Solterer v. Kiss

70 S.E.2d 329, 193 Va. 695, 1952 Va. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 21, 1952
DocketRecord 3910, 3911
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 70 S.E.2d 329 (Solterer v. Kiss) 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
Solterer v. Kiss, 70 S.E.2d 329, 193 Va. 695, 1952 Va. LEXIS 181 (Va. 1952).

Opinion

Whittle, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Magdalena Kiss, appellee in.Record No. 3910, and Laszlo Kiss, her husband, appellee in Record No. 3911, instituted actions in the Circuit Court of Fairfax county on February 11, 1950, alleging gross negligence and seeking damages for personal injuries against appellant, Josef Solterer.

The cases grew out of an intersection collision involving a Chevrolet automobile owned and operated by appellant in which appellees were riding as guests, and a Hudson coupe driven by John D. Meyers. The suits were tried together' on January 9, 1951, with Meyers joined as a party defendant.

The trial resulted in two verdicts against Solterer, one in favor of Magdalena Buss in the sum of $5,000, and the other in favor of Laszlo Kiss in the sum of $10,000. The verdict in each case exonerated Meyers from negligence and therefore he is not here involved.

Solterer moved the trial court to set aside the verdicts and grant new trials or to enter final judgments in his favor, which motions were overruled, whereupon final judgments were entered upon the verdicts and writs of error were granted.

The transcript of testimony, the exhibits, instructions and other incidents of trial were the same in both cases and by stipulation of counsel have been made a part of one record to be considered upon appeal to this court, where they were jointly argued and submitted.

The accident occurred on Sunday, September 25, 1949, about 1:30 p. m. The day was clear and the road was dry. The scene of the wreck was in Fairfax county at the intersection of Routes 7 and 676. The record shows Route 7 to be a primary *697 highway and Route 676 a secondary highway. Route 7 runs in an easterly-westerly direction and is a straight road at and near the intersection. There is a descending grade immediately west of the intersection. Its asphalt or bituminous surface is approximately 24 feet wide with broken white lines marking the center. There were no warning or stop signs at the intersection on either road. The speed limit on Route 7 at the point of intersection was 50 miles per hour.

Route 676 approaches Route 7 from the south on a downgrade and intersects the southerly side of it at a right angle. Route 676 is a hard surface road, covered with stone, which extends to the improved driving portion of Route 7, at which point it widens into a “Y” shape.

Andrews Chapel is located on a bank on the southwest corner of the intersection. This bank is 10 or 12 feet high and extends to within a few feet of Route 7. A roadway leading from the chapel descends in a northeasterly direction and enters Routes 7 and 676 near the intersection. The bank obstructs the view of a driver traveling north into Route 7, so that he must be “right up in the intersection” or “within two to four feet” of the hard surface of Route 7 before he can see west on Route 7 and proceed safely into it.

Appellant contends that the intersection is made deceptive by the fact-that in the construction of the chapel road it was necessary to cut down a portion of the bank on the west of Route 676, causing a “double lip of the bank” and thus “a driver going north on Route 676, having passed the southerly ‘lip’, actually a little over 36 feet from the pavement of Route 7, feels (that) he has passed the obstruction to his vision.”

On the day in question Solterer drove his automobile north on Route 676, with Laszlo Kiss s'eated beside him and Magdalena Kiss in the rear seat. Solterer said that he was confused by the roadway leading to the chapel and contends that he stopped his car near that road, looked down the same and thought that the way was clear to the west on Route 7. He at no time stopped near enough to the intersection to see down Route 7 to the west. Whether he was misled by the “lips” to the chapel road or not, the fact remains that he did not effectively stop before entering Route 7 and that he drove his car from this blind corner into primary Route 7, immediately into the eastbound lane of the 'Meyers ear.

*698 Lee W. Charters was in a jeep traveling west in the northern lane of Konte 7 at the time and as he approached the intersection he saw Solterer drive into the path of the eastbound Meyers car without stopping, and sensing that a collision was inevitable, in a frantic effort to stop before becoming involved, he turned the jeep over.

The picture exhibits of the two cars show and the evidence discloses that the front of the Meyers car struck the Solterer car on the left side, the impact being’ on the door next to the driver. State Trooper David McCollum testified that he examined the scene of the wreck and from the location of the debris and glass in the road it appeared that when the Solterer car was struck it was about a car length west of the center of the intersection and about the center line of the highway.

Appellees were injured and taken to the hospital. They were Hungarian citizens, displaced persons, who had been in this country only a short while. They spoke German but could not speak English. Solterer was also injured and taken to the same hospital in Arlington. He and Laszlo Kiss occupied the same room. Solterer was born in Austria and had been a naturalized American citizen since 1932. He spoke English and could also speak German fluently.

While Solterer and Kiss were in the hospital, insurance adjuster Kinney came to see them. Kinney represented a company which had a limited liability policy on Solterer’s car, and the purpose of his visit was to investigate the accident. He secured a written statement in German from Kiss in the following manner : Kinney would suggest the questions to Solterer who passed them on to Kiss. Solterer then wrote down the questions and answers in German and when completed Kiss, signed the paper. The statement, with material discrepancies, was later translated into English and transcribed by someone whose identity is not made clear.

At the trial, under cross-examination, Laszlo Kiss was asked the following question through an interpreter: “Now do you recall that on the 30th day of September, 1949, five days after the accident, you dictated in German and Dr. Solterer wrote down in German your statement as to how this accident happened?” Appellees objected to the question and asked to be heard upon its admissibility in the absence of the jury. In chambers it was stated that the objection to the question was based upon the ground that the written statement of Kiss could not be used *699 to contradict him as it would violate the provisions of section 8-293 of the Virginia Code. In addition to this objection it was asserted that if appellant insisted upon this line of cross-examination, appellees should be permitted to show the surrounding circumstances under which the statement was secured. It was asserted that the circumstances were unusual and for this reason the jury should know who was present when the statement was taken, their interest in the case, who propounded the questions and who wrote the answers.

This brings us to the first' assignment of error which is stated by appellant as follows:

“1.

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.E.2d 329, 193 Va. 695, 1952 Va. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solterer-v-kiss-va-1952.