Tri-State Coach Corp. v. Stidham

62 S.E.2d 894, 191 Va. 790, 1951 Va. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1951
DocketRecord 3716
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 62 S.E.2d 894 (Tri-State Coach Corp. v. Stidham) 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
Tri-State Coach Corp. v. Stidham, 62 S.E.2d 894, 191 Va. 790, 1951 Va. LEXIS 137 (Va. 1951).

Opinion

*793 Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Lonnie Stidham, a little boy two years and seven months old, a passenger on the bus of the defendant, a common carrier, was killed when the right front wheel of the bus ran over his head soon after he had gotten off the bus. His administrator recovered a verdict and judgment against the defendant on the ground that his death was caused by its negligence.

The defendant operated a bus line from Appalachia, in Wise county, to points in Lee county, over State Route 606. Lonnie lived with his grandmother, Vesta Holdway, and on the day of the accident she was taking him with her on the bus to her garden, near Keokee depot, where she formerly lived. With them was her daughter, Shirley Holdway, then 13 years old. The only other passengers in the bus at the time of the accident were the grandfather, the father and an uncle of the little boy.

On signal the driver stopped the bus on his right-hand side of the road and opened the door on that side where the shoulder of the road was suitable to alight upon. Just ahead of the bus the road turned to the left and a short distance directly in front of the bus a dirt road led over a small bridge out toward the flag station of Keokee and to the garden to which Mrs. Holdway was going. Mrs. Holdway and the two children started from their seats to the front of the bus to get off. Shirley was. in front, Lonnie was next, and Mrs. Holdway followed. There is conflict on critical points between the testimony of the bus driver, who was called as an adverse witness by the plaintiff, and the plaintiff’s witnesses. In view of the verdict, the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff must now be accepted as establishing the controlling facts.

When the three persons reached the door in the order stated, Shirley, the daughter, got off, ran around the back of the bus, across the road, and when the accident happened was on or across the bridge in front of the bus, which the driver testified was 100 to 120 feet away. There were *794 two steps leading from the bus to the ground and when Mrs. Holdway made the first step she turned and inquired of the driver when the bus would be back. When he stated a time too soon for her, she inquired as to the next bus and he informed her about that. The little boy stopped with her and stood at her feet but she did not have hold of his hand, and while she was talking to the driver he got off. Mrs. Holdway testified that the boy was standing there when she turned to speak to the driver and that he must have gotten off during their conversation. When she had finished talking she turned around and this is what she said happened: “I stepped off the bus and by the time I stepped off the bus on ■the ground the man pulled out and the baby screamed.” Other witnesses testified that the bus started as soon as Mrs. Holdway stepped off. The bus driver was asked how much time he gave her to look for the children and he replied, “Well, I didn’t particularly give her any time, looking for the child, because I didn’t even have the child in my mind. The little girl went off with the child.”

As stated, the right front wheel had run over the child’s head. The bus was stopped quickly; the door had not then been closed. The driver thought he had moved 28 to 36 inches but that was a surmise, based on a wheel mark on the road which he thought could have' been caused by the brake on that wheel gripping sooner than the others. The evidence as to the condition of the brakes rather refuted that theory and the plaintiff’s evidence was that the bus moved from five to ten feet. It was 55 inches from the front of the bumper back to the front of the wheel. There was a spot of blood and some hair in the road marking where the wheel had gone over the child’s head, and this was eight or ten inches behind the wheel. The child’s body was under the bus with his feet toward the back, or side, of the bus. His head was drawn to one side in an unnatural position, indicating, the doctor testified, that his neck had been broken. He also testified there were no other bruises on the child’s body or breaks in the skin.

*795 While nobody saw just how the accident happened, the jury could conclude from the evidence that the child was standing either in front or to the side of the bus and was knocked down when it started. The driver’s testimony was that the child “followed on off behind” Shirley but that he did not see him after he got off and did not “particularly” look for him. . He said he always looked at his door to see that it was clear, and there was nothing in front of him before he started out, but he did not look with reference to the child. His driver’s seat was three feet back of the windshield. He said he could see two or three feet in front of the bus but did not know whether he looked down there when he started. The last he saw “they stepped off the bus. I did not notice which way the kid went, but the girl turned in the direction going toward the rear of the bus.”

While a common carrier is not an insurer of the safety of its passengers, it owes to them a very high degree of care, and is liable for the slightest negligence that such care could have foreseen and guarded against. Yellow Cab Co. v. Eden, 178 Va. 325, 337, 16 S. E. (2d) 625, 629; Chesapeake, etc., R. Co. v. Hibbs, 142 Va. 96, 101-2, 128 S. E. 538, 540, 41 A. L. R. 1083; Norfolk, etc., R. Co. v. Birchfield, 105 Va. 809, 821, 54 S. E. 879, 883; 9 M. J., Carriers, sec. 49, p. 742.

The relation of carrier and passenger does not terminate until after the passenger has alighted from the conveyance and has had reasonable opportunity to reach a place of safety. Houston v. Lynchburg Traction, etc., Co., 119 Va. 136, 141, 89 S. E. 114, 115; Norfolk, etc., Terminal Co. v. Morris, 101 Va. 422, 44 S. E. 719; Virginia Ry., etc., Co. v. Dressler, 132 Va. 342, 111 S. E. 243, 22 A. L. R. 301; Lewis v. Pacific Greyhound Lines, 147 Ore. 588, 34 P. (2d) 616, 96 A. L. R. 718, and Anno, at p. 731 ff.

In the Dressier Case, supra, it was held that the plaintiff was not a passenger during the interval in which she was walking to transfer from one street car to another and was struck by a third, on the ground that she had reached a *796 place of safety after alighting from the first car and was at liberty to exercise her own judgment in effecting the transfer. Judge Burks, in the opinion, reviewed a number of cases from other jurisdictions relied on to uphold the view that the passenger status continued during such transfer. He said that practically all of them were either cases in which the passenger was boarding or about to board, or was alighting or had. just alighted from, the car, had not had opportunity to reach a place of safety, and was injured by the car he boarded or from which he had alighted; or were cases in which the passenger was under the control of the carrier or moving under its direction. See Patterson v. Duke Power Co., 226 N. C. 22, 36 S. E. (2d) 713.

In

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E.2d 894, 191 Va. 790, 1951 Va. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-state-coach-corp-v-stidham-va-1951.