Schools v. Walker

47 S.E.2d 418, 187 Va. 619, 1948 Va. LEXIS 252
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 26, 1948
DocketRecord No. 3272
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 47 S.E.2d 418 (Schools v. Walker) 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
Schools v. Walker, 47 S.E.2d 418, 187 Va. 619, 1948 Va. LEXIS 252 (Va. 1948).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A. J. Walker, plaintiff below, lived in a house located in the southeastern corner of the intersection of State Highway No. 3 and a secondary road known as the Lara road, in the village of Farnham, Richmond county.

This house was damaged as the result of a collision between a gasoline truck owned by W. T. Holt, Inc., herein referred to as Holt, and an automobile owned and operated by Lindsey L. Schools. The Holt truck hit the Schools car broadside on its left, pushed it up a slight slope, caused it to strike Walker’s house at two corners and tear down a hedge and fence before it came to rest at the edge of a well in Walker’s yard, on the west side of his residence, about 85 feet from the point of collision. The impact shifted the house on its foundation, broke two chimneys and did other damage.

Walker brought his action against Holt and Schools for his damage, charging that it was caused by their concurring negligence. The jury trying the case returned a verdict for $2,000 against Holt, but found in favor of Schools. On [622]*622motion of Holt (permitted under the decisions in Norfolk, etc., R. Co. v. Parker, 152 Va. 484, 147 S. E. 461, and Richmond Coca-Cola Bottling Works v. Andrews, 173 Va. 240, 3 S. E. (2d) 419), the trial court set aside the verdict for Schools and entered judgment against both Schools and Holt for the amount of the verdict. To that ruling this writ of error was awarded Schools, whose sole assignment is that the trial court erred in setting aside the verdict in his favor.

At the place of accident, Highway No. 3 runs approximately north and south through Farnham, from Warsaw on the north toward Lancaster and Kilmarnock on the south. Coming south, it is entered from the left, or east, by what is referred to as the Baptist parsonage road; and about 250 feet farther south by the Lara road, also on the left. The accident happened in this latter intersection about two feet from the eastern edge of Route 3 proper and on the part of the intersection within the extended lines of the southern prong of the Lara road.

From the parsonage road there is a curve to the right to the Lara road of about ten degrees at the parsonage road and diminishing to about seven degrees at the Lara road. About 100 feet south of the parsonage road there is a hedge on the right in the Omohundro yard, which extends back from the edge of the road in such manner as to interfere with vision to the south, so that the driver of a car coming south cannot see a car at the Omohundro mailbox, where Schools was just prior to the accident, until he passes this hedge which is about 160 feet from the place of accident.

On the morning of December 30, 1945, about sunrise, Schools, in his automobile, was delivering papers. He testified he came out of the parsonage road to Route 3, stopped there and looked to his right up Route 3, where he could see for over half a mile, and saw nothing approaching; that he then crossed that intersection and drove on down to the Omohundro mailbox and delivered his paper without getting out of his car. That mailbox was located on Schools’ right at the west edge of the west shoulder of Route 3 and [623]*623about opposite the center of the intersections of the Lara road with Route 3. He expected to go from there to the Walker mailbox, which was across the Lara road intersection at the northeastern corner of the Walker house on the edge of the Lara road. He said that after delivering the Omohundro paper “then I made a left-hand turn, put my hand out and looked behind, and started my car. Nothing in sight. After starting the car across the road I shoved the glass up, and about the time I got across the road that is the last I know. Must have been hit, don’t know what else.”

It was the Holt truck that hit him—a tractor truck and trailer loaded with 3,700 gallons of gasoline. It was being driven by Holt’s agent, Dixson, who testified that although day was breaking he still had all his lights on; that he was going to Kilmarnock and driving about 35 miles an hour when he came to Farnham; that he slowed up for the curve, and then “I saw a parked car down there. It was in motion, or moving, and he cut across the road from one mailbox, cut across to the store, and I showered down on my brakes, and he just kept coming across the road, and I just cut to the left to avoid the accident, and I hit him on the side of his door.”

When Dixson cut to the left he crossed with his left wheels the double white fine in the center of Route 3 about 120 feet from the point of collision.

Dixson testified that he first saw Schools when he was 120 feet away from him and that Schools was then moving a little bit, just pulling off on an angle to his left, heading toward Kilmarnock. “My notion is (was) he was going straight ahead, instead of that he came across the road.”

As stated, the verdict against Holt was approved and judgment was entered thereon, which has become final. The negligence of Holt’s driver as a proximate cause of the collision has, therefore, been conclusively established and is not now in issue. The question for decision now is whether the judgment setting aside the verdict in favor of Schools was proper.

[624]*624The trial court held that under the evidence, as a matter of law, Schools was guilty of several acts of negligence which were a proximate cause of the accident and but for which the accident would not have happened. The soundness of that conclusion is to be tested by principles that are well settled.

A verdict which has been disapproved by the trial judge is not entitled to the same weight as one that has been approved by him. Clark v. Parker, 161 Va. 480, 486, 171 S. E. 600. He has also seen the witnesses and heard them testify and the power that is given him to set aside a verdict as contrary'to the evidence necessarily means that he must, to some extent at least, pass upon the weight of the evidence. But this does not mean that he can set aside a verdict merely because if on the jury he would have found a different verdict. He must be satisfied from the evidence adduced that there was no evidence to support the verdict or that the verdict was plainly contrary to the evidence. Ricketts v. McCrory Co., 138 Va. 548, 560, 121 S. E. 916; Edgerton v. Norfolk So. Bus Corp., post, p. 642, 47 S. E. (2d) 409.

If there was credible evidence sufficient to support the finding of the jury, such finding cannot be disturbed by the trial court or by this court. Atlantic Greyhound Corp. v. Shelton, 184 Va. 684, 692, 36 S. E. (2d) 625.

From the testimony of Schools himself and from evidence about which there is no dispute, including the map filed as Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1, we think it is clear that Schools was, as a matter of law, guilty of negligence, which was a proximate cause of the collision. His testimony, of course, is not to be pinned down to isolated statements that might convict him of negligence, but his conduct is to be tested by his evidence as a whole. He is not to be judged by his conclusions or opinions, but by his statements of fact as developed by examination and cross-examination.

In starting from the Omohundro mailbox to the Walker mailbox, Schools made a left turn across Route 3. In doing so it was his duty to use reasonable care under the [625]*625circumstances to see that such movement could be made in safety.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E.2d 418, 187 Va. 619, 1948 Va. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schools-v-walker-va-1948.