Lucas v. Division of Highways

24 Ct. Cl. 120
CourtWest Virginia Court of Claims
DecidedApril 9, 2002
DocketCC-99-422
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Ct. Cl. 120 (Lucas v. Division of Highways) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucas v. Division of Highways, 24 Ct. Cl. 120 (W. Va. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

GRITT, JUDGE:

Claimant brought this action for personal injuries to herself and for damage to her vehicle which occurred when she was operating her vehicle on Roach Truss Bridge in Cabell County, and the vehicle struck both sides of the bridge. Respondent was responsible at all times herein for the maintenance of the Roach Truss Bridge. The Court is of the opinion to deny this claim for the reasons set forth below.

The incident giving rise to this claim occurred on November 8, 1998, at approximately 6:30 p.m. Claimant Marcia Lucas and two of her children, Tinia Stratton and Jonathan Lucas, were traveling in her 1997 Ford Explorer. Claimant was driving her vehicle with her daughter in the front seat and her son seated in the middle of the back seat. All three occupants were wearing their seatbelts at the time of the incident. They had been shopping at the Huntington Mall and were returning to their home in Ferrellsburg, Lincoln County. It was a dark, cloudy evening. It had rained earlier in the day, but it was only sprinkling while the Lucas family was traveling home. Claimant testified that the road surface was not slippery or wet prior to reaching the Roach Truss Bridge. Tinia Stratton recalled that the roads prior to the bridge were wet but neither slippery nor in poor condition. Claimant was traveling Cyrus Creek Road which she was familiar with and often used to get home. However, claimant decided to also use Roach Road which a friend recommended to her as a short cut. According to claimant, she was traveling southwest on Cyrus Creek Road when she approached a stop sign where she turned right onto Roach Road. Claimant had never traveled Roach Road before. She estimated the distance from the stop sign where she turned off Cyrus Creek Road onto Roach Road to the Roach Truss Bridge to be approximately 70 to 100 yards. Upon reaching the one lane bridge, she stopped her vehicle to make sure there was no oncoming traffic approaching from the other side of the bridge. Claimant testified that she cautiously drove onto the bridge traveling approximately 15 to 20 miles per hour. She was approximately one third of the way across the bridge when suddenly something under the vehicle raised it up which caused her to lose control of the vehicle. The claimant’s car started spinning around and did so approximately two or three times. According to claimant, the vehicle made two three hundred sixty degree turns and after the second spin it slammed into the left side of the bridge where the sidewalk is located. The force of the impact caused the vehicle to slide across the bridge and strike the right side of the bridge. After striking the right side of the bridge, the vehicle slid back to the left side of the bridge where claimant believes it came to rest upon a large board which was two inches thick and six inches wide. The force of the initial impact caused both front seat air-bags to deploy. Tinia Stratton was injured slightly by the air bag. Jonathan Lucas was slightly injured when he was tossed around in the back seat. Claimant’s chin and mouth were bleeding as a result of the impact. Once the vehicle stopped, all three occupants got out of the vehicle. Jonathan Lucas testified that as soon as he stepped onto the surface of the bridge, he noticed that there were numerous boards missing around him. He testified that there was one hole large enough for two men to fall through to the river below. He also stated that the guardrail on one side of the bridge was missing and that the surface of the bridge was very slick. All three occupants testified that the bridge was so slick that they had a difficult time walking on it. Claimant also stated that there was a large hole in the bridge where she exited the vehicle and that had she not been warned of it by her son she would have fallen through it. The claimant and her children walked away from the gap in the bridge to the other side where it was relatively safer. They waited on the next passing vehicle for help. Larry Pinkerman, at that time a sergeant with the Cabell County Sheriffs [122]*122Department (now a Lieutenant), arrived at the scene, as well as an ambulance which took all three individuals to Cabell Huntington Hospital where they were treated and released.

Although claimant’s children did not suffer severe injuries in this incident, claimant herself suffers with pain and limitations in her activities as the result of back injuries which she alleges were caused by this accident.

It is claimant’s position that the respondent negligently failed to maintain and repair the Roach Truss Bridge. Claimant also asserts that respondent failed to place any warning signs indicating that the bridge was slippery when wet. According to the claimant, these acts and omissions created a hazardous condition which was the proximate cause of the claimant’s damages. Claimant testified that many of the boards on the bridge were rotten, loose and protruding. All three occupants of the vehicle testified that the vehicle was lifted up by protruding boards. Claimant submitted into evidence numerous photographs taken approximately one week after the incident which indicate that there were a number of boards in the traveling portion of the bridge protruding upwards. One photograph submitted into evidence showed that a few of the boards protruded as high as six to eight inches. The claimant testified that it was one of these loose and protruding boards that lifted her vehicle up and caused her to lose control and wreck. Claimant also submitted into evidence a bridge inspection report created by respondent on June 8,1998, which states that the bridge’s sidewalk was in poor condition and that several boards around the sidewalk are also “severely loose.” The report also stated that both ends of the bridge had uneven transitions and both asphaltic approach roadways were in poor condition.

Respondent admits that this bridge was not in good condition, but it asserts that the condition of the bridge was not the proximate cause of the claimant’s accident. Respondent asserts that the claimant failed adequately to maintain control of her vehicle and that such failure to maintain control of the vehicle was the proximate cause of this incident.

Lieutenant Larry Pinkerman of the Cabell County Sheriffs Office was the investigating officer at the scene of this incident. He testified that he was notified of the accident at 6:36 p.m. at which time he proceeded to the scene. He recalled that the bridge was wet and slippery when he arrived at the scene. He stated that the bridge was old and in a state of disrepair. However, he did not recall having any difficulties crossing the bridge when he arrived at the scene. He completed the West Virginia Uniform Traffic Accident Report in which he indicated that the surface of the bridge was wet. He also indicated in this report that the claimant’s failure to maintain control was a contributing circumstance, but he testified that he does not know what caused her initially to lose control of the vehicle. He testified that he believed that the claimant was traveling eastbound when this incident occurred, whereas the claimant testified that she was traveling westbound. Lieutenant Pinkerman stated thathe believed the claimant was traveling eastbound due to the fact that this was the direction in which her vehicle was facing when he arrived on the scene. Furthermore, he believed that this bridge was not wide enough for a Ford Explorer to do a three hundred sixty degree turn and stop facing the opposite direction.

Gregory Lee Surber, a bridge repair design engineer for the respondent in Cabell County, testified that the Roach Truss Bridge was built in 1926. It has since been replaced by a new bridge.

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Related

Roush v. Johnson
80 S.E.2d 857 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1954)
Matthews v. Cumberland & Allegheny Gas Co.
77 S.E.2d 180 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1953)
Pritt v. Department of Highways
16 Ct. Cl. 8 (West Virginia Court of Claims, 1985)
Commercial Union Insurance v. Department of Highways
16 Ct. Cl. 84 (West Virginia Court of Claims, 1986)
Chapman v. Department of Highways
16 Ct. Cl. 103 (West Virginia Court of Claims, 1986)
Phares v. Division of Highways
21 Ct. Cl. 92 (West Virginia Court of Claims, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ct. Cl. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-division-of-highways-wvctcl-2002.