McKinney v. Noland Co.

86 S.E.2d 607, 227 S.C. 27, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 22, 1955
Docket16985
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 86 S.E.2d 607 (McKinney v. Noland Co.) 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
McKinney v. Noland Co., 86 S.E.2d 607, 227 S.C. 27, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 4 (S.C. 1955).

Opinion

Legge, Justice.

This action, commenced in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County, is for personal injuries and property *29 damage alleged to have resulted from a collision on the night of May 2, 1953, on a public highway within or near the corporate limits of the City of Greenville, between an automobile of the defendant Noland Company driven by the defendant Atwater, and the disabled automobile of the plaintiff. Defendants’ motion to transfer the cause to Spartan-burg County was granted by the Honorable J. B. Pruitt, Presiding Judge, who by his order dated January 15, 1954, found that the individual defendant was at that time and had been at the commencement of the action a resident of Spartanburg County, and that the defendant Noland Company, a Virginia corporation, had no place of business in Green-ville County but maintained a branch office in Spartanburg County and was, for venue purposes, a resident of the latter. Code, 1952, § 10-303; Hancock v. Southern Cotton Oil Co., 211 S. C. 432, 45 S. E. (2d) 850. From this order there was no appeal. Thereafter plaintiff moved to transfer the cause from Spartanburg County to Greenville County upon the ground that the convenience of witnesses and the ends of justice would be thereby promoted. Code, 1952, § 10-310(3). This motion was heard before the Honorable Bruce Littlejohn, Resident Judge of the Seventh Circuit, and granted by his order dated May 10, 1954, from which this appeal is taken.

The complaint alleged, in substance, that on the date of the accident the defendant Noland Company had held a meeting at a hotel in Spartanburg that was attended by its representatives from outlying areas, among those present being the defendant Atwater, its Greenville representative; that Atwater had become “heavily intoxicated” from partaking of the drinks served at the meeting; that when the meeting was over Atwater, still intoxicated, and with the knowledge and permission of the corporate defendant, proceeded to drive an automobile owned by it from Spartan-burg to his home in Greenville; and that while so intoxicated and still about the business of the corporate defendant he so negligently and recklessly operated the said automo *30 bile in a heavy downpour of rain that it struck the plaintiff’s automobile which had stopped, disabled, off the paved portion of White Oak Way, a street and highway within or near the corporate limits of' Greenville, and also struck and seriously and permanently injured the plaintiff, who was standing near his automobile. It is alleged that after the collision the Noland car went over an embankment and came to rest against a tree at a point not visible from the highway; that when Atwater got out and climbed back to the highway he told neighbors who had arrived at the scene that no person other than himself had been involved in the wreck, and he requested them to carry him to his home, which they did; and that it was not until these neighbors had returned to the scene of the wreck that they discovered the plaintiff lying unconscious on the shoulder of the highway, whereupon they reported the matter to the Greenville police, who summoned an ambulance to carry him to the hospital, where he remained unconscious for eleven days.

In his answer the defendant Atwater admitted, among other things, that on the evening in question he had attended a social gathering of friends in Spartanburg and had “had some drinks with them,” that during the return trip to his home in Greenville, and at the time of the collision, it was raining heavily, and he alleged that the collision was an accident unavoidable on his part. He denied any wrongful or actionable conduct on his part and charged the plaintiff with contributory negligence and recklessness in having stopped his car on the paved portion of the highway without lights or other signal, and in. having placed himself in a position of obvious danger in the circumstances.

The answer of Noland Company admitted its ownership of the car driven by Atwater, admitted that the collision had occurred, that both cars had been damaged, and that the plaintiff claimed to have received personal injuries. It denied the remaining allegations of the complaint and, upon information and belief, charged contributory negligence and *31 recklessness in the same particulars specified in the answer of its co-defendant.

In support of his motion before Judge Littlejohn, plaintiff submitted certain affidavits, the substance of which follows :

Mr. J. LaRue Hinson, of counsel for the plaintiff:

1. At the time of the collision the defendant Atwater owned a home in Greenville, in which he and his family had resided for several years and in which they continued to reside until shortly after the time of the collision, when they moved to Spartanburg County.

2. Two witnesses who had assisted in pushing plaintiff’s automobile off the highway after the collision reside in Greenville County.

3. Two other witnesses who after the collision had carried Atwater to within a short distance of his home, and who on their way back to the scene of the accident had found the plaintiff lying unconscious on the shoulder of the road, were at that time students at Bob Jones University in Green-ville, and one of them is still a student there.

4. Six officers of the Greenville police department had assisted in the investigation of the accident. They had summoned the ambulance to carry plaintiff to the hospital; had observed the position of the cars after the collision; had taken pictures of the scene of the wreck; had, after midnight, found Atwater in bed at his home, and had taken him to police headquarters in Greenville, where they had observed his intoxicated condition, had given him an alcometer test, and had obtained a written statement from him.

5. The State Highway Patrolman who had assisted in the investigation is stationed in Greenville County.

6. The plaintiff was hospitalized at Greenville General Hospital in the City of Greenville.

7. Dr. White, the surgeon who had attended plaintiff at the hospital, and Dr. Carpenter, a specialist to whom plain *32 tiff had. been referred for treatment of eye injuries, reside and practice in Greenville.

8. Plaintiff’s employer, a witness as to plaintiff’s physical and mental condition before and after his injuries, resides in Greenville County.

9. Members of plaintiff’s family, with whom he had resided before the accident and with whom he resided after his release from the hospital, and therefore material witnesses as to his physical condition, reside in Greenville County.

10. Plaintiff’s wrecked automobile was taken after the accident to a garage in Greenville, and the witness who will testify to the extent of its damage resides in Greenville.

11. The ends of justice would be promoted by a jury view of the scene of the accident, and by having jurors of Green-ville County pass upon the credibility of the material witnesses before mentioned, and of the plaintiff and of the defendant Atwater, who had been a resident of Greenville County at the time of this accident.

12.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 S.E.2d 607, 227 S.C. 27, 1955 S.C. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-v-noland-co-sc-1955.