Locker v. Carter

15 S.E.2d 39, 177 Va. 610, 1941 Va. LEXIS 246
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 9, 1941
DocketRecord No. 2330
StatusPublished

This text of 15 S.E.2d 39 (Locker v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Locker v. Carter, 15 S.E.2d 39, 177 Va. 610, 1941 Va. LEXIS 246 (Va. 1941).

Opinion

Gregory, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the night of September 9,1939, Mary Frances Carter, a colored woman twenty-five years of age; was walking along the Spottswood Trail between Gordonsville and Barboursville, accompanied by a colored man named Elijah Quarles. They were walking in a westerly direction on the left side of the road when a car owned and driven by W. Clyde Locker struck the young woman, inflicting upon her injuries of a serious and permanent nature. She filed suit against Locker alleging' his negligent operation of the car, and the jury awarded her a verdict of $500, upon which judgment was rendered by the trial court. It is from this judgment that Locker was granted a writ of error. The parties will be referred to in the respective positions they occupied in the court below.

The only question before us is whether or not there is sufficient evidence to support the verdict of the jury.

The evidence indicates that the defendant was driving toward Gordonsville about midnight at a speed not exceeding forty miles an hour, and saw the couple walking [612]*612toward Mm “in a place of safety” some distance ahead. Both plaintiff and defendant were on their proper side of the highway. Code, §2154 (112 and 126f). As the defendant approached the pedestrians and after he had seen them a safe distance away, he was Minded by the headlights of an oncoming car, driven by one Clarence Johnson. The defendant did not slow down, and his vision did not clear until he was virtually upon the plaintiff, and he was unable to avoid striMng her. The width of the pavement at this point was twenty feet, three inches, with a dirt shoulder on each side of approximately three feet.

The exact position of the plaintiff at the moment of impact was in serious dispute. She testified that she was on the hard surface, not more than eighteen inches from the edge of the road, and this was corroborated by Clarence Johnson, who testified that he saw the accident in the moment before his car passed that of the defendant. Elijah Quarles likewise corroborated plaintiff’s testimony.' However, defendant sought to impeach Mm by the testimony of two police officers and an independent witness who testified that immediately after the accident he gave a different version, saying that plaintiff had moved out into the path of the machine just before the accident. The defendant testified that the young woman darted in front of him and that, lacking time to apply his brakes, he swerved his car to the left but was unable to avoid striking her.

The position of the Johnson car, whose headlights blinded defendant, is not perfectly clear. Johnson himself testified that he saw the impact. Elijah Quarles thought the Johnson car had gone past before the accident, and the defendant was uncertain as to whether it had gone by or not. The plaintiff gave no testimony as to the position of the Johnson car.

After the accident defendant placed plaintiff in his car and drove her to Grordonsyille, where she was given medical attention. Prom there she was driven to the [613]*613University Hospital in Charlottesville, where her right leg was amputated. There were numerous other injuries, and she remained in the hospital approximately one month.

The jury was fully and carefully instructed as to the law of negligence and contributory negligence. They have found, by their verdict, that defendant was guilty of negligence and that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence. We cannot say that their verdict was not supported by the evidence.

The jury could have found, as they no doubt did, that the defendant did nothing to avoid striking the plaintiff until it was too late. Specifically, the jury could have found that the circumstances, namely, seeing the plaintiff on the edge of the road and then being blinded by the headlights of the approaching car, demanded that he stop or slow down until he could proceed without striking the plaintiff.

The case of South Hill Motor Co. v. Gordon, 172 Va. 193, 200 S. E. 637, relied upon by defendant, contains nothing that compels us to reverse the trial court in the instant case. In that case, not only was the pedestrian drunk and unable effectively to control his movements, but the motorist, who was blinded, as in the case at bar, by the headlights of an oncoming car, did not see him until a split second before the impact. That is, the motorist had no knowledge of an impending perilous situation, no warning of a possible accident, until too late to avoid striking the pedestrian. What is said in that case of the rights of motorists and pedestrians being “equal and co-ordinate,” and that they “are bound to respect the rights of each other” is undoubtedly the law, and the verdict of the jnry in the present case does no violence to those principles.

A reversal of the judgment below would necessitate a holding that, when both motorist and pedestrian apprehend a situation of impending peril, the motorist may hold to his course, and the pedestrian alone must [614]*614take all the responsibility of avoiding the accident. This amounts to giving the motorist a “right of way,” and is contrary to any theory of “equal and co-ordinate” rights.

The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Htjdgists, J., dissenting.

I cannot agree with that part of the majority opinion declaring that the question of plaintiff’s negligence was properly submitted to the jury. A more detailed analysis of the evidence is necessary to present my view of the case.

Mary Frances Carter, a negro woman 25 years of age, about midnight on 'Saturday, September 9, 1939, with Elijah Quarles, a negro man, was walking in a westerly direction along the Spottswood Trail about a mile west of Gordonsville in Orange county, when she was struck by a car proceeding in an easterly direction and driven by the defendant. Plaintiff was seriously injured. Both legs were broken. One of them had to be amputated at the hip, and the knee joint of the other was permanently injured and impaired. Her right shoulder was sprained. Other cuts and bruises were sustained. If defendant is liable at all, the sum of $500' is grossly inadequate to compensate plaintiff for the severe and permanent injuries sustained by her. The amount of the award is some indication, to my mind, that the jury’s sympathy for the Avoman overbalanced a fair and impartial consideration of the evidence on the question of defendant’s liability.

The hard surface of the highway at the point of impact is 20% feet wide with dirt shoulders 3 feet in width on each side. Plaintiff and Quarles were walking Avithin 18 inches of the southern edge of the hard surface. Defendant was driving on his right side, which was also [615]*615the southern side, of the highway. While he was some distance from the point of impact he saw the headlights of a car and the two pedestrians approaching from the opposite direction. He said the pedestrians at that time were in a place of safety. He claimed that the lights of the approaching car blinded him momentarily, and, when his vision cleared, the woman pedestrian “started out in the road in front of me.” Then he swerved the car to the left as much as he could but he was too close to avoid striking her. Defendant stopped within two car-lengths of the point of impact. He backed up, put the injured woman and her companion in the front seat of his car and took them to a doctor in Gordonsville.

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Related

Massie v. Firmstone
114 S.E. 652 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1922)
South Hill Motor Co. v. Gordon
200 S.E. 637 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1939)
Harrell v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.
12 S.E.2d 833 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 S.E.2d 39, 177 Va. 610, 1941 Va. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/locker-v-carter-va-1941.