on his wrong side in the packed portion and made no indication that he would turn out on to his proper side, until there was a distance of 25 feet between the cars approaching to a head-on collision, when defendant’s driver in order to avoid collision turned to the left out into the center of the road, and plaintiff then immediately turned his ear to the right and struck defendant’s car on its right side causing it to skid, leave the road and run into the porch, the steering gear having become damaged by the impact. There is the usual conflict in the evidence as to the speed of the two cars. One witness says he was following the Studebaker car and kept up with it at 20 miles per hour. Some of plaintiff’s witnesses say they heard the Stüdebaker car running and from the sound it made they judged it was going at a high rate of speed. One witness for defendant says he saw Lawson driving on the left of the road going down, just a little time before he heard the impact. A good sized crowd auicldy gathered and the tracks of the cars were traced in the gravel, and the preponderance of the eyidence as to the tracks corroborate the evidence of defendant’s driver and passenger as to the relative position of the cars. Several witnesses also said that Mrs. Lawson there admitted that they were driving on the wrong side claiming that they, the Law-sons, had a right to drive on that side so long as another car was not approaching. She denied that she so stated. The *497 preponderance of the evidence, and ■ the physical facts are rather corroborative of defendant’s evidence that the cars approached each other on a straight road for several hundred feet, defendant on his right side and plaintiff on his wrong side, until they neared each other in dangerous proximity, where both attempted to avoid a head-on collision with the result as detailed. The jury was taken to inspect the marks on the parts of the cars caused by the impact.

The errors which Lawson says should reverse the judgment and set aside verdict are in giving and refusing instructions and admitting and rejecting evidence.

Plaintiff’s instruction 2, refused, would have told the jury the maximum rate of speed and prescribed by law for the operation of defendant’s car on a public road in the country; and would have told them that if they believed from the evidence that defendant operated his car at a speed in excess of 35 miles.per hour at the time of the accident, they could, from this fact together with all other facts, presume that defendant was negligent, and if they believed such negligence -was the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff’s truck, “the driver of said truck being in the exercise of ordinary care”, they should find for plaintiff. The substance of this instruction was given in plaintiff’s instruction 4. Instructions need not be repeatedly given. Said instruction No. 2, refused, is subject to the criticism of tendency to mislead, for it says the “driver of plaintiff’s truck being in the exercise of ordinary care.” The jury may have understood (if the instruction had been given) that the court meant to tell them that plaintiff’s driver was exercising ordinary care at the time of the accident.

Plaintiff’s instruction 3, refused, would have told the jury that the operator of a car upon meeting another car coming from the opposite direction, should turn to the right of the center of the road, and if they believed that defendant’s driver did not do so, and his failure to do so was the proximate cause of the collision, then the jury should find for plaintiff, if they further believed that plaintiff’s driver was exercising ordinary care. This instruction ignores the defense that defendant’s driver was on the right of the road *498 and could not turn further to the right, and in order to avoid a head-on collision took the only way open to avoid it. There are situations which justify a turn to the left, instead of to the right, where a collision would,result if it was not done. So, a failure to turn to the right is not always negligence, depending upon the situation. This instruction would have told the jury that if defendant’s car did not turn to the right upon meeting plaintiff’s car, and plaintiff was operating his car with ordinary care, then they should find for plaintiff. The instruction was properly refused. Swiger v. Runnion, 90 W. Va. 322. It singles out the fact that defendant’s driver did not turn to the right of the center of the road, and therefore if plaintiff’s driver was in the exercise of ordinary care, the jury should find for plaintiff. There AAras other evidence Avhich strongly indicated that plaintiff’s driver brought about the situation which caused defendant’s driver to attempt to pass on the left to avoid a head-on collision; and it has been repeatedly held that it is improper for a court, in an instruction, to point out certain facts and tell the jury it should find for either party on such facts when there are other facts or evidence in tbe case bearing on the subject. 7 Ency. Digest Virginia & West Virginia, p. 723; Woodell v. W. Va. Improvement Co.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 S.E. 817, 106 W. Va. 494, 63 A.L.R. 271, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-dye-wva-1928.