Schlimmer v. Poverty Hunt Club

597 S.E.2d 43, 268 Va. 74, 2004 Va. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 10, 2004
DocketRecord 031773.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 597 S.E.2d 43 (Schlimmer v. Poverty Hunt Club) 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
Schlimmer v. Poverty Hunt Club, 597 S.E.2d 43, 268 Va. 74, 2004 Va. LEXIS 85 (Va. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION BY Justice KINSER.

Karl R. Schlimmer ("Schlimmer"), and his parents, Herman and Doreen Schlimmer, filed a second amended motion for judgment against Nolen L. Cofield ("Cofield"), Poverty Hunt Club ("Hunt Club"), and 12 other defendants for personal injuries Schlimmer sustained in a hunting accident when Cofield shot him. A jury returned a verdict in favor of Cofield and the Hunt Club (collectively, "the Defendants"). 1 After considering Schlimmer's motion to set aside the jury verdict, the circuit court affirmed the verdict and entered judgment in favor of Cofield and the Hunt Club.

Schlimmer appealed to this Court claiming that the circuit court erred by refusing to find Cofield negligent as a matter of law; by not granting a negligence per se instruction; by refusing to set aside the verdict on the basis that there was insufficient evidence to sustain a defense of contributory negligence or to find that Schlimmer's alleged contributory negligence was a proximate cause of the accident; and by refusing to strike the defense of contributory negligence. Because we conclude that Schlimmer was entitled to a negligence per se instruction, we will reverse the circuit court's judgment.

RELEVANT FACTS

Schlimmer's father had been a member of the Hunt Club for several years. Schlimmer, who was 14 years old at the time of the accident, had been accompanying his father since he was 11 years old as a guest on hunting expeditions on property leased to the Hunt Club. In approximately 1995 or 1996, Schlimmer and his father attended a hunter safety education class together.

On the morning of November 23, 1996, Schlimmer, his father, Cofield, and other members of the Hunt Club gathered for the second hunt of the day. The members decided in which area of the property to conduct the hunt and assigned hunting stands to the hunters. Schlimmer and his father were assigned a stand known as "Fletcher's Old Stand." They were told that someone would meet them at the "loading dock" and show them where their assigned stand was located. However, no one ever met them there. After waiting about 10 to 15 minutes, Schlimmer's father decided that he and his son could find the stand by themselves, and they proceeded to walk into the "brush." They soon found a stand familiar to Schlimmer's father and stopped there instead of proceeding to their assigned stand. Schlimmer sat down on a bucket and his father sat on a log.

*45 After a few minutes, the two saw Cofield walk by within 25 to 30 yards of where Schlimmer and his father were sitting. Neither of them said anything to Cofield so as to make him aware of their presence. Schlimmer's father admitted that Cofield probably did not see either him or his son as Cofield walked past them. Schlimmer then questioned his father about whether they were in "a good place" and asked if they should move to a different location. Schlimmer testified, "In my mind I was in a safe place but not the right place." They discussed the situation and had decided they should move to another location when Schlimmer was shot by Cofield.

Up until that moment, Schlimmer had sat with his back against a tree that had a trunk of six to eight inches in diameter. He had not stood up or moved except to look around nor had his father. Schlimmer was wearing a blaze orange hat and a camouflage jacket.

A game warden who investigated the accident testified that it would have been "virtually impossible" to see Schlimmer from the tree stand in which Cofield was situated. Pictures taken by the game warden showed that the area in which Schlimmer and his father had stopped contained numerous trees and brush. The game warden measured a distance of 67 yards between Cofield's tree stand and the spot where Schlimmer was sitting.

In both an oral and written statement given to the game warden just after the shooting accident occurred, Cofield stated that he had seen one deer; and then about 20 minutes later, he saw something moving, thought it was a deer, and shot. Cofield's testimony at trial, however, was different. He stated that, after he climbed up a ladder to his tree stand and loaded his gun, he saw two deer pass but was not able to get off a shot at them. Cofield then saw "a buck coming to [his] far left." He shot at the buck but hit Schlimmer. Cofield testified that, at the time he fired his shotgun, he did not know that Schlimmer and his father "were where they were." "No one was supposed to be there," Cofield stated.

The game warden charged Cofield with the reckless handling of a firearm in violation of Code § 18.2-56.1(A). That statute makes it "unlawful for any person to handle recklessly any firearm so as to endanger the life, limb or property of any person." Code § 18.2-56.1(A). Cofield pled guilty to the charge.

ANALYSIS

The dispositive issue in this appeal concerns the circuit court's refusal to instruct the jury on negligence per se. The circuit court stated the following reasons for its refusal to do so: "[Cofield] could have been convicted of reckless handling of a firearm if nobody had been hit. If he hadn't touched the plaintiff, the handling of the firearm was reckless. And I think we've got to rely on the negligence to get to the verdict on this."

Schlimmer argues he was entitled to an instruction on negligence per se because Cofield recklessly handled a firearm in violation of Code § 18.2-56.1(A). The Defendants, however, contend that Cofield's conviction for violating that statute was not "conclusive evidence of negligence in a subsequent civil action." They also argue that the inconsistencies in the evidence about how Cofield came to fire his shotgun did not justify a negligence per se instruction.

A litigant is entitled to jury instructions supporting his or her theory of the case if sufficient evidence is introduced to support that theory and if the instructions correctly state the law. Price v. Taylor, 251 Va. 82 , 85, 466 S.E.2d 87 , 88 (1996); Bowers v. May, 233 Va. 411 , 413-14, 357 S.E.2d 29 , 30 (1987); Hodnett v. Friend, 232 Va. 447 , 452, 352 S.E.2d 338 , 341 (1987); H.W. Miller Trucking Co. v. Flood, 203 Va. 934 , 937,

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Bluebook (online)
597 S.E.2d 43, 268 Va. 74, 2004 Va. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlimmer-v-poverty-hunt-club-va-2004.