Payne v. Kinder

127 S.E.2d 726, 147 W. Va. 352, 1962 W. Va. LEXIS 31
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1962
Docket12163
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 127 S.E.2d 726 (Payne v. Kinder) 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
Payne v. Kinder, 127 S.E.2d 726, 147 W. Va. 352, 1962 W. Va. LEXIS 31 (W. Va. 1962).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge:

In this action of trespass on the case instituted in the Court of Common Pleas of Kanawha County the plaintiff, Lois Ann Payne, a married woman, seeks to recover from the defendant, William Earl Kinder, damages for personal injuries which the plaintiff alleges were caused by the negligence of the defendant. The injuries of which the plain *356 tiff complains were sustained in a collision between an automobile owned and driven by the husband of the plaintiff in which she was riding as a guest and an automobile owned and occupied by the defendant and driven by an unidentified person who had been permitted by the defendant to operate his automobile. The collision occurred about six thirty o’clock in the evening of May 16, 1959, on U. S. Route No. 119, in Kanawha County.

Upon the trial of the action the jury, on March 30, 1960, returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $5,000.00. On October 19, 1960, the trial court overruled the motion of the defendant to set aside the verdict and grant him a new trial and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the verdict with interest and costs. Upon writ of error the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, by judgment rendered September 28, 1961, reversed the judgment of the court of common pleas of October 19, 1960, and remanded the case to that court for a new trial. To that judgment of the circuit court this Court granted this writ of error and supersedeas upon the application of the plaintiff.

Before the collision in which the plaintiff sustained the injuries of which she complains, the defendant had been several times arrested for drunkenness and at the time of the collision his driver’s license had been revoked. In that situation he could not lawfully operate his automobile and in the afternoon of the day of the collision his wife accompanied by the defendant drove his automobile to a section of the City of Charleston. After parking the automobile, she went to the shopping district of the city for the purpose of making some desired purchases.

The defendant went from the parked automobile to a nearby beer parlor or cafe known as the Pastime on Ka-nawha Boulevard where he drank five to seven bottles of beer and met two men, whom he had not previously known, who were also drinking beer at that place. During a conversation with them he told them that his driver’s license had been revoked and that he could not drive his automobile. They requested him to permit them to drive his automobile to Boone County to see the sister of the taller of the *357 two strangers. They told him that they would purchase gasoline and return the defendant to his father’s home on Park Avenue in Charleston. He consented and told them that he would go with them. The two men and the defendant then entered the front seat of the automobile.

The defendant occupied the space between the two strangers and the taller of the two strangers became the driver. They went to a liquor store on Tennessee Avenue where one of the strangers purchased two bottles of vodka and returned with them to the automobile. From that place they proceeded to a restaurant known as the Gold Dome where the strangers purchased two bottles of “Seven Up” for use in drinking the vodka. One of the bottles of vodka was placed in the glove compartment of the automobile and the defendant opened and took seven or eight drinks from the other bottle while riding in the automobile. It does not clearly - appear that either of the strangers drank any of the vodka from that bottle, although when the automobile was examined the next day after the collision one of the bottles remained in the glove compartment and the botile from which the defendant had drunk vodka was missing. According to the defendant he did not drink all of the contents of that bottle.

After leaving the Gold Dome restaurant the strangers purchased gasoline at a nearby filling station. The automobile then proceeded east on U. S. Route No. 119 for a distance of approximately nine miles and stopped at a beer parlor known as the Windmill in or near Marmet, where one of the strangers ordered beer. The defendant was intoxicated and became sick and unable to drink the beer ordered at that place. The defendant and his stranger companions had left the Pastime about ten minutes after four o’clock and they remained at the Windmill until a short time before the collision. All of them drank beer at both beer parlors and each of the strangers consumed at the least an amount equivalent to two or three bottlesful of beer.

The defendant recalled what occurred at the Pastime and during the ride from that place to the Windmill and *358 what had happened there. He also remembered being assisted by the strangers from the Windmill to the rear seat of his automobile and its departure from that place. After that he became unconscious and did not know what had happened until he later awoke in the city jail in Charleston where he was informed of the collision and from which he was taken to his home by his wife after she had learned of his whereabouts.

Sometime after the automobile of the defendant had left the Windmill and had proceeded for some distance on U. S. Route No. 119 it was driven off the improved portion of the highway by one of the strangers and parked on its east berm. While it was in that position the plaintiff and her husband accompanied by her mother and their daughter were proceeding north on U. S. Route No. 119 in a Chevrolet automobile owned and driven by her husband. As that automobile, traveling on the right side of the highway, the improved portion of which was approximately twenty feet in width, approached the place where the automobile of the defendant was parked the automobile of the defendant, moving in a southerly direction, suddenly and without sign or warning entered the highway and collided with the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding. The automobile of the defendant struck the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding near its right front wheel and pushed or knocked it across the highway and into a ditch on its west side. In the collision the plaintiff sustained severe and permanent injuries to her person.

After the collision the two strangers, according to the testimony of the husband of the plaintiff, left the automobile, ran along the road, and permanently disappeared. When recalled for further questioning after the conclusion of his examination in chief he testified that one of the strangers put his hand on the shoulder of the other stranger and staggered and that the other stranger staggered around the automobile and struck it with his hand; that both of them then engaged in a struggle, raised their hands, and pushed each other; and that in the opinion of the witness “they were pretty well lit up”.

*359 The beer which the defendant and the strangers obtained and drank at the Pastime and at the Windmill was beer which contained not more than 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight and was of the type defined by Section 5, Article 1, Chapter 60, Code, 1931, as amended, as nonintoxicating beer, the sale of which is authorized and regulated by the provisions of Article 16, Chapter 11, Code, 1931, as amended. Section 2 of that statute declares such beer to be nonintoxicating and not to be construed as liquor as that term is used in Chapter 60 of the Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.E.2d 726, 147 W. Va. 352, 1962 W. Va. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-kinder-wva-1962.