Lilly v. Taylor

155 S.E.2d 579, 151 W. Va. 730, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 119
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1967
Docket12619
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 155 S.E.2d 579 (Lilly v. Taylor) 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
Lilly v. Taylor, 155 S.E.2d 579, 151 W. Va. 730, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 119 (W. Va. 1967).

Opinion

CALHOUN, PRESIDENT:

This case, on appeal from a final judgment of the Circuit Court of Raleigh County, involves a civil action in which Carlos E. Lilly, Jr., seeks recovery of damages from Paul D. Taylor for Lilly’s personal injuries and for damage to his automobile arising from an automobile collision which occurred on a public highway in Raleigh County on June 22, 1965. Lilly, the plaintiff, was the owner and driver of one of the automobiles involved in the collision. Taylor, the defendant, was the owner, driver and sole occupant of the other automobile. The plaintiff prosecutes this appeal from a final judgment rendered on a jury verdict in favor of the defendant.

The primary or basic questions presented for decision involve the sufficiency of the proof to support the verdict and to warrant the action of the trial court in granting certain instructions in behalf of the defendant, and particularly instructions dealing with contributory negligence and the sudden emergency doctrine.

The accident occurred at approximately four o ’clock in the afternoon on a road known as Secondary Route 1 or Maple Fork Road. At the scene of the collision the asphalt paving on the highway was sixteen feet, nine inches wide. The weather at the time was clear and the road was dry.

*732 The state trooper who arrived at the scene shortly after the collision occurred and before the vehicles were moved testified that the highway at the scene was marked by a ‘ ‘ center line ’ ’ but the plaintiff testified to the contrary. It is undisputed, however, that the two vehicles collied head-on wholly within the plaintiff’s traffic lane or portion of the highway. The state trooper testified that the left rear wheel of the defendant’s vehicle came to rest partially on the berm on its left side, the plaintiff’s side, of the highway; that the right front wheel of the defendant’s vehicle was ten feet, seven inches from the edge of the pavement on the opposite side; and that this right front wheel was the part of the defendant’s vehicle nearest to its own right edge of the pavement. The trooper testified further that the right front wheel of the plaintiff’s vehicle was one foot, ten inches and the rear wheel was two feet, six inches from the edge of the pavement on its right side. The unpaved berm on that side was level and approximately two feet, six inches wide.

The road at the scene of the collision was level and comparatively straight, but some distance from that point in each direction there was a slight curve. The plaintiff in his automobile proceeded over a slight rise and out of a slight depression or “dip” in the highway as he came in sight of the defendant’s approaching vehicle. The scene of the collision was described by the state trooper as being on a “very small knoll”.

A photographer, who was on the scene shortly after the collision occurred and before the vehicles were moved, took excellent photographs of the vehicles immediately following the collision. These photographs were introduced in evidence and are a part of the record before this Court. They disclose clearly that the plaintiff’s automobile came to rest in a position near and almost parallel to the edge of the pavement on its proper side of the highway; and that the defendant’s vehicle came to rest in a diagonal position with its *733 left rear wheel off the hard surface and on the berm, on its left side of the highway and with its front end extending in the general direction of the center of the highway.

The plaintiff’s vehicle left skid marks extending hack eighty-four feet from the point where it came to rest. These skid marks, for their entire length, were near and substantially parallel to the edge of the pavement on the plaintiff’s side of the highway.

The state trooper testified that there were other fresh skid marks which extended from the defendant’s side of the highway diagonally across to plaintiff’s side of the pavement. These skid marks are clearly visible on the photographs. They extended in the general direction of the defendant’s vehicle at the place where it came to rest after the collision. The trooper testified, and the photographs disclose, that these skid marks did not lead directly to the rear wheels of the defendant’s automobile. In that connection, the trooper testified: “* * * I couldn’t testify that they were made by the Taylor vehicle although I am reasonably sure they were, but I can’t testify to that effect. ’ ’

The defendant does not deny that his vehicle proceeded from its proper side of the highway diagonally across the pavement and that it became involved in the head-on collision with the plaintiff’s vehicle on the latter’s proper side of the highway. The defense at the trial was predicated upon contributory negligence and the sudden emergency doctrine. On the issue of contributory negligence, the court gave Defendant’s Instruction No. Z which submitted to the jury the question whether, prior to the collision, the plaintiff was operating his automobile “at a greater rate of speed than was reasonable and prudent under the conditions then and there existing. * # *” In giving Defendant’s Instruction No. AA, the court submitted to the jury the question whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligency in not operating *734 “his vehicle at an appropriately reduced speed when approaching a hillcrest and when driving upon a winding roadway. ’ ’

By Defendant’s Instruction No. 0, the court submitted to the jury the question whether “the defendant was suddenly confronted with an emergency” which was not caused in whole or in part by his own negligence. This instruction is, in the main, predicated on the defendant’s testimony that two young female pedestrians were walking toward him on or near the edge of the pavement on his right side thereof as he approached the point of the subsequent collision. In support of the propriety of giving the sudden emergency instruction when it was offered, counsel for the defendant stated: “ * * * I think it is a question for the Jury as to whether or not this [the presence of the pedestrians] created an emergency, the fact that he had to get out past the center of the road, and this instruction does leave to the Jury squarely the question of whether or not there was an emergency suddenly confronting the defendant, and the emergency was the combined position of his car and the sudden emergence of the Plaintiff’s car at what we contend to have been an excessive rate of speed. * * * . I think it is undisputed that he put on his brakes and skidded across the highway.” We are authorized to look to the trial court’s written opinion, which was made a part of the record, to determine the basis of its action in granting the instruction. Sargent v. Malcomb, 150 W. Va. 393, 394, 146 S. E. 2d 561, 563. In the opinion the trial court stated: “ * * * Under the circumstances here, Defendant contends that the emergency was the presence of the girls on or in close proximity to his portion of a comparatively narrow highway, requiring some action on his part to avoid danger to them. It is apparent that he neither caused nor contributed to their presence there. * * In their brief before this Court, counsel for the defendant state: “* * * the defendant faced a sudden emergency in the presence of *735

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 S.E.2d 579, 151 W. Va. 730, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lilly-v-taylor-wva-1967.