Skaff v. Dodd

44 S.E.2d 621, 130 W. Va. 540, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 66
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1947
Docket9932
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 44 S.E.2d 621 (Skaff v. Dodd) 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
Skaff v. Dodd, 44 S.E.2d 621, 130 W. Va. 540, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 66 (W. Va. 1947).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

In this action of trespass on the case to recover damagés for alleged personal injuries, instituted in the Court of Common Pleas of Kanawha County, the plaintiff, Frank *542 Skaff, was awarded a judgment based upon a jury verdict in the amount of twenty-five hundred dollars against the defendants', Henry Dodd and The Automotive Parts Company, an Ohio corporation, to which judgment the Circuit Court of Kanawha Couhty refused a writ of error and supersedeas on the ground that the judgment of the court of common pleas was plainly right. To the judgment of the circuit court defendants prosecute this writ of error.

Upon the trial in the court of common pleas, defendants under a plea of the general issue presented the defenses of: (1) lack of actionable negligence on the part of defendants; and (2) contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part.

On January 5,1946, about 8:45 in the morning, the plaintiff Skaff was severely injured when he was struck by a half ton pickup truck driven by defendant Dodd and owned by defendant, The Automotive Parts Company, on Virginia Street in the City of Charleston, some eighteen or twenty feet west of its intersection with Summers Street. The width of Virginia Street at that point is thirty-two feet from curb to curb, the concrete for the street having been poured in such manner as visibly to divide the surface into three well defined strips, the center strip being eleven feet wide, and those on each side ten and one-half feet. Although these concrete strips are referred to in the record as “lanes,” there were no actual traffic lanes or cross-walks marked upon the surface of the street. So far as the record discloses at the time of the alleged injury, the intersection was controlled by electric traffic lights installed on all four corners of the intersection of the two streets.

Shortly prior to the injury plaintiff had boarded a bus of Charleston Transit Company for the purpose of travel-ling to his place of employment, which was located on the north side of Virginia Street about forty feet west of the intersection heretofore noted. The bus, proceeding east on Virginia Street, was brought to a stop at the southwest corner of Virginia and Summers Streets for the purpose *543 of discharging and taking on passengers. According to the record, it had stopped parallel to, and about one foot north of, the southern curb of Virginia Street, with its front flush or almost flush with the curb line of the sidewalk on the western side of Summers Street.

At the time the bus stopped, the line of traffic following, including a beer truck and a pickup truck heretofore mentioned, also stopped, all vehicles in the line at that time being in the strip or “lane” on the south of Virginia Street. The bus was thirty-two feet long and eight feet wide; the beer truck was' twenty-eight feet long and six feet, seven inches wide.

Plaintiff Skaff alighted from the door at the right front of the bus, stepping out on the sidewalk. He walked west on the sidewalk paralleling Virginia Street until he had passed the rear end of the bus. There he stepped from the sidewalk into the street, preparatory to crossing the same. As he reached and stepped out into the open portion of the street he was struck by the pickup truck.

The defendant Dodd testified that when the bus stopped to discharge and take on passengers, he stopped his truck and upon seeing the traffic light at the intersection turn green, he pulled out of the line of traffic into the center of the street and proceeded around the beer truck and passed the bus at six to eight miles an hour and then proceeded east on Virginia Street across Summers Street. It was while defendants’ truck was passing the space between the beer truck and the rear of the bus that plaintiff was struck.

It is not clear from this record whether defendants’ truck was immediately behind or several cars behind the beer truck, and the record conflicts on whether Skaff looked in both directions or just in the direction of the traffic light immediately before stepping from the space between the beer truck and the bus; and likewise the evidence conflicts as to whether the traffic light controlling the movement on Virginia Street was red or green at the time defendants’ truck pulled out of the line of traffic for *544 the purpose of crossing the intersection. The speed of the truck is variously estimated in the record from a minimum of six to eight miles an hour to a maximum of thirty-five miles an hour, but it seems clear from this evidence that the place where plaintiff was crossing Virginia Street at the rear of the bus, was west of the extension of the curb lines of the western sidewalk on Summers Street, for from the position of the bus as it was stopped, with the thirty-two foot length thereof taken into consideration, plaintiff was necessarily struck a number of feet west of the westerly lateral line of the western sidewalk of Summers Street if extended across Virginia Street.

Several pertinent ordinances of the City of Charleston dealing with motor vehicles and traffic were introduced at the trial. Section 33 of Chapter 18 of the ordinance provides, in part: “No person shall drive a motor vehicle upon any street or highway within the city at a speed in excess of that indicated for particular districts or locations, as follows: Passenger vehicles and trucks less than 2 tons loaded capacity: * * * In business and congested districts 20 M.P.H.; at intersections in business and congested districts 15 M.P.H. * * *; when passing busses while loading or unloading 8 M.P.H.” Section 19 of the same chapter provides in part:

“(A) Green alone or ‘go’:
“(2) Pedestrians facing the signal may proceed across the roadway within any marked or unmarked crosswalk. (Italics supplied)
* * * »

And finally Section 63 (dealing with pedestrians) of Chapter 18 provides: “* * *

“(b) Whenever any vehicle is stopped at a marked crosswalk or at any unmarked crosswalk at an intersection to permit a pedestrian to cross the roadway, the driver of any other vehicle approaching from the rear shall not overtake and pass such stopped vehicle.
*545 “ (c) Every pedestrian crossing a roadway at any point other than within a crosswalk, shall yield the right of way to all vehicles approaching upon the roadway.
“ (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, every driver of a vehicle shall exercise due care to avoid colliding with any pedestrian upon any roadway, * *

From the briefs of counsel for the parties litigant, it seems clear that primary negligence on the part of defendants was a jury question, and, in our opinion, this' is necessarily so because at the time injured, plaintiff was attempting a crossing between the bus and the beer truck in a northerly direction bn Virginia Street at a place other than a cross-walk. Sections 19(2) and 63(b) of Chapter 18 of the ordinances of the City of Charleston deal with both “marked” and “unmarked” cross-walks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.E.2d 621, 130 W. Va. 540, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skaff-v-dodd-wva-1947.