Mildred R. Copeland v. The Greyhound Corporation

337 F.2d 822
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 1964
Docket21407_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 337 F.2d 822 (Mildred R. Copeland v. The Greyhound Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mildred R. Copeland v. The Greyhound Corporation, 337 F.2d 822 (5th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Chief Judge.

This appeal presents the unusual case in which an appellant makes an extremely plausible and cogent argument .that 'in the undisputed circumstances surrounding a bus-automobile collision, the trial court’s finding that the driver of the bus was not negligent must be reversed because clearly erroneous, or be■cause under the agreed circumstances negligence follows as a matter of law.

Facts which are not in dispute, and •which were largely found by the trial •court in this non-jury trial for personal injury, depict a collision between a Greyhound bus with the Rambler automobile of Mrs. Copeland, which it was •overtaking just within the city limits of Winder, Georgia, on Highway 29, at •early dusk on a wet afternoon. The. facts needed to test but the appellant’s theory are as follows:

The bus had followed Mrs. Copeland’s car for some ten miles, driving west towards Atlanta from Athens. It had been raining, but just before the time of the accident the rain had stopped, although the road was still wet and slick. Both Mrs. Copeland and the bus had slowed down to approximately 25 to 30 miles an hour as they entered the city limits of Winder. The bus was following the automobile at a distance of a least 105 feet. 1 The bus driver testified without contradiction that under these circumstances and speed, he could stop the bus “in a hundred feet or less.” On account of the lights from oncoming traffic, Mrs. Copeland drove to the extreme right of her lane in the two-lane road, and on account of the slippery condition of the road either her right rear or both of her right wheels slid off of the right side of the- road and dropped 6 to 8 inches onto an unpaved shoulder.

She continued forward at a diminished speed trying to regain the highway by turning her car at an angle towards the left. The bus driver saw Mrs. Copeland’s dilemma when it occurred and described the manner in which her car “fish-tailed” forward up the highway in attempting to regain its position on the road.

The evidence fully warrants the following findings of fact made by the trial court:

“Clarence O’Neal, the driver of defendant’s bus, saw Mrs. Copeland’s car run off the pavement. He first decided to try to pass her on the right of the dirt shoulder and turned his bus in that direction but seeing the condition of the surface and deciding he could not safely pass to the right, he then turned the bus to the left and started to go around Mrs. Copeland’s car to the left and *824 had reached a point where the front of the bus was on the center line of the highway when Mrs. Copeland’s station wagon came back onto the highway with a sudden lurch and headed diagonally across the highway toward the left hand side of the highway in the direction in which Mrs. Copeland was traveling and when her automobile had reached a point about the center line of the highway immediately in front of the bus, the bus collided with Mrs. Copeland’s car striking it about the left front door where Mrs. Copeland, the driver, was seated, crushing the door inward and causing Mrs. Copeland to suffer serious injury to her person. As a result of this occurrence, she suffered much pain, lost time from her work, incurred hospital and medical expenses and her automobile was badly damaged.
“The bus stopped on the highway within a few feet of the point where the collision occurred, while the automobile of Mrs. Copeland, its transmission rendered ineffectual by the collision, rolled slowly across the parking area of the East Side Filling Station and into a drainage ditch on the west side of said station where it came to rest.”

The trial court then made the following findings:

“Both the plaintiff and the driver of the defendant’s bus were faced with a sudden emergency which was created by Mrs. Copeland’s car dropping from the edge of the pavement onto the dangerously low dirt shoulder of the road. The driver of the defendant’s bus did not have sufficient time within which to determine with certainty the best course to pursue in the emergency.
“The Court finds that the defendant was not guilty of any negligence which proximately caused or contributed to the injuries and damages suffered by plaintiff.”

Further significant evidence given by the bus driver is contained in the following questions and answers:

“Q. Now, Mr. O’Neal, from your familiarity with this highway at the time of this accident, in your judgment as a bus driver, was there sufficient area of graded shoulder to allow you to pass to the right off of' the paved portion of the highway of' the Copeland car?
“A. I don’t believe it was, no, sir..
“Q. Were there vehicles approaching, headed in an easterly direction approaching your car and Mrs. Copeland’s car and other cars?
“A. Yes, sir.”

The thrust of the appellant’s criticism: of the trial court’s determination that the bus company was not negligent, is that, the bus was following at a relatively slow rate of speed with ample distance between it and the pi'eeeding car to come to-a stop even if Mrs. Copeland’s car had come to a complete stop itself, but especially since it proceeded another 30 feet, before contact would be made if the bus. continued forward; there was no room to pass on the right; it was unsafe to pass, on the left because of oncoming traffic; and the bus driver failed to do the only thing that would have prevented the-accident, which was to come to a stop-within the ample distance available for him to do so.

The appellant contends that this court, would be warranted in setting aside the-judgment here on either one of two* grounds: (1) by application of the clearly erroneous rule, or such modification of it as applies where this court is dealing-with ultimate rather than evidentiary or basic fact finding, cf. Galena Oaks Corporation v. Scofield, 5 Cir., 218 F.2d 217, or, (2) the court determined that the bus. driver faced a “sudden emergency” and. thus applied the sudden emergency standard of care, whereas, on the facts of this-, record, such determination could not. stand. Appellant argues that it is apparent from the findings of the trial court *825 “that it applied a standard of care to the •conduct of the bus driver somewhat less burdensome or demanding than would normally be the case because of the court’s determination that Mrs. Copeland’s mishap caused the bus driver to be “faced with a sudden emergency,” whereas the circumstances outlined above demonstrate that only Mrs. Copeland was faced with a sudden emergency by reason •of her car’s slipping off the highway. .She claims that what happened to her ■car was what might normally be expected to occur and which gives rise to the ■Georgia statutory requirement that a following car remain at a safe distance ■“having due regard for the speed of such vehicles and the traffic upon and the condition of the highway.” 2

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Bluebook (online)
337 F.2d 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mildred-r-copeland-v-the-greyhound-corporation-ca5-1964.