Ruett v. Nottingham

107 S.E.2d 402, 200 Va. 722, 1959 Va. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 16, 1959
DocketRecord 4899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 107 S.E.2d 402 (Ruett v. Nottingham) 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
Ruett v. Nottingham, 107 S.E.2d 402, 200 Va. 722, 1959 Va. LEXIS 160 (Va. 1959).

Opinion

I'Anson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*723 This suit was instituted by Page Franklin Nottingham, Jr., an infant who sues by Page Franklin Nottingham, Sr., his father and next friend, hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff, to recover damages for injuries sustained when he fell from an automobile while riding as a guest in the car operated by James A. Ruett, hereinafter referred to as the defendant. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of $2,500.00, and the trial court entered judgment thereon. To this judgment we granted a writ of error and supersedeas.

The defendant’s assignments of error may be summarized as follows: (1) That the court erred in not setting aside the verdict of the jury and entering judgment in his favor on the ground that there was no evidence of gross negligence on the part of the defendant, and (2) that the court erred in granting certain instructions offered by the plaintiff.

The principal question involved is: whether the evidence was sufficient to make out a case of gross negligence under the guest doctrine prevailing in this State. Sec. 8-646.1, Code of 1950.

Since the plaintiff obtained a judgment in the lower court, the evidence will be stated in the light most favorable to him.

The defendant for some time had been in the habit of taking, as an accommodation, the plaintiff, aged six, and plaintiff’s sister, aged twelve, children of a close friend, to school each morning as he drove to work. Usually both children rode in the back seat of the defendant’s automobile.

The car was a 1939 Plymouth. The doors locked from inside by lifting the handles and opened by pushing them down. The locks were in good condition and working effectively. A motor company representative examined the locks and presented a statement in evidence to the effect that he found no need of correction or adjustment on the door latches.

At about 8:30 on the morning of October 3, 1957, the defendant, pursuant to his custom, drove to plaintiff’s home and blew his horn to call the children. They were ready and waiting and their mother sent them out, watching from the window as they got in the car, closed the door and started off on their way to school.

The defendant had reached over the front seat and opened the right rear door for the children to get in. The girl let the boy get in first, and seeing the defendant’s laundry on the seat, she opened the door to the front seat and got in with the defendant. She closed the front door and the plaintiff closed the rear door.

*724 The trip started on 20th Street about a block west of Granby Street in the city of Norfolk, Virginia. The defendant made a left turn off 20th Street into Granby and traveled a little over a mile to the scene of the accident. During the trip from plaintiff’s home to the scene of the accident the right rear door, according to the plaintiff’s sister, seemed “perfectly closed and perfectly tight, but I wasn’t listening.” At no time during the trip was there any indication that the door was not properly closed.

The defendant stated he was “in a little bit of a hurry to get to work,” but there was no evidence of excessive speed.

Upon reaching the neighborhood of the school the defendant noticed that a bus was stopped in the right travel lane at the southeast corner of Granby and Thole Streets, with passengers either getting on or off. The defendant was traveling in the middle lane of the three north-bound lanes, moving toward the northeast comer of Granby and Thole Streets where the children were to alight. According to the statement of the plaintiff’s sister the defendant “swerved in front of the bus and straightened out suddenly” when making his right turn. There was no evidence to indicate such a “swerve” caused her to move in her seat or that the automobile was traveling at more than a normal speed for such a right turn. After the defendant had made the turn and straightened out he heard a noise caused by the plaintiff falling, or in some other manner emerging, from the right rear door of the automobile. The point of the fall was in the middle of Thole Street, or just one-half the width of Thole Street from the point where defendant planned to stop completely and to let the children alight from the car.

There was evidence that the defendant gave his undivided attention to driving the automobile and did not look to the back seat to supervise the plaintiff, but that he did hear noises made by the plaintiff pulling the grab rope on the back of the seat and snapping it.

The plaintiff, by counsel, concedes that although he is a minor this fact does not take the case out of the gross negligence rule existing in this State or relax the necessity of establishing gross negligence. Richards v. Parks, 19 Tenn. App. 615, 93 S. W. 2d 639, 643; Langford v. Rogers, 278 Mich. 310, 270 N. W. 692. See also 60 C. J. S., Motor Vehicles, § 399 (5), p. 1017, and 4 Blashfield on Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, Part 1, Perm. Ed., § 2351, p. 486. He asserts, however, that a high degree of care is required of the defendant since the plaintiff, a child of six years of *725 age, was riding alone in the back seat of the car and that the defendant was guilty of several acts of negligence which when “taken together combine or add up to create a package of negligence of such size or gravity as to come within the term gross, that is, wanton, disregarding personal rights, shocking to reasonable men’s conscience.” He relies on the following facts: (1) permitting the child to ride alone in the back seat of the automobile; (2) the condition of the locks; (3) failure to check the door after closing; (4) failure to lock the door; (5) failure to supervise; and (6) the negligent operation of the automobile.

The degree of care owed a child is proportionate to the apparent ability of the child in view of his age, maturity and intelligence to foresee and avoid the perils which may be encountered, if those perils are such as have become apparent to or should have been discovered by the operator of a motor vehicle in the exercise of ordinary care under all the circumstances. The younger the child and the less able to look out for himself the greater the care which may reasonably be expected of the motorist. Conrad v. Taylor, 197 Va. 188, 191, 89 S. E. 2d 40, 42. This degree of care required of the operator of a motor vehicle to his guest who is a minor, however, does not relieve the injured minor from the necessity of proving gross negligence in order to recover for his injuries.

In Hershman v. Payne, 196 Va. 241, 83 S. E. 2d 418, Mr. Justice Miller reviewed our decisions dealing with the degree of negligence necessary to constitute gross negligence in guest cases. In summation he said, at 196 Va. p. 245, 83 S. E. 2d 420, “In the final analysis and (weighing of the evidence, the question is not what or how many statutory violations can be said to have been established or how many acts of negligence have been proved. One act of simple negligence may violate several statutes.

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

Related

Smith v. Kauffman
183 S.E.2d 190 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1971)
Whitfield v. Bruegel
190 N.E.2d 670 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.E.2d 402, 200 Va. 722, 1959 Va. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruett-v-nottingham-va-1959.