McDowell v. Floyd

125 S.E.2d 4, 240 S.C. 158, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 11, 1962
Docket17899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 125 S.E.2d 4 (McDowell v. Floyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDowell v. Floyd, 125 S.E.2d 4, 240 S.C. 158, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 83 (S.C. 1962).

Opinion

Taylor, Chief Justice.

This appeal is from an action brought in the Court of Common Pleas for Horry County seeking damages for injuries allegedly received by Respondent when struck by an auto owned by Appellant Carroll and driven by Appellant Floyd.

*160 The complaint alleges injuries sustained by Respondent by reason of certain acts of negligence on the part of Appellants. The answers of Appellants Floyd and Carroll contained a general denial, plea of unavoidable accident, contributory negligence and recklessness, sole negligence and recklessness on the part of Respondent and combined negligence and recklessness on the part of Respondent and the driver of Appellant Dan Hucks vehicle.

The collision occurred in the nighttime on an improved secondary highway, S-26-24, in Horry County. The highway is 21 feet wide at the point on a straight stretch of approximately 300 yards, approximately 100 yards from a curve to the east and approximately 700 feet from a curve to the west.

Respondent’s car, headed east, was stopped on the highway, without lights, when a pickup truck, owned by Appellant Dan Hucks and driven by his daughter, stopped alongside, headed west, in its right lane. Its cab was approximately opposite the rear of Respondent’s automobile, with its headlights on. Respondent, who was out of her car, walked over to the pickup and talked to the driver. While standing there, she observed the lights of the Floyd-Carroll vehicle approaching around the curve from the west, approximately 700 feet distant, in the lane in which Respondent’s vehicle was stopped. Respondent then moved to a position behind her vehicle before it was struck by the oncoming car resulting in her injury.

Upon trial Appellants made timely motion for a directed verdict on the ground that the only reasonable inference to be drawn from all the testimony was that Respondent was guilty of contributory negligence and recklessness. This was refused and the case submitted to the jury which returned a verdict in favor of the Respondent against Appellants Floyd and Carroll in the sum of $15,000.00, thus exonerating the Appellant Hucks.

Appellants contend error in that (1) the only reasonable inference to be drawn from all the testimony is that Re *161 spondent was guilty of contributory negligence and recklessness and (2) that the Court erred in permitting the witness Arnie Brown to testify concerning an experiment he conducted during trial in that the experiment was not conducted under circumstances sufficiently similar to those existing at the time of the collision.

Inasmuch as we are of opinion that the case must be reversed and remanded for a new trial on the second question, we will not discuss the question of contributory negligence other than to say that an examination of the record reveals that there was sufficient evidence to require the case being submitted to the jury and we find no merit in this contention.

As to the second contention, the record reveals that the witness Arnie Brown had. testified previously but was recalled the following day after having made an experiment at the scene the night before. The pertinent part of this testimony appears as follows :

“Q. Mr. Brown, you testified yesterday about some measurements, and then after that I put Mr. Dan Hucks up about some measurements. Did you go back to the scene of the accident last night ?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Looking back from the scene of the accident back in a westerly direction, did you park an automobile where the scene of the accident occurred ?
“A. Yes, right in the spot the Chevrolet was sitting.
“Mr. Green: Your Honor, we object to the testimony of any experiments last night at the scene of the accident. His testimony is that he parked the car where the McDowell car was. That is hearsay. We don’t know the degree of the lights either.
“The Court: That is testimony that would be given its weight.
“Q. Did you park it?
“A. Yes.
*162 “Q. Would you please tell the jury of any measurements you made and how you made them?
“A. I goes around the curve which the cars was traveling to come back the same direction, they were traveling at the time the accident happened and I drove until my lights showed me this car sitting there and I stopped and I made a mark, and it was dangerous measuring last night, and Mr. McDowell came by and measured the distance, and I didn’t measure it, but this is the distance here and I think it is right.
“Q. What type of mark did you make, sir ?
“A. Taken a big lump of dirt as big as a four quart measure and pushed it right at my lights.
“Q. From your observation of the marker at the scene of the accident, what is your approximation?
“A. Well, my, if I know how to answer that question.
“Mr. Green: Your Honor, I don’t think he has sufficiently identified which distance he has identified. I don’t know which. This gentleman testified that he didn’t make any measurements himself.
“The Court: As I understand he asked for an estimation. I think he can testify to that.
“Q. What is that?
“A. Seven Hundred Twenty-six (726) feet.
“The Court: Are you reading that which was somebody else’s or is that your estimate?
“A. That is my estimate, but they measured it.
“Q. Did you see that?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Did you notice anything on it?
“A. I don’t recall.
“Q. Could you tell what portion Mrs. Pacettie’s body hit that car in any way?
“Mr. Green: I don’t think he can testify to that, your Honor.
“The Court: No, he can’t testify to that. .
* * *
*163 “Q. You testified you went back to the scene and you placed this car here without lights on it?
“A. Yes.
“Q. You placed it where the McDowells told you?
“A. No, I placed it where the McDowell car was. I placed it where I saw the McDowell car at the scene.
“Q. You placed the car here without lights?
“A. Yes.
“Q. You came to this direction?
“A. Yes.
“Q.

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Weaks v. South Carolina State Highway Department
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130 S.E.2d 370 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.E.2d 4, 240 S.C. 158, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdowell-v-floyd-sc-1962.