Shaw v. Division of Highways

28 Ct. Cl. 5
CourtWest Virginia Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 7, 1995
DocketCC-92-156
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ct. Cl. 5 (Shaw v. Division of Highways) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw v. Division of Highways, 28 Ct. Cl. 5 (W. Va. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

WEBB, JUDGE:

Claimant Gerald W. Shaw brought this action as administrator of the estate of Yang Cha Shaw, his wife, and in his own behalf for personal injuries. Claimant and his wife were involved in a serious two-vehicle accident'on June 3, 1990, in Jefferson County. Claimant alleges that respondent was negligent in its maintenance of the intersection of Leetown Road and Route 51 in that there were inadequate signs or other markings to warn the travelling public of a stop required at this particular intersection. Claimant further alleges damages in the amount of$681,768.00 and unliquidated damages for his pain and suffering resulting from his personal injuries. Claimant has made arecovery of $250,000.00 for his personal injuries and $250,000.00 for his wife's estate from the driver of the other vehicle in the accident.

Respondent owns and maintains Route 51 and Leetown Road which is also designated as Secondary Route 1 for respondent's purposes.(The Court will use the designation Leetown Road as this was the terminology used by the witnesses during the hearing) Respondent contends that the intersection of Leetown Road and Route 51 was maintained properly and adequately, and that the proximate and sole cause of the accident was the action or inaction of the driver of the other vehicle in the accident when the driver made a conscious decision to drive into the intersection without stopping at a stop sign which was placed in the proper manner on Leetown Road.

The evidence adduced at hearing of this claim on June 28 and 29, 1994, established that on June 3, 1990, claimant and his wife, Yong Cha Shaw who was also referred to as Kim Shaw during the hearing, were driving in their 1990 Ford Ranger crew cab pick-up truck to their home after having been to Winchester, Virginia. They had exited Interstate 81 and they were proceeding eastbound on Route 51 to reach their home located in a housing development two to three miles east of the Leetown intersection. As claimant drove through the intersection of Route 51 and Leetown Road, a 1985 Plymouth Horizon driven by Candy Lynn Johnson came through the intersection, struck the pick-up truck, and pushed it across Route 51 into the parking lot of a gas station. The pick-up truck flipped onto its side when contact occurred between the two vehicles. As a result of this accident, Kim Shaw suffered injuries resulting in her death and Gerald Shaw suffered severe, permanent personal injuries.

This accident was investigated by two members of the West Virginia Department of Public Safety, both of whom testified at the hearing. Trooper Da"as Wolfe, III, the chief investigating officer, was notified of the Shaw accident at 6:15 p.m. and arrived at the scene about fifteen minutes later. Flis investigation revealed that claimant Gerald Shaw was proceeding east on Route 51 and that Candy Lynn Johnson was driving south on the Leetown Road also known as Secondary Route 1. He determined that Candy Lynn Johnson had failed to stop at a stop sign located at the northwest quadrant of the intersection. After an investigation by the office of the prosecuting attorney, a citation was issued to Ms. Johnson for going through the stop sign at the intersection. Trooper Wolfe took a statement from Ms. Johnson at the accident scene. He testified that she could not get stopped at the stop sign because there was another vehicle behind her and "she was more concerned about getting hit in the rear end than shooting through the intersection." She wanted to get to the parking lot so she would not get hit in the rear-end, and "unfortunately, the Shaw vehicle was coming up 51 when she made that maneuver" He described the intersection of Route 51 and Leetown Road as follows:

Well, it's an intersection that you had better pay attention to . The way [7]*7I see it is that roadway through there has speed limit signs leading up to that intersection. I feel that if you're obeying the speed limit and watching the other signs along the road warning that there's that intersection up there, that you could stop for that intersection. I see no problem with that. But if you are not paying attention to the signs that are along the roadway, you could go through that intersection very easily. That's how I would describe that intersection, as well as other intersections in that county. There is (sic) a lot of intersections just like this one that if you're not paying attention, because of the way the road is laid out, could shoot through several intersections in that county.

Trooper Wolfe was familiar with the roads in Jefferson County and he testified that the terrain was rolling and that the intersection of Route 51 and the Leetown Road was typical for the area.

The second investigating officer, Sergeant Stephen Tucker, took measurements at the scene of the accident and noted that there were stop signs for north and southbound traffic on the Leetown Road at this intersection and there were signs that indicated stop ahead prior to reaching the intersection. His investigation revealed that there was no evidence that Candy Lynn Johnson applied her brakes or skidded through the intersection and in her statement she related that she actually drove through the intersection or tried to accelerate when she saw that she would not be able to stop. It was his opinion that "if you're driving the speed limit or less and see the stop ahead sign, there's adequate opportunity to be stopped before you reach the intersection" When queried about the general road conditions in Jefferson County, he stated that most of the major routes in Jefferson County have the same type of rolling terrain. He testified that "There would be tens, if not hundreds, of intersections similar to this throughout Jefferson County."

The intersection at Leetown Road and Route 51 was described in great detail during the hearing, and, in fact, the Court took a view of the intersection prior to the hearing of this claim. There were video tapes introduced in evidence for the Court to observe signs on the Leetown Road as a driver approached the intersection with Route 51. The videos provided the Court with the opportunity to observe the crest and trough nature of the approach and the additional signs warning drivers of the stop a/lead at the intersection. (The view of the accident scene taken by the Court did not provide an accurate portrayal of the scene as there was ongoing construction by respondent to remove the hill at the approach to the intersection.) The video tapes were taken sometime after the date of the accident and, likewise, do not depict the scene exactly as it was on June 3, 1990. However, the testimony and photographs taken by the investigating officers do provide the Court with sufficient information to allowthe Court to formulate an opinion as to the adequacy of signs at the intersection of Route 51 and Leetown Road. A description of the intersection was provided through the statements of many of the witnesses at the hearing. The terrain at this intersection is not unlike that at many of the intersections in the eastern panhandle of our State. A motorist traveling southbound on Leetown Road encountered a" Stop Ahead" sign approximately 270 feet from the intersection with Route 51. The sign was placed on the berm of the road and it was located about two-thirds of the way up to the crest of the hill. A motorist would then crest the hill and approach the intersection where there was a thirty-inch stop sign on the northwest quadrant of the intersection. The stop sign was placed by respondent at this location in accordance with the provisions of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices.

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28 Ct. Cl. 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-division-of-highways-wvctcl-1995.