McLeod v. Charleston Laundry

145 S.E. 756, 106 W. Va. 361, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 187
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1928
Docket6237
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 145 S.E. 756 (McLeod v. Charleston Laundry) 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
McLeod v. Charleston Laundry, 145 S.E. 756, 106 W. Va. 361, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 187 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

The Charleston Laundry Company complains of a judgment of the circuit court of Kanawha county affirming a judgment entered by the common pleas court of said county on a $5,500.00 verdict in favor of the administrator of Marjorie McLeod, in an action to recover for unlawful death.

The accident occurred just after the beginning of a blinding and driving rain storm in the 1500 block on Lee street, in the city of Charleston, at a point other than a street intersection. Midway of the block, and on the north side of the street, a walkway, known as Ruffner Walk, connects the north sidewalk of Lee with the south sidewalk of Washington street. Mr. McLeod and his wife, the decedent, lived on this walk, one hundred feet back from Lee. Prior to: the accident, Dr. and Mrs. Banks had parked their car on the right (south) side of Lee street and opposite and slightly to the east of Ruffner Walk, for the purpose of picking up the McLeods and driving them to a party. As the latter were in the act of leaving their home to join the parties waiting in the ear, the storm broke in all its fury, and the wife and husband, in the order named, started to run towards Lee street. On reaching the north curb of Lee street, Mrs. McLeod hesitated and with a parasol pulled down over her face and right shoulder to keep off the driving rain ran into the street where she was struck by defendant’s truck, going east on Lee. There is but one slight deflection in the street in this block— the street being practically straight. The driver had just made a stop in the same block two hundred yards west of the point of the accident. The rain started as he was leaving. The truck, according to his testimony and that of his companion, was within eight to ten feet of her when she suddenly appeared in the center of the street. He swerved to the right as far as he could and applied the foot brake and reached for the emergency when unable to get away from her. The body of Mrs. McLeod, which was thrown into the air, caught on the left fender where it remained for a short *363 distance before falling into tbe street under the wheels of the car. The driver and companion locate the point where the truck stopped at about thirty-five or forty feet from the point of impact, while the plaintiff’s witnesses place it at about twice that distance. The driver and his companion claim that the former was going fifteen miles per hour, which is within the rate prescribed by ordinance, while plaintiff and some of his witnesses- (none of whom seems to have seen the car prior to the impact) estimate the speed at which the car was going at thirty to forty miles per hour — basing their conclusions largely upon the distance traveled by the car after the impact and before coming to a complete stop.

The points of error stressed are: (1) the insufficiency of the declaration; (2) the giving of instructions for the plaintiff numbers one, two and three, which were in effect predicated on the doctrine of the last clear chance; and the refusal of defendant’s peremptory instruction.

While it was technical error to overrule the demurrer to the declaration, since the latter did not allege the appointment of the administrator, a new trial on that ground alone would be limited to the issue of the appointment of such administrator. Moss v. Railway Company, 75 W. Va. 62. Whether or not proof of appointment during the trial on the merits would suffice, we do not decide, as our views on the second assignment dealing with the merits of the case are controlling.

The relative duties imposed by the law on the pedestrian and the user of the motor vehicle on the public street are aptly expressed in 42 C. J. 1150-1151:

“There is no imperative rule requiring a pedestrian about to cross a public street or highway to stop, or to look and listen for approaching motor vehicles, or to look for vehicles in intersecting streets, under penalty of being deemed negligent as a matter of law upon omission thereof, and whether or not a failure so to do is negligence is ordinarily a question of fact under the circumstances; but under the rule requiring every user of the highway to exercise reasonable care for his own safety and in so doing to make reasonable use of his faculties and intelligence to discover im *364 pending danger, one who fails to look or listen for approaching vehicles before entering upon the traveled part of a street for the purpose of crossing it is usually negligent in fact. Thus a pedestrian who, without looking, steps suddenly into a roadway, or crosses with his head down, or with an umbrella so held as to cut off his vision, or who, having advanced into the traveled portion of a street, steps back into the path of a motor vehicle without observing whether the way is clear has been held guilty of negligence.”

The old doctrine that negligence, however slight, on the part of the plaintiff contributing to the injury would bar him from recovering has given place in our jurisprudence to the benign rule of the last clear chance; that is, though the plaintiff may have negligently placed himself in a position of peril, if the defendant sees him in such place of peril, and has time to avoid injuring him, the law requires him to do so. The plaintiff here by his instructions substantially based his right to recovery by invoking the doctrine of last clear chance. This attitude taken by him presupposes negligence either primary or contributory on the part of plaintiff’s intestate. McGowan v. Tayman, 144 Va. 358; Wilson v. Virginian Railway Co., 122 Va. 160. If there was no negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate, the driver’s liability is not determined on the score of the last clear chance, but on the score of his primary negligence. The distinction is of great importance when the question of the degree of care required of the driver not to injure the plaintiff is at issue. In the case of driver’s primary negligence not contributed to by that of the party injured, the fact that the driver may have done all that a prudent, careful driver could have done to avoid the accident, after he discovered the dangerous situation of the' party injured, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have done so, will not relieve him from liability from his negligence prior thereto; whereas, if the question arise under the doctrine of the last clear chance which presupposes negligence on the part of the plaintiff, all that would be required of the defendant would be to do that which a prudent, careful driver would have done to avoid injuring the intestate after he discovered *365 her peril. So,' if here the driver was driving at a rate beyond that set by the law, and while so driving had killed the intestate without contributory negligence on her part, he would not be permitted to say that he did all a prudent, careful driver would have done to stop the automobile, but that in spite of his efforts, he could not stop it — a defense which would be sufficient if the intestate was guilty of contributory negligence and the doctrine of the last clear chance was invoked to attenuate the legal consequence of such negligence. Buchanan v. Railway Co., 102 W. Va. 426.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.E. 756, 106 W. Va. 361, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleod-v-charleston-laundry-wva-1928.