Temple v. Ellington

12 S.E.2d 826, 177 Va. 134, 1941 Va. LEXIS 202
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1941
DocketRecord No. 2267
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 12 S.E.2d 826 (Temple v. Ellington) 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
Temple v. Ellington, 12 S.E.2d 826, 177 Va. 134, 1941 Va. LEXIS 202 (Va. 1941).

Opinion

Gregory, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The subject of our review is the correctness of a judgment rendered in an action for damages sustained by Mary Ellington as a result of a collision between a Ford automobile in which she was a rear-seat passenger and a “pick-up” truck. The Ford automobile was owned and operated at the time by John A. Moses. The truck was owned and operated by John R. Temple. The action was brought by Mary Ellington against Sallie B. Temple and others, administrators of the estate of John R. Temple, who was killed as a result of the collision.

The trial of the case resulted in a verdict for the defendants. The trial court was of opinion that the verdict was not supported by the evidence. It held that the evidence disclosed as a matter of law that Mr. Temple' [139]*139drove Ms truck from a private road into a public highway when the car driven by Mr. Moses was approaching dangerously near and that Temple’s conduct, as a matter of law, constituted negligence which, concurring with that of Moses, was the proximate cause of the injuries to Mrs. Ellington. The trial court therefore set aside the verdict and awarded a new trial to be had on the question of damages alone. In this latter trial the jury fixed the damages of Mrs. Ellington at $11,000, and the court entered judgment in her favor against the administrators for that amount.

If the court were in error in setting aside the verdict in the first trial then this court will restore it, enter judgment thereon, and annul all subsequent proceedings.

The collision occurred on a clear day at around eleven A. M. on state highway number 58, which is straight and runs east and west. A private road runs from the “Reps Jones Farm” and intersects the highway approximately at a right angle on its south side. Lawrenceville is some four miles to the east of this point and the town of Broadnax is to the west. The highway has a twenty-one foot hard surface with level, wide shoulders, and approaching’ the intersection from the west there is a descending grade for approximately five hundred feet. A clear view of the highway looking from the intersection to the west, the direction from which the Moses car was being driven, can be had to the brow of a hill,' some five hundred feet away. After that distance is reached the highway descends to the west, and at five hundred and sixty feet the hill obstructs the view.

The farm house of the “Reps Jones Farm” is on an elevation. It is on the south side of the highway and is reached by the private road. This road as it leaves the highway descends and the grade is not uniform. To the right, as one approaches the intersection from the west, as Mr. Moses was doing, there is a field in which wheat [140]*140was growing two and a half to three feet high at the time.

Witness Brewer, who lived on the “Reps Jones Farm,” in testifying for the defendants said that the growing wheat did not obstruct the view. That is, one driving on the highway from the west to the east could see a vehicle approaching on the private road a considerable distance before the intersection is reached.

Mr. Temple visited the “Reps Jones Farm” in the morning of the day of the collision and upon leaving-drove over the private road to the highway. He had entered the highway and, proceeding to the west, had reached a point about four feet from the north edge of the hard surface and nineteen and a half feet west of the center of the intersection when his truck was struck by the Moses car, which was proceeding easterly down grade.

The truck at the time of the impact was practically on the north side (its right-hand side). Mrs. Brewer, an eyewitness for the defendants, said that from the farm house where she was she saw the side of the truck; that it had almost straightened' out when struck but was still slightly “cater-cornered” in the highway.

The jury was taken to the scene of the collision and observed the physical surroundings.

There were many photographs of the scene and two plats filed as exhibits.

There were seven persons riding in the Moses automobile, a Ford coach, — three on the front seat and four on the rear seat. Mr. Temple was alone in his truck. Mrs. Moses, who was riding on the front seat of the Ford, was killed instantly. Mr. Temple died the next day as a result of the impact.

Mrs. Ellington, the plaintiff in the present action, was a passenger in the automobile and was riding on the rear seat. Her action was against the administrators alone. ■She did not join Mr. Moses, the operator of the car in which she was riding, as a defendant, though the trial [141]*141court has held as a matter of law that the concurrence of his negligence and that of Mr. Temple was the proximate cause of her injuries.

The legal effect of the verdict in the first trial was to establish that Mr. Temple was free from any negligence which was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries or which efficiently contributed thereto.

If there was more than a scintilla of credible evidence tending to establish that the sole proximate cause of the injuries to Mrs. Ellington was the negligence of Mr. Moses, then a jury question was presented and the verdict in the first trial was sufficiently supported by the evidence. If, however, all of the credible and substantial evidence showed that Mr. Temple was guilty of such negligence as was the proximate cause or the efficiently contributing or concurring cause of the plaintiff’s injuries then the question was for the court and not for the jury.

We must determine which tribunal, the court or the jury, should have measured the conduct of Mr. Temple. If it were the province of the jury then the court should not have disturbed the verdict.

The physical facts and the photographs disclose that there was a terrific impact. The front of the Ford struck the left side of the truck at the door of the cab. The Ford was almost demolished. Leading up to the point of impact there were tire marks of the Ford for thirty-nine feet on the highway, made by the application of the brakes. The force of the impact drove the truck forty-seven feet back in the opposite direction and turned it over on its right side. It was in second gear. The Ford after the impact moved in an arc for thirty-seven feet down the highway before it stopped.

The tire and other marks established that the collision occurred on the north side of the highway. This was the proper side for the truck and the improper side for the car of Mr. Moses. The tire marks of the Moses car ran from the center of the highway and for thirty-nine [142]*142feet bearing gradually to tbe left-hand side until they reached the point of impact on the north side of the highway.

Code, §2154 (124), provides that the driver of a vehicle entering a public highway from a private road shall, immediately before entering the public highway, stop, and upon entering the highway he shall yield the right of way to all vehicles approaching on such public highway.

The plaintiff contends that Mr. Temple violated that section of the Code. She also contends that he entered the public highway when the Moses car was approaching dangerously near.

The statute must be given a reasonable construction. It does not grant an exclusive privilege to drivers on the public highway regardless of their duty to obey traffic laws and to exercise reasonable care to protect the rights of others.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.E.2d 826, 177 Va. 134, 1941 Va. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temple-v-ellington-va-1941.