Otte v. Miller

24 S.E.2d 90, 125 W. Va. 317, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 5
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1943
Docket9404
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 S.E.2d 90 (Otte v. Miller) 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
Otte v. Miller, 24 S.E.2d 90, 125 W. Va. 317, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 5 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

This is an action for wrongful death, instituted in the Circuit Court of Marshall County. Plaintiff’s decedent, Mamie Otte, was killed on the 19th day of December, 1941, by being struck by an automobile operated by the defendant, Harry Miller. A trial of the action before a jury, during which a view of the scene of the accident was had, resulted in a verdict for the defendant, and judgment thereon, to which judgment plaintiff prosecutes this writ of error.

The' accident occurred on a public highway, known as Glendale Heights Detour, and at a point between Mc-Mechen and Glendale. The defendant was driving his automobile from, at or near McMechen toward Glendale. The plaintiff’s decedent lived in a house on the left side of the highway in the direction in which the automobile was being driven. Late in the afternoon of the day of her death, she left her home for the purpose of carrying a bottle of milk to the home of a neighbor who lived a few doors below her, and on the same side of the highway. The defendant, accompanied by two men of foreign birth, was driving his automobile in the same direction in which the plaintiff’s decedent was walking. The evidence is not clear on what portion of the highway she was walking. *319 The highway was paved for a width of eighteen feet, and there was a berm on each side thereof. At or near the Otte residence, an automobile in the rear of that being driven by the defendant, blew for the road and, as shown by a cleár preponderance of the evidence, passed defendant’s automobile on the left. Immediately thereafter, plaintiff’s decedent was struck by the defendant’s automobile near the center of the highway. The evidence does not disclose how she reached the center of the highway, or what caused her to occupy that position, but that she was at or near that point seems to be clearly established. Aside from the defendant and the two men who were with him in his automobile, no one' saw the actual striking of the decedent. Several witnesses testify as to seeing the body of the decedent being thrown up over the front of the defendant’s automobile.

We think it clearly shown that plaintiff’s decedent was at or near the center of the highway when she was struck. The witness Ballard, who testified for the defendant, saw her a' short time before she was actually struck, and so states. Clyde Gatewood, who testified for the plaintiff, states that the defendant’s automobile was on the left side of the highway when he saw it after he heard the crash and at the time decedent’s body was being thrown over the front of the automobile; but on cross-examination, he modifies this statement to some extent, and admits that the left side of the automobile may. have been near the center of the highway. Charles Clark, who also testified for the plaintiff, and was working with Clyde Gatewood, and had the same opportunity of observation, says that defendant’s automobile was near the middle of the road when he first saw it. Hubert Otte, a son of the decedent, says that he was in the Otte home, near a window from which he could see the highway; that he heard a crash, and when he looked, saw the body of his mother on the left side of the road, and the “car was on the lefthand side of the road right alongside of her.” The evidence clearly established, from actual measurement, that after the decedent’s body landed on the highway, her head was *320 too feet and eight inches from the left edge of the paved portion of the highway, and her body extended in a slightly diagonal direction toward the center of the highway; so that the body must have extended very close to the center of the highway, and in the very nature of things, the automobile could not have been, for any considerable distance, on the left side of the center line at that time. The claim that the defendant’s automobile was on the left side of the highway where it struck decedent is sought to be established from alleged statements of the defendant, claimed to have been made to the plaintiff and Clyde Gatewood, to the effect that he, the defendant, was forced to the left side of the road by a passing automobile, which passed him on the wrong side. These statements, the defendant denies.

The defendant’s version of the accident is supported by his own testimony; that of the witnesses Ballard, and the two men of foreign birth who were riding with the defendant in his automobile. Ballard was driving a truck in the same direction as that of the defendant’s automobile. He says that he looked ahead and he saw the decedent before the automobile struck her. He states that she had a quart of milk in her hand, and “she looked to me like she tried to run away from something, or like she was scared.” He also states that “there was an automobile coming down, and she saw that automobile come around her, and she immediately ducked out after that car passed her,’ and on being asked where she went, stated that she went to the middle of the road, and that when she was struck she was just about the middle of the road. He states that defendant’s automobile was being driven on the right side of the road, and that the decedent was “just about the middle of the road” when she was struck. The defendant states that he was driving his automobile at a speed of from twenty-five to thirty miles an hour, and that an automobile coming up from his rear blew for the road, and passed him on his left; that as it passed, he was watching the back end of that car, and “all at once I seen something in front of me, and I slapped the brakes on”; *321 that what he saw in front of him was the decedent; that it appeared she came from the direction of the driveway; that he did not see her until “I was just about pretty near on top of her”; that she appeared to be running across the highway; that she came from his left; and was in about the center of the highway when she was struck. It is shown that the decedent was struck by the left front fender of the defendant’s automobile and on her right side. The testimony of the two witnesses of foreign birth is somewhat disconnected, but, in substance, supports the defendant’s statement as to how the accident occurred.

The plaintiff relies strongly on what he terms physical facts. We confess our inability to see that the case is controlled by any physical fact. Mention is made of the curves in, and the presence of double painted lines on, the highway, and it is argued that an automobile being driven at a speed of thirty miles an hour could not have negotiated the curve at the point of the accident without crossing to the left side of the road. The jury, immediately after a statement of the case and before the introduction of the testimony, had a view of the highway at the point of the accident, and as all of the surroundings were pointed out to them at the instance of counsel for both the plaintiff and defendant, we think it may be safely assumed that it was fully acquainted with all of the physical facts, and considered the same in arriving at its verdict.

It is, of course, apparent that two primary questions were submitted to the jury: (1) that of primary negligence on the part of the defendant; and (2), concurrent or contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff’s decedent. Counsel for the plaintiff contends that there is no evidence of concurrent or contributory negligence. ' We think it might as well be said that there is no evidence of primary negligence, neither of which propositions has our support.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 S.E.2d 90, 125 W. Va. 317, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otte-v-miller-wva-1943.