Sibley v. SLAYTON 193 Va. 470

69 S.E.2d 466, 193 Va. 470, 1952 Va. LEXIS 156
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 10, 1952
DocketRecord 3896
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 69 S.E.2d 466 (Sibley v. SLAYTON 193 Va. 470) 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
Sibley v. SLAYTON 193 Va. 470, 69 S.E.2d 466, 193 Va. 470, 1952 Va. LEXIS 156 (Va. 1952).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This record is here on a writ of error to review the proceed- • ings of a trial in which Yan E. Slayton, administrator of the *472 estate of Van W. Slayton, deceased, obtained a $10,000 verdict and judgment against Bichard Mills Sibley for the -wrongful death of plaintiff’s decedent, a guest of Sibley, which resulted from an automobile accident.

The decisive question presented is whether the evidence is sufficient to convict the defendant of gross negligence.

At about 10:30 p. m., April 11, 1950, the defendant, an eighteen-year-old youth, accompanied by three teen-age companions, Herman Adkins, John Williamson, and Van. W. Slayton, left South Boston in defendant’s one-seated 1949 Ford pickup truck and started for their respective homes.

The defendant turned off U. S. Highway No. 58 and proceeded south on State Highway No. 694 in Halifax county to the home of John Williamson. After the Williamson boy alighted, the defendant turned around and drove back in a northerly direction along that section of State Highway No. 694 over which he had just passed. Van Slayton was seated next to the right door and young Adkins was in the middle. About three miles from Williamson’s house the road curves in the shape of an “S”. It was about midnight when the truck reached this place, the weather was clear and the road was dry. The defendant was driving within the legal speed limit at between forty-five and fifty miles per hour and made the first or right turn of the “S” without difficulty. The second section of the ‘ ‘ S ” makes a fourteen degree left turn with a radius of about four hundred feet. Approaching from the south this curve is partially obscured by á small building located on the west side of the road. The defendant reached this curve before he realized it and found he was going too fast to hold the vehicle on the pavement, which was between fifteen and sixteen feet wide at this place. The shoulder along the east- or right side of the road was approximately four and one-half feet wide and covered with loose stone. In attempting to make the curve the defendant veered -three feet off the hard surface onto the right shoulder and followed the contour of the pavement for thirty-four feet where the right wheel or wheels of the truck hit an inconspicuous chuck hole in the shoulder three feet from the edge of the pavement at the end of a twelve-inch metal culvert running east and west under the hard surface. The defendant released the accelerator, did not apply his brakes, and attempted to get the vehicle back on the pavement. When the truck hit the hole he lost control *473 and the vehicle continued out of control for fifty-eight feet beyond the culvert where the right front of the truck crashed into a large sweet gum tree standing eight feet from the edge of the hard surface. The truck rebounded off the tree, careened, and came to rest on its left side along the edge of the pavement opposite the tree.

Both passengers had been dozing immediately prior to the collision. As a result of the accident young Slayton died within two hours and the Adkins boy was rendered unconscious for two days.

There was no evidence that either Adkins, John Williamson, or Slayton had objected to the manner in which the defendant had been operating the truck. At the trial Adkins and Williamson testified that the defendant, prior to the accident, had been driving “all right.” Adkins also testified that the defendant had been driving “pretty fast”, but on cross-examination it was •brought out that at the hearing before the trial justice Adkins had testified that the defendant had not been driving in a manner to make him uneasy and he thought the defendant was driving all right.

The defendant lived about five miles from the scene of the accident and, of course, had been over the same section of the highway only a short while before, but he maintained he was not familiar with the road, had traveled it only a few times before, and did not know exactly where the curve was located.

There was no real conflict in the evidence on the trial of this case, although the plaintiff attempted to prove that the right wheel or wheels of the truck did not hit the hole in the shoulder of the road. Originally there had been a concrete head wall or curbing at the end of the culvert, but this wall had been removed leaving a hole about sixteen inches deep and of a width not disclosed by the evidence.

W. W. Williamson, who lived nearby, watched the truck’s head lights from his front door as the vehicle rounded the curve and hit the tree and he heard the sound of the crash. He arrived on the scene immediately after the accident and testified that he examined the tracks of the vehicle ánd they indicated that the truck had hit the hole and made a direct line to the tree. State Trooper C. C. Coates arrived there within two hours after the collision and testified that he thought one wheel of the truck had passed over the hole. The defendant also testified that he *474 hit the hole. There was no denial of this testimony. The only other evidence on this point was the testimony of a photographer who took pictures of the scene four or five days after the mishap. He did not deny that the wheel or wheels hit the hole, hut did say he had not seen the mark showing where the wheel or wheels went into the culvert.

There is only one conclusion that the jury could properly have drawn from this evidence and that is that the right wheel or wheels of the truck hit the hole.

Section 8-646.1 of the Code of Virginia, 1950, enacted in 1938, is a legislative codification of the gross negligence rule established in this State by the case of Boggs v. Plybon, 157 Va. 30, 160 S. E. 77. Under the provisions of this statute the plaintiff in this case must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the death of Van W. Slayton was caused or resulted from the defendant’s gross negligence or willful and wanton disregard of the deceased’s safety.

Whether or not the acts and conduct of the driver of an automobile in .a given situation establishes his guilt of gross negligence is ordinarily a question of fact for the jury. But if reasonable men should not differ as to the conclusion, the issue becomes a question of law for the court. Hill v. Bradley, 186 Va. 394, 43 S. E. (2d) 29.

“We have repeatedly pointed out that gross negligence means something more than lack of ordinary care. In cases like that now before us we have characterized it as, ‘an utter disregard of prudence amounting to complete neglect of the safety’ of the guest, * # * ,‘heedless and reckless disregard of the rights’ of the guest * * *, ‘conduct which shows an utter disregard of prudence amounting to complete neglect of the safety of another ’ * * Reel v. Spencer, 187 Va. 530, 535, 47 S. E. (2d) 359. “Putting one’s self in the place of the parties, to be gross it should shock fair-minded men.” Carroll v. Miller, 175 Va. 388, 399, 9 S. E. (2d) 322.

The plaintiff contends that the jury was warranted in inferring from the physical evidence that the driver was traveling at an excessive'rate of speed.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E.2d 466, 193 Va. 470, 1952 Va. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sibley-v-slayton-193-va-470-va-1952.