Scales v. Majestic Steam Laundry

171 S.E. 899, 114 W. Va. 355, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 81
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1933
Docket7538
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 171 S.E. 899 (Scales v. Majestic Steam Laundry) 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
Scales v. Majestic Steam Laundry, 171 S.E. 899, 114 W. Va. 355, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 81 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge:

On May 10, 1932, the plaintiff was riding in a Chevrolet sedan being driven by Lawrence Johnson on state route No. 12 in Wyoming County from Devil’s Fork to Wyco. Seated beside the driver was Charley Morgan and plaintiff sat on the left of the rear seat. Next to plaintiff was his wife, and James Arnold was on the right side of the rear seat. In rounding what is known as the Iroquois curve, the Chevrolet and the truck of the defendant, which was rounding the curve in the opposite direction, collided, and plaintiff was injured. This action in the circuit court of Wyoming County followed, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff, and defendant prosecutes this writ of error.

In the curve where the accident occurred, the paving is eighteen feet wide with the usual white line marking the middle, and the shoulders, flush with the paving, are from two to three feet wide on each side of the paving. The testimony is that at the time of the accident it either was, or shortly before had been, drizzling rain. The Chevrolet was traveling on the inside of the curve and going up grade. The truck was on the outside. The accident seems to have occurred about half way around the curve. The testimony is that the line of vision around the curve was from ten to fifty feet, varying according to the witness. The Chevrolet was going from twenty to twenty-five miles an hour. The truck entered the curve at about twenty-five miles an hour, but slowed down, according to the testimony of the driver. The testimony of the defendant tends to show that the truck was over as far as practicable on the right side of the road at the time of the collision. The testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses is to the effect that it was straddling the white line. As a whole, the testimony is in irreconcilable conflict, and except to the extent necessary to deal with the assignments of error, no useful purpose would be served by recounting it in detail.

The first assignment covers the defendant’s objections to the testimony of plaintiff’s witness, Arthur Phillips. Phillips *357 testified that he was riding with Alex Trotsky in a Ford conpe from Wyeo and was going in the same direction as the truck, and while he and Trotsky were approaching the hard road from a side road, they saw the truck pass on the main highway ; that they came to the highway and at the suggestion of Trotsky started out to try to catch the truck; that in doing so they were making from 30 to 35 miles an hour, sometimes as high as 45, and did not overtake the truck until after the accident; that the point on the hard road where they joined the truck was about a mile and a half from the point of accident ; that he did not see the wreck when they whipped around the curve where it occurred because the Ford was going too fast; that the Ford stopped next to the laundry truck and that neither he nor Trotsky could have seen the accident; that they were some 200 to 300 feet off the hard road when they saw the truck pass. This testimony is objected to under the familiar rule laid down in Mercer Funeral Home v. Addison Brothers & Smith, 111 W. Va. 616, 163 S. E. 439. In that case, testimony of speed 500 yards from the place of the accident was excluded, this court stating that the speed of the automobile at another place under different circumstances was immaterial. Here the circumstances are decidedly different, because here we have a following automobile. For this reason, the testimony of Phillips to the effect that they did not succeed in catching the truck within a mile and a half, although they traveled from 30 to 45 miles an hour, beginning not more than a few hundred feet behind it, is calculated to throw some light upon the truck driver’s methods and speed in approaching the curve where the accident occurred. However, we do not believe that it is necessary to decide that this testimony is relevant. There was virtually no controversy about the truck’s speed in approaching this curve. The driver himself testifies that he was making 30 miles per hour when he approached the curve. No one contradicts him. The testimony of Phillips does not attempt to fix the speed of the truck at the time it went around the curve or entered the curve. There is -nothing in it inconsistent with the truck driver’s statement that he entered the curve going 25 miles an hour. Therefore, we do not believe that it could possibly have been prejudicial to the defendant.

*358 Assignment of error No. 2 relies upon the giving of plaintiff’s instruction No. 1, as constituting reversible error. It is as follows:

‘' The court instructs the jury that if they find the defendant, Majestic Steam Laundry, guilty by a preponderance of the evidence, they are, in estimating the damage, at liberty to consider the health and condition of the plaintiff before the injury complained of, as compared with his present condition, in consequence of such injury, and whether or not said injury is in its nature permanent and how far said injury is calculated to disable the plaintiff from engaging in those pursuits and employments for which, in the absence of said injury, he would have been qualified, and also the physical and mental suffering to which he was subjected, or may be subjected, by reason of such injury, and allow such damage as in the opinion of the jury from the evidence will be a fair and just compensation for the injury which the plaintiff has sustained. ’ ’

This instruction states the measure of damages in the event the jury finds for the plaintiff. It relies upon the case of Riley v. Railroad Company, 27 W. Va. 145, 161. An instruction given for the plaintiff in that case and found at page 151 is almost identical with the instruction here complained of. Judge Snyder, speaking for the court at page 161 of the reported case, approves this instruction, giving authority therefor. Plaintiff in error, however, does not complain of the instruction upon the ground that it incorrectly states the measure of damages. The complaint is- that it does not state the elements of recovery, and that therefore it leaves the jury, as to those elements, the judges of both fact and law. We do not understand that it is the duty of the plaintiff to instruct upon any particular element of the case. It is his right to submit his case without any instructions if he wishes. The defendant’s corresponding right is to have the jury properly instructed upon any element of the case he may desire. Thus, as a usual thing, neither party is in position to complain of prejudicial error by reason of the fact that his opponent has failed to tender instructions upon an element of the case desired by him to be presented to the jury. If his *359 opponent does not cover the desired point, then he may cover it himself. Of course, it is different where the court undertakes to instruct upon a certain element of the case and leaves out material factors which go to make up the proper subject matter of the instructions. This is not the case with this instruction. It is an instruction on the elements entering into the plaintiff’s damage. It does not undertake to state the elements of recovery. It was the defendant’s right to do this, stating those elements in the manner best calculated to serve his defense. This, he has done.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.E. 899, 114 W. Va. 355, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scales-v-majestic-steam-laundry-wva-1933.