McCrorey v. Thomas

63 S.E. 1011, 109 Va. 373, 1909 Va. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 1011 (McCrorey v. Thomas) 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
McCrorey v. Thomas, 63 S.E. 1011, 109 Va. 373, 1909 Va. LEXIS 45 (Va. 1909).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

There was a verdict and judgment in the trial court in favor of Beatrice Thomas, an infant, who sued by her next friend, against J. G. McOrorey, for damages for injuries caused by the *375 fall of an awning. To that judgment this writ of error was awarded.

It appears that on a windy day in January, 1907, the plaintiff, who was twelve years old, was walking along the sidewalk On Main street in the city of Norfolk, when an adjustable awning in front of and attached to the defendant’s store, fell upon her, producing among other injuries a depressed fracture of the skull.

There was some question at the trial as to whether or not an operation would have relieved or prevented some of the injurious consequences which it was testified had or might probably result from the fracture.

Dr. McCormick, one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, was asked the following questions, as appears from bill of exceptions No. 1:

“Q. Is there danger attending these operations? A. I think so.
“Q. Now, doctor, if the operation goes through and the child lives after the operation, can you say with any degree of certainty, that either or both of the conditions which will reasonably exist will be cured ? A. I have not had wide experience or observation on the subject, but I have seen a man with a depressed fracture of the skull, who suffered from Jacksonian epilepsy and from epileptic symptoms. The depression was removed and he ceased having epileptic attacks, but the paralysis remained the same.
“Q. That has come under your observation ? A. Yes, sir.
• “Q. How was that injury occasioned? A. By a blow on the head.
“Q. How ? A. Struck with a piece of iron rod over the center.
“To which last question the defendant, by counsel, objected; which objection the court overruled.” The admission of this evidence is assigned as error.

The objection made to it here is that while the witness might *376 give his opinion as to what generally might he expected to follow from such a blow, he had no right to give the results in an isolated case which came under the witness’ observation.

Conceding that this is true, no such objection was made. The only thing objected to, so far as the bill of exceptions shows, was how; the blow in the particular instance testified to was caused. The answer to that question could not have prejudiced the defendant.

Another error assigned is the action of the court in permitting Dr. Graves, another witness for the plaintiff, to answer the following question: “Doctor, from an examination and knowledge of the facts concerning the injury to this particular child, will you state to the jury how, in your opinion, her future will be affected by this injury with reasonable certainty.”

The bill of exception 3sTo. 2, upon which this assignment of error is based, does not show what the objection to the question was, but when the bill of exception containing all the evidence of Dr. Graves is examined, it appears that the objection made to the question was, that it ought to be confined “to the facts within his (the witness’) knowledge and not what the girl has told him.” Upon the statement of the plaintiff’s counsel, in reply to that objection, that the question related to what the witness knew, the court overruled the objection and permitted the question to be answered.

If .there was the further objection to the question, that it was too broad and authorized the witness to enter into the realm of speculation as to the effects of the blow upon the- future life of the plaintiff, as is now claimed in the petition, that objection ought to have been made at that time. A' party will not be permitted to make one objection to evidence in the trial court and another in the appellate court. Warren v. Warren, 93 Va. 73, 74-76, 24 S. E. 913.

». -The action of the court-in giving.instruction hTo. 1, offered by the plaintiff, and in refusing to give- that instruction as *377 amended by the defendant in lieu of it, is assigned as error.

Three objections are made to the instruction given, viz.:

"(1) It imposed upon the defendant an absolute duty, to use the safer of two ways, either of which, as a matter of fact, may have been reasonably safe in the judgment of a man of ordinary care and prudence situated under the same or similar circumstances.
"(2) It charged that as a matter of law it was culpable negligence in the petitioner, in the choice between alternatives, either of which may have been safe in the judgment of a man of ordinary prudence under the circumstances, not to have used the safer way, and thus took from the jury the very question which, under the settled principles of the common law, is peculiarly and necessarily referred to the determination of the jury, that is to say: Whether the conduct of the defendant was conformable with the requirements of ordinary care and prudence under the circumstances of the case.
“(3) It assumed the existence of a material fact.”

The first and second of these objections to the instruction are based upon a misconception of its meaning. It does not raise the question of the defendant’s duty to use the safer of two safe ways in the management of the awning, but it told the jury that if the use of the sidewalk was made dangerous to the plaintiff and others under the conditions that existed the day of the accident by the awning being left in a lowered condition, and that it would have been safe if the awning had been raised, then it was the defendant’s duty to adopt the safe method; and that if he knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care could have known, that such a wind was blowing and beating upon the awning as to make it dangerous when down, then he was guilty of negligé nee. ' ■

The other objection to the instruction is that it assumes a material fact, viz.: that the wind at the time of the accident was "dangerously high.” The only substantial difference upon this point between the instruction which was given and that which *378 the defendant sought to have the court give in lieu of it is that in the one the wind is described as “a dangerously high wind,” and in the other as “a high wind.”

It was not assumed in the instruction as given, nor in the instruction as amended and rejected, that the wind was of the character described in either; but in the one the court told the jury that if the wind was “dangerously high” then it was the duty of the defendant to raise the awning, if he knew or could by. the exercise of ordinary care have known that such a wind was blowing. In the other, the court was asked to tell them that if the wind was “high” then it was the defendant’s duty to raise the awning if he knew or could by the exercise of ordinary care have known that such a wind was blowing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 S.E. 1011, 109 Va. 373, 1909 Va. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrorey-v-thomas-va-1909.