Myers v. Charleston Transit Co.

37 S.E.2d 281, 128 W. Va. 564, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 17
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1946
Docket9742
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 S.E.2d 281 (Myers v. Charleston Transit Co.) 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
Myers v. Charleston Transit Co., 37 S.E.2d 281, 128 W. Va. 564, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 17 (W. Va. 1946).

Opinion

Kenna, President :

Dell Myers, defendant in error, brought this action of trespass on the case against Charleston Transit Company, plaintiff in error, to recover damages for the loss of the index, second, and part of the third finger of his right hanid, due to the alleged negligent operation by the defendant company of a passenger bus from the City of South Charleston to Charleston. Judgment was entered on a verdict for $5,000.00 in favor of the plaintiff *566 below and this writ of error was granted upon the petition of the Charleston Transit Company. By appropriate motions the points covered by the assignments of error briefed and argued were properly preserved, and since they turn largely upon' the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s evidence it is necessary to state what we regard as the material part of the testimony.

The plaintiff at the time of his injury on May 25, 1944, was sixty-one or two years of age, lived on Chandler’s Branch and was employed by the State Road Commission at sixty cents per hour. On the morning of the day of the accident he says he didn’t feel as well as usual and so decided not to go to work but instead to visit his daughter whom he hadn’t seen for some time. He left his home at around nine-thirty in the morning and went to his daughter’s apartment on Fourth Avenue where he says he stayed until fifteen or twenty minutes of two, then going to the corner of Patrick Street and Fourth Avenue and there meeting Caleb Milam with whom he was talking when the accident occurred at around, two p.m. Myers says that he was waiting for the traffic to clear so that he could cross Fourth Avenue on his way home to' Chandler’s Branch and was leaning with his back toward the river against a telephone pole on Patrick Street within a few feet of the south corner of that street with Fourth Avenue.

Fourth Avenue is thirty feet wide between curbs, paved with concrete, and begins at Patrick Street, running east or up the Kanawha River. Patrick Street is thirty-two feet wide with concrete paving between curbs and runs north from the bridge across the Kanawha River to the hill.

Myers testified that he was standing on the sidewalk but that he must have been right close to the curb because in rounding the corner from Patrick Street into Fourth Avenue the bus “sideswiped” him and knocked him down; that as he was falling he saw the bus, evidently for the first time, and in attempting to push him *567 self away from it came to earth with his right hand over the edge of the curb as the rim on the bus’ right rear wheel struck it, cutting off his fingers.

Patrick Lee Miller and Robert Franklin Miller, respectively fourteen and sixteen years of age, corroborate the testimony of Myers concerning the immediate happening though their testimony does ‘not correspond completely in detail. They lived on Fourth Avenue and were employed as pin boys in the Boulevard Bowling Alley and were on their way to work when they stopped at Regas’ Market and on their way in saw Myers and Milam sitting on the steps outside. They got a bottle of pop or coca cola each and came outside to drink it when they saw the plaintiff standing with his back to the telephone pole, saw the bus “sideswipe” him, knock him down, turning him around as he fell, with his right hand over the curb so that the back wheel struck his fingers. The testimony of these- two witnesses is conflicting as to time and the position of the plaintiff after he fell.

Joe Scott, an employee of the Kelly Axe & Tool Works, who was walking toward the river on Patrick Street, facing the corner of Fourth Avenue, saw Myers and saw the bus turn into Fourth Avenue. He did not see the bus strike Myers nor Myers fall toward the bus. He did see Myers after he was injured.

The police officer on duty, who did not see the accident, and the civil engineer who testified concerning the measurements and introduced a plat drawn to scale of the intersection or corner where the accident occurred, complete the testimony of the plaintiff.

The defendant undertook to show that the plaintiff’s fall was directly due to intoxication either without the bus striking him, 'or because he swayed beyond the curb line toward the bus and collided with it due to his own fault.

Mrs. Zoma Witt testified that Myers had been in her place of business within two doors of the corner of Pat *568 rick Street and Fourth Avenue during the entire morning from about nine-thirty until a half hour before the accident occurred; that they had refused to sell him more beer and ordered him out because he had had too much and “could not stand up very good”.

Mrs. Theodosia Collias, who was employed at Regas’ Grocery, owned and operated by her uncle testified that she saw Myers staggering with another man helping him walk before her place of business a short while before the accident; that at the time of the accident she was opening bottles of coca cola for the Miller boys and that they must have been in the store at some point because of that fact. An objection to her testimony as conjectural was sustained, after which the witness stated that they were in the store, the latter statement not being stricken.

Paul Bedell testified that he saw Myers a short while before the accident and that he was very drunk as he passed him, going as far as the grocery store on the corner when he fell and was helped to his feet by a friend who came out of the grocery store. Bedell did not see the accident.

William C. Games, a driver for the Greyhound Company, testified that he was sitting to the right of the center of the rear seat of the bus, the speed of which did not exceed ten miles per hour as it approached the corner; that he saw the plaintiff standing with another man at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Patrick Street; that “they were moving about; more of a stagger than anything”, and that after the driver of the bus had passed them in turning the corner, the plaintiff, who was standing with his back to the bus, staggered into its side just in front of the rear wheel after the driver had “gotten by”, dropping below the window and out of his sight. Mr. Games stated on cross examination that he first saw the plaintiff when he, Games, was a bus length from him, and that the length of a bus would be possibly twenty-eight or thirty feet.

*569 Eugene Evans, a seventeen-year-old young man engaged in preaching, testified that he saw Myers fall against the bus between the rear door and the rear wheel and that in his opinion Myers was then drunk. Evans also stated that the man with Myers tried to grab him as he fell, but was unsuccessful.

Ray Probst testified that he saw Myers at the time of the accident and the man with him was holding him up and “trying to pull him up the sidewalk”; that Myers pulled away and fell as the bus rounded the corner. On cross examination he stated that he did not see Myers “hit the sidewalk” in falling and that he did not know whether Myers hit the bus or the bus hit him because the witness was across Fourth Avenue from the corner Myers was on and that in turning up Fourth Avenue the bus obstructed his vision.

The driver of the bus, B.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brake v. Cerra
112 S.E.2d 466 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1960)
Higgs v. Watkins
78 S.E.2d 230 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1953)
LaBris v. Western National Insurance
59 S.E.2d 236 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 S.E.2d 281, 128 W. Va. 564, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-charleston-transit-co-wva-1946.