Lunsford v. Cannon Ball Transit Co.

166 S.E. 19, 112 W. Va. 586, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 228
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1932
Docket7296
StatusPublished

This text of 166 S.E. 19 (Lunsford v. Cannon Ball Transit Co.) 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
Lunsford v. Cannon Ball Transit Co., 166 S.E. 19, 112 W. Va. 586, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 228 (W. Va. 1932).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

Tbe trial court set aside a verdict in favor of plaintiff for error in instructions and directed a new trial; and plaintiff prosecutes error.

Tbe suit is for personal injuries to plaintiff and tbe declaration charges that on September 26, 1931, plaintiff, a child about three years old, was, of right, walking across a state road, Eoute 82 in Pike County, Kentucky, and while so walking that one of the buses owned and operated by defendant through its employee Fife was driven on said road in a negligent, careless and reckless manner so that it struck plaintiff and permanently injured him. No demurrer was interposed. Defendant plead the general issue.

The accident occurred about seven o ’clock in the evening of September 26, 1931, at the eastern part of Sharondale where there were about eleven dwellings each approximately 37 feet from the road, five on the right side of the road as the bus traveled in the direction of Williamson, West Virginia, and six on the other side, in the second of which plaintiff lived with his parents. The father of the child was on the right of the road, as the bus approached, immediately opposite his dwelling, talking to his neighbor, Elias Dotson, and there were three small boys on that side of the road near them and one of them rolled a tire or hoop across to the opposite side of the road as the bus approached; and, according to plaintiff’s witness, Lilly Nix, who was sitting on her porch about 213 feet from the place of accident, barely got across the road ahead of the on coming bus, when plaintiff, who was on the left side (the side of his resident), came up the bank onto the road and started across it and was struck by the bus; or, according to defendants’ witness, ran into it as it passed. Plaintiff claims that the child was about three of four feet out on the hard-surface when the bus was about fifty feet away, and was struck by the front part of the car; while de *588 fendant claims that the child came up the bank suddenly and ran into the side of the bus as it passed.

While the declaration does not charge any specific act of negligence, such as excessive speed, failure to give warning, failure to keep proper lookout for pedestrians or the like, the plaintiff’s claim of negligence is that the child was out on the hard-surface in time for the driver to have seen it and avoided hitting it had he kept a proper lookout, and that he was driving on the wrong, or left-hand side, of the road, there being no obstructions on the right side to prevent him from driving there. It appears that the road curves to the left as the scene of accident was approached by the bus, and was elevated by a fill about three and one-half feet high above the surface of the surrounding ground, and that looking from the place of accident toward the curve (from which bus approached) there was an unobstructed view of the road for a distance of about 375 feet.

The chief witness for plaintiff’s theory was Mrs. Nix, who was sitting on her porch 213 feet away and whose attention was directed to the accident by the little boy rolling the tire or hoop across the road, and she was watching to see if he got across ahead of the oncoming bus. She says that the child had barely got across, when plaintiff attempted to cross in the opposite direction and had gotten out on the road four or five feet when the oncoming bus was about fifty feet away. It was “dusk dark”, the headlights of the bus were on (although she did not remember that they were on), and she was looking from a distance of 213 feet or more towards the bus as it approached. The father, talking to Elias Dotson, had his attention attracted by hearing one of his boys yell: “Go back, Eugene.” ITe testified that: “Just as I looked 1 saw Eugene coming over the bank. I hollowed at him and looked down the road to see if there was any danger coming down the road. I east my eye back up the road and noticed the bus about fifty or sixty feet from him. By the time I got my eye back to him it was making so much speed it looked to be about ten or fifteen feet. I seen it was going to catch him and I just shut my eyes like that. By the time I opened my eyes again, I could see right under the front of the bus and saw the child *589 laying in tbe edge of tbe road.” Tbe child’s brother, Earle, asked to tell what he saw, testified: ‘‘Well, I was standing over there just kindly down on the edge of the bank. I looked np about fifteen feet from me and seen the bus coming. Eugene he was standing, I just seen the top of his head, and then when he got np on the bank, he got about three, he was within about three or four feet to the edge of the hard-surface and started kindly down the road. I seen the bus and it struck Eugene, the left-hand front fender and left bumper.”

Elias Dotson, a witness for defendant who was talking to the father and saw the accident, said the bus was twenty-five or thirty feet away when the child came “up from the ditch”, and kept on coming; that the bus did not hit the child with the front part, or he would have seen it. “It was bound to have hit on tbe other side somewhere.” The hard-surface of the road was about seventeen feet and about four feet of berm on each side. The bank up which the child came was about three and one-half feet high and the bank on the other side was about sis feet high. The driver of seven years’ experience said he was keeping a lookout, saw the boys on the right of the road, and had his car under control to protect them should they move in danger, that he did not see the child, and never knew an accident had occurred until some one hollowed on the outside and a like exclamation came from some one in the bus, when he stopped in twenty-five or thirty feet distance and moved back to where the boy was hurt. He was running from twenty to twenty-five miles per hour. Another witness or so for plaintiff estimated the speed up to 45 miles. There were five passengers in the bus. Some of them testified that they were watching the road and could clearly see it and that they did not see the child in front but felt an impact. All say that the impact appeared to be against the side of the car.

The evidence has been reviewed and the substance given because one of the grounds of motion for setting aside the verdict was that it was contrary to the clear preponderance of the evidence. The court, in its discretion, could have based its action on that ground, for it is apparent that the child suddenly appeared either in, or at the side of the road *590 at a time and place where it was either very difficult or impossible to avoid the accident. But the court has not set aside the verdict on that ground, and if there is reversible error shown, this court usually does not review the evidence where a new trial is awarded, unless necessary to do so in order to reach a conclusion as to the correctness of the order under review. Browning v. Hoffman, 86 W. Va. 468, 103 S. E. 484; Martin v. Supply Co., 88 W. Va. 471, 107 S. E. 183; Pallotto v. Paper Co., 106 W. Va. 60, 144 S. E. 720. In Browning v. Hoffman, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 S.E. 19, 112 W. Va. 586, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunsford-v-cannon-ball-transit-co-wva-1932.