Virginia Transit Company v. Hodges

110 S.E.2d 231, 201 Va. 232, 84 A.L.R. 2d 115, 1959 Va. LEXIS 216
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 3, 1959
DocketRecord 4967
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 S.E.2d 231 (Virginia Transit Company v. Hodges) 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
Virginia Transit Company v. Hodges, 110 S.E.2d 231, 201 Va. 232, 84 A.L.R. 2d 115, 1959 Va. LEXIS 216 (Va. 1959).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, Clarence J.' Hodges, was injured when an ambulance in which he was being taken to a hospital collided with a Transit Company bus. He brought this action against the Transit Company and recovered a verdict and judgment from which the Transit Company prosecutes this appeal. It insists that the evidence did not support the verdict and that the court erred in admitting evidence and in giving two instructions.

The accident occurred about 10 p.m. November 2, 1956, within the intersection of City Hall avenue and Church street, in Norfolk. City Hall avenue runs east and west. It is 55.6 feet wide at the intersection and as it enters Church street from the west it has three lanes for eastbound through traffic and a fourth lane for vehicles making a left turn into Church street. Church street at the intersection is 32.8 feet wide and has three lanes. On its west side about ten feet from the curb is a brick wall seven feet high for a distance of about 70 feet north from the intersection. It comers at the intersection and then continues westwardly along the north side of City Hall avenue at a height of three feet two inches. It surrounds St. Paul’s churchyard.

The ambulance was going east on City Hall avenue and the bus was going south on Church street. The ambulance struck the bus at about its right rear wheel near the middle of the intersection. The speed limit in that area was 25 miles an hour. The traffic lights at the intersection were red against the ambulance and green for the bus.

The ambulance belonged to the Navy and was being operated by one of its drivers named Lear. It had been dispatched from the Naval Air Station by a Navy doctor to carry the plaintiff Hodges and another patient named Phillips, both of whom had suffered heart attacks, to the Naval hospital in Portsmouth. A Navy corpsman accompanied the driver and had told him that is was an emergency run. The driver turned on the siren and the flashing red light of the ambulance before he left the station and they operated continuously on the trip up to the time of the collision with the bus. The plaintiff Hodges was lying on a stretcher in the ambulance and the other patient, Phillips, was on the front seat with the driver.

*234 An ordinance of the city of Norfolk in effect at the time of the accident provided:

“Upon the approach of any police or fire department vehicle, or ambulance, giving audible signal by siren or exhaust whistle, the driver of every other vehicle shall immediately drive the same to a position at or near as possible and parallel to the right-hand edge or curb, clear of any intersection of highways, and shall stop and remain in such position unless otherwise directed by a police or traffic officer, until the police or fire department vehicle, or ambulance shall have passed. This provision shall not operate to relieve the driver of a police or fire department vehicle or ambulance from the duty to drive with due regard for the safety of all persons using the highway, nor shall it protect the driver of any such vehicle from the consequences of an arbitrary exercise of such right of way.”

The main issue in the case is whether the bus driver under the circumstances shown by the evidence negligently violated this ordinance and thereby contributed to the happening of the accident. Whether he. was negligent depends on whether he saw or heard or in the exercise of reasonable care should have seen or heard the approaching ambulance in time to stop before entering the intersection. The evidence on this point as the jury could have decided was as follows:

Lear, the driver of the ambulance, testified that he did not remember the condition of the traffic lights and as he approached the intersection at a speed between 20 and 30 miles an hour it appeared to him that all traffic had stopped; the intersection was clear and when he got within 30 to 40 feet of the intersection the bus suddenly pulled out in front of him and he did everything he could to stop.

Phillips, a bank teller and one of the patients in the ambulance, testified that he was sitting beside the driver; that as they were moving up to the intersection and just before they entered it Lear had slowed down to 15 to 20 miles an hour; that Lear applied his brakes when the front of the ambulance was 25 or 30 feet from the Church street cross-walk, at the beginning of the intersection; that when the brakes went on he looked to his left and saw the bus coming into the intersection.

Officers Pugh and Pope of the Norfolk police department witnessed the accident. They had approached the intersection in their patrol car going east on City Hali avenue and were stopping for the red traffic light against them at the intersection They heard the siren *235 when they were within probably a couple of car lengths from where they stopped. Pugh was driving and when he heard the siren he pulled as far as he could to his right and stopped opposite one of the two or three cars which had stopped in the lane next to him on his right. There was a bus in the next lane to the right, being the lane next to the curb, with some other cars behind it. They first saw the ambulance in their rear-view mirror as it came around the curve in City Hall avenue about 200 feet back of them, with its siren sounding and its red light flashing. They had heard the siren which was clearly audible before they saw the ambulance and when it was perhaps two blocks away. The siren was sounding continuously and got louder at it approached. From the increase of the sound it was apparent that it was approaching them. There was no other traffic in the intersection at the time of the collision.

They first saw the bus as it came into view from behind the brick wall. Pugh pointed out on a map in evidence where this point was but the record does not show its location. He said they saw the bus about the same time they saw the ambulance rounding the curve about 200 feet behind them; but he also said that was when the bus was approaching the intersection and was at the crosswalk line. They estimated the speed of the bus to be between 15 and 20 miles an hour as it entered the intersection and the speed of the ambulance to be 25 to 30 miles an hour as it approached the intersection. The rear of the bus was approximately in the center of the intersection when the ambulance struck it at about its rear wheel. The ambulance laid down skidmarks of about 20 feet to the point of the collision.

On cross-examination Officer Pugh testified that while they heard the siren before they saw the ambulance, they did not know where it was until they saw its red light and when they came up to the intersection they stopped because of the red traffic light, but he added that the chances were they would have stopped at the sound of the siren if there had been no traffic control at all.

The defendant on its part introduced the driver and two occupants of the eastbound bus that had stopped on City Hall avenue at the intersection who testified that they did not hear the siren until the ambulance was about even with their bus; and two doctors who were in an automobile going west on City Hall avenue and had stopped for the red light.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.E.2d 231, 201 Va. 232, 84 A.L.R. 2d 115, 1959 Va. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-transit-company-v-hodges-va-1959.