Piccolo v. Woodford

35 S.E.2d 393, 184 Va. 432, 1945 Va. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 8, 1945
DocketRecord No. 2971
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 35 S.E.2d 393 (Piccolo v. Woodford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piccolo v. Woodford, 35 S.E.2d 393, 184 Va. 432, 1945 Va. LEXIS 162 (Va. 1945).

Opinion

Gregory, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A. J. Woodford, administrator of Lois Ann Woodford, deceased, brought an action in the court below against the appellants for the wrongful death of his intestate, and the jury awarded him damages of $3,000, which was confirmed by the lower court.

There is no material dispute in regard to the facts. On the first day of June, 1943, Harrison Clinedinst was driving a truck alleged .to have been owned by the defendants in a southerly direction on North Royal Avenue in the town of Front Royal, and between Third and Fourth streets, when his truck struck the plaintiff’s decedent, who was a normal girl twelve years of age, riding a bicycle at the time, and inflicted injuries which caused her death.

The tragic accident was investigated by a member of the State police force and he testified as to certain physical facts. Among them, the truck was found headed in a southerly direction on said avenue four feet from the west curb. Behind the truck fifteen steps from its front a bicycle tire mark appeared in the soft surface of the asphalt street. There were no blood marks on the truck and no brake marks made on the street by the wheels of the truck. On both the left and the right portions of the bumper the dust had been wiped off. The street was forty-one feet, two inches wide, and there were no marks in the street which indicated that the truck had been turned either to the left or to the right prior to the collision with the child. The distance from the intersection of Fourth street to the point where the child was struck was approximately seventy-three feet, and at a point approximately one hundred feet from the intersection the bicycle upon which the child was riding was run over by the truck. The truck was being driven at a speed of from ten to fifteen miles an hour. There was no evidence that the child had been dragged nor that she had [436]*436been run over by the wheels of the truck. She was found on the west side of North Royal Avenue about four feet ‘from the curb, and her legs were between the front and rear wheels of the truck. From the impact with the truck she suffered a concussion of the brain which was the cause of her death the next morning.

She had been accustomed to riding a bicycle daily for two or more years. The accident occurred about 6:30 P. M. upon a clear day in June. It had not begun to get dark and the sun was still shining.

At the time of the accident Clinedinst stated to the police officer that he had seen the child coming from the left side of the street upon which the truck was traveling south, and that she cut her bicycle across in front of his truck. He stated that he applied his brakes immediately and that he did not think that the truck moved more than its length.

At the trial he testified that the child was about four feet in front of the bumper of his truck when he first saw her, and that she had been traveling from the left of his truck in a “bias” direction in front and across the line of travel of the truck.

At the time of the accident the truck was registered in the name of Ralph A. Piccolo, of Edinburg, Virginia, and it was engaged in the transportation of chickens from the Valley of Virginia to New York City. The driver of the truck was accompanied by Michele Piccolo, one of the defendants, and the father of Ralph Piccolo. He was riding on the front seat with the driver and returning to New York City. The load of chickens on the truck at the timé was to be delivered to Michele Piccolo at his place of business in New York, where he conducted a retail poultry business. The driver of the truck was an experienced truck driver.

Ralph A. Piccolo testified that he.owned and operated the business at Edinburg under the firm name of Dandy Poultry Company and that he owned the truck involved in the accident. He further testified that the truck had. been de[437]*437livered to him by his brother when the latter was inducted into the army.

The funds derived by the concern were deposited in the bank at. Edinburg to the credit of Ralph A. Piccolo, Michele Piccolo, and the Dandy Poultry Company. The land and buildings upon which the business was conducted in Edinburg were conveyed to Michele Piccolo, upon a consideration of one dollar, by Carmine Piccolo, a brother of Ralph, at the time Carmine was about to go overseas.

There are a number of assignments of error. One is that the verdict should be set aside because it is contrary to the law and the- evidence and without evidence to support it. We do not think there is any merit in this assignment. The facts establish that the child was struck by the truck while she was riding her bicycle in front of the truck, in daylight, on a clear day; that there was no other traffic to interfere with the truck driver changing his course or stopping if necessary. If the truck driver had maintained a proper lookout he should have seen the child overtaking him from the left side of the cab window if she came from that direction, and governed himself accordingly. In fact he told the police officer a short time after the accident that he actually saw her overtaking him from his left, but upon the witness stand he testified he did not see her until she was just four feet in front of him. Whether she came from his left or whether she was riding immediately in front of him makes little difference. The jury had the right to infer that he had ample opportunity to have saved her. From the testimony and the physical facts the jury reasonably could have inferred that the child was riding her bicycle in front of the truck four feet from the west curb, and that the driver of the truck failed to see her and ran her down. In this event, they could have found that he failed to keep a proper lookout. On the other hand if she actually overtook the truck, coming from the truck driver’s left, he could not have failed to see her had he been looking, for she is bound to have been within his field of vision, and when she cut in front of him she is bound to have been in his direct vision.

[438]*438Michele Piccolo, one of the defendants, was riding in the truck on the seat with the driver. He did not see fit to testify in the case. He evidently saw or could have seen just as much as did the driver. He now claims in his petition for a writ of error that the truck was not owned by him, nor was it being driven in connection with his business, and for that reason the judgment should not have been against him. There are many circumstances which sustain the proposition that Michele Piccolo was the owner of the truck, or had an interest therein, and that it was being driven in connection with his busniess. For instance, it was shown that the building in Edinburg where the business was conducted stood in his name as owner; that he operated a poultry business in New York, and large shipments of chickens were made to him from the Edinburg plant; that he frequently came to Edinburg and visited the plant and looked at the chickens; that the bank account for the business in Edinburg was in his name and in the name of Ralph A. Piccolo; that Ralph had paid nothing for the business; that the shipment of chickens contained in the truck at the time of the accident was destined to Michele Piccolo’s place of business in New York, and he was riding in the truck at the time; and that he failed to testify in the case and failed to give his deposition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 S.E.2d 393, 184 Va. 432, 1945 Va. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piccolo-v-woodford-va-1945.