Ratcliffe v. McDonald's Administrator

97 S.E. 307, 123 Va. 781, 1918 Va. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 14, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 97 S.E. 307 (Ratcliffe v. McDonald's Administrator) 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
Ratcliffe v. McDonald's Administrator, 97 S.E. 307, 123 Va. 781, 1918 Va. LEXIS 66 (Va. 1918).

Opinion

Whittle, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

J. L. McDonald, administrator of his son, Ash Mankin McDonald, deceased, brought this notice against J. K. Ratcliffe and “Mrs. J. K. Ratcliffe” to recover $10,000 damages for the alleged negligent killing of plaintiff’s intestate (a child about four years old) in driving their automobile against the person of intestate and crushing his body between the car and the steps to the store porch of the defendant, J. K. Ratcliffe, fronting on a public street in the town of Goshen.

The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff against both defendants, upon which the court rendered the judgment under review.

The defendants reside at Goshen, where the husband is engaged in the mercantile business, in the store house where the accident happened. Since our decision must [784]*784turn chiefly upon the action of the court in giving and refusing instructions, we only deem it necessary to state so much of the evidence as tends to elucidate the ruling of the court in that regard.

A few months previous to the accident, J. K. Ratcliffe purchased an automobile for the pleasure and entertainment of himself and family; and his wife having received some instruction in running the machine, was permitted by her husband to use it for her own diversion whenever she desired to do.so. J. K. Ratcliffe was in the habit of having the car washed and cleaned by a negro man named Sandy Thomas, who the evidence tended to show was not in his employment but who testified that he rendered this service without charge in order to get a ride now and then. On the day in question he was standing in front of the store near the automobile, when Mrs. Ratcliffe, together with several members of the family, entered it for a drive. Mr. Ratcliffe came out of his store on the porch, and Thomas testified he thinks told him to get on the front seat with his wife, who was at the wheel, and turn the car around for her at the furnace. Shortly afterwards plaintiff, accompanied by three of his children, went to the store to make some purchases. They had left the store and descended the steps of the porch into the street for the purpose of crossing over diagonally to where his wagon and team were standing, the children being “strung out in front of the porch steps,” when Mrs. Ratcliffe approached from the rearward in the car. McDonald says he saw the car coming and called the attention of the children to it. The evidence is conflicting in details as to how the accident occurred ; but, so it was, the little boy was struck and crushed' to death in the manner described.

The assignments of.error which claim our consideration . are as follows:

1. The first assignment is to the sufficiency of the notice [785]*785of motion for judgment. There was no motion to quash the notice, and no demurrer thereto. Counsel for defendants merely states in the grounds of defense that the notice “does not in law sufficiently state a case; hence subject to demurrer."

To say that a pleading is subject to demurrer, even in a proceeding by motion, cannot be said to constitute a demurrer to such pleading. As, however, the judgment has to be reversed on other grounds and remanded for a new trial, we deem it proper to say, that the defendant, Mrs. Ratcliffe, should be impleaded by her own baptismal, or Christian, name, and not-by the initial letters of her husband's name; the former is her legal designation.

2. The second assignment is to the giving of instrue- • tions Nos. 1, 2 and 4, at the request of plaintiff.

Instruction No. 1 is as follows: “The court instructs the juiy that if they believe from the evidence in this case that the intestate was an infant 'child under the age of four years when he was killed by the Ratcliffe’s car, then the court tells the jury the said child as a matter of law was not capable of being guilty of any negligence that so contributed to his death as to defeat the plaintiff's right to recover in . this case; Nor can any negligence of the father, if there was any such negligence in causing the death of the child, be considered by the jury to defeat the plaintiff's right to recover."

There was evidence tending to show that the negligence of plaintiff, J. L. McDonald, proximately contributed to the accident, and under the statute of distributions the recovery would inure to his benefit. In such case it is settled law in this jurisdiction that he cannot recover.

The case of R. F. & P. R. Co. v. Martin’s Adm’r, 102 Va. 201, 45 S. E. 894, is similar in pleading and evidence to the hypothetical case presented by the instruction, and is directly in point. It was there held: “In an action for [786]*786the benefit of a father, to recover damages for the death of his infant child occasioned by the wrongful act of another, there can be no recovery where it appears that the negligence of the father, or of' the custodian of the infant to whom the father entrusted it, proximately contributed to the result.” The same principle is enunciated in Reid v. Medley’s Adm’r, 118 Va. 462, 87 S. E. 616.

In this case the verdict of the jury is .general and did not specify to whom the recovery should be paid; and, therefore, as observed, by the Virginia statute of distributions, the recovery goes to the father. Code, sec. 2904. Hence, the court erred in giving instruction No. 1.

Instruction No. 2 is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence in this case that the defendant, Mr. Ratcliffe, owned the car which did the mischief; that the negro chauffeur, Sandy Thomas, was in the car with the defendant, Mrs. Ratcliffe, -and by her side to assist her at the instance of Mr. Ratcliffe at the time the mischief-happened; that the negro chauffeur by the exercise of ordinary care on his part could have avoided the mischief, either by the use of the steering wheel -or the emergency brake of the car, and that he negligently failed to exercise such ordinary .care, and if they believe that Mrs. Ratcliffe negligently ran the car against the intestate and killed him, then the jury must find a verdict against both of the defendants.”

This instruction concludes with the direction that the jury shall -find for the plaintiff against both defendants, if they believe from the evidence the facts upon which the instruction is predicated. The .rule is that wheré an instruction-so concludes it -is bad unless it covers every phase of the-.case that is.supported by evidence. The above instruction ignores that rule, .in that it leaves- -out of com sideration the question of the contributory negligence of plaintiff as affecting his right to recover at all. .For these reasons, instruction No. 2 should have been refused.

[787]*787Instruction No. 4 reads: “The jury are instructed that if they find for the plaintiff, in ascertaining the damages that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, they shall find the same with reference:

“First—to the pecuniary loss sustained by the father and the mother of the deceased, and the (6) one brother and five sisters of the deceased, fixing such sum as would he equal to the probable earnings of the deceased child, taking into consideration his age, intelligence, and health, during what would have been his life time, if he had not been killed.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.E. 307, 123 Va. 781, 1918 Va. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratcliffe-v-mcdonalds-administrator-va-1918.