Wash v. Holland

183 S.E. 236, 166 Va. 45, 1936 Va. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 183 S.E. 236 (Wash v. Holland) 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
Wash v. Holland, 183 S.E. 236, 166 Va. 45, 1936 Va. LEXIS 161 (Va. 1936).

Opinions

Eggleston, J.,

Gladys M. Wash, eight years and nine months old, while running across a highway in Hanover county, was struck and killed by an automobile driven by A. J. Holland. This action was brought by her administrator to recover damages for her alleged wrongful death. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the court below in which there was verdict and judgment for the defendant.

The evidence on behalf of the defendant, which has been accepted by the jury, is this:

Gladys Wash lived with her grandmother, Mrs. J. Y. Williams, on the eastern side of the Richmond-Washing[48]*48ton highway, at Atlee, in Hanover county. The Williams residence is some distance back from the road. In front of it is a hedge running parallel to, and about thirty-three feet from, the eastern edge of the hard surfaced portion of the highway.

The road is straight for several hundred feet both north and south of the entrance to the Williams home. Should the driver of a northbound automobile look in that direction, he could plainly see a person standing or moving between the hedge and the eastern side of the highway.

Each morning, at about 8:30 o’clock, it was the custom of the little girl to cross the road and catch the school bus on the western side of the highway in front of her home. This she did by proceeding along a walkway leading from the residence, through an opening in the hedge, thence down a slight embankment, over a six foot dirt shoulder and across the pavement.

At about 5:30 A. M., on October 1, 1933, in company with two friends, the defendant left his home in Nansemond county, Virginia, in a Model A, 1928 Ford sedan, to attend a world series baseball game to be played at Washington, D. C., on that afternoon. Their route was through the city of Richmond and thence northwardly along the Richmond-Washington highway. They were proceeding at from forty to forty-three miles per hour as they approached the Williams home. The school bus was then about seventy-five or one hundred yards in the distance, and approaching from the opposite direction. Just in front of it, and proceeding in the same direction as the bus, was a loaded truck.

On the western side of the highway, opposite the Williams property, were two school children waiting for the bus. About five hundred yards south of the entrance to the Williams property, and on the western side of the highway, five other children were likewise awaiting the bus. The defendant saw, but paid no particular attention to these children as they were a safe distance from the road.

[49]*49When the Holland car had almost reached the entrance to the Williams home, the defendant, for the first time, saw the little girl. She was on the eastern edge of the concrete about twelve or fifteen feet ahead of his car, was running diagonally toward the western side of the road with her back to the automobile, and entirely unmindful of its approach. The defendant was then driving about two feet from the right hand edge of the pavement. Upon seeing the child on the eastern edge of the concrete, Holland cut his car sharply to the left in the effort to avoid striking her. After hesitating momentarily in the center of the road, as if to retrace her steps, the child continued on across the pavement into the path of the car and was struck and killed instantly.

The gist of the plaintiff’s case is that the defendant, by the exercise of ordinary care, should have seen the child before she reached the edge of the road, since she was within the range of his vision from the time she left the hedge.

The defense is two-fold: (1) The failure of the driver in not sooner seeing the child was due to his looking out for approaching traffic; (2) The deceased was guilty of contributory negligence.

The first assignment of error is to the refusal of the court to grant “Instruction No. 4,” requested by the plaintiff as follows: “The court instructs the jury that the operator of an automobile has no right to assume that a child will not attempt to cross the highway in view of or ahead of his automobile, and it is therefore the duty of the automobile driver, when he sees or should have seen, in the exercise of ordinary care, a child crossing or about to cross in front of or ahead of his automobile, to get his automobile under complete control so as to avoid injury as soon as he sees, or in the exercise of ordinary care, should have seen such child crossing or about to cross in front of or ahead of said automobile.”

This instruction, in the form requested, was properly refused. It.would have, in effect, made the defendant an [50]*50absolute insurer so far as the child was concerned. Under it the defendant would have been liable even though the child had darted immediately in front of the car giving the defendant no opportunity whatever to have avoided injuring her. This is what the defendant’s evidence tended to show happened. It was his main defense.

The instruction should have been qualified so as to have told the jury that they should find for the plaintiff if the defendant saw, or in the exercise of ordinary care, should have seen, the child “in time to have avoided her, by the exercise of ordinary care.” Only with such or a similar qualification would it have been proper.

The next assignment of error is to the action of the court in granting “Instruction No. Y” at the request of the defendant. This instruction is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if the defendant through no fault of his own was suddenly confronted by an emergency and was compelled to act instantly in an effort to avoid the accident, he was not guilty of negligence if he made such a choice as a person of ordinary prudence placed in such a position might have made, even though the defendant did not make the wisest choice; and whether he used reasonable care under all circumstances is a question for the jury.”

It is urged in the petition that the defendant was not entitled to this instruction because his own negligence, in not sooner discovering the presence of the child, created the emergency, and that the doctrine of “error in *extremis” does not apply to a self-imposed emergency. This principle of law is undoubtedly correct. Real Estate Trust & Insurance Co. v. Gwyn’s Adm'x, 113 Va. 337, 345, 74 S. E. 208; Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Blunt's Adm'r, 158 Va. 421, 440, 163 S. E. 329.

But the plaintiff’s present objection to this instruction must fail for two reasons:

(1) While the certificate of exception shows a general objection to the granting of the instruction, no ground of such objection was stated in the court below. In fact, the [51]*51written opinion of the trial judge states that “No objection was urged when this instruction was given, the objection seems to have arisen after the trial, * * Rule XXII precludes our considering the objection here.

(2) But even if the exception had been properly taken in the court below, we can not say that the granting of the instruction was error. To sustain the contention of the plaintiff we must hold, as a matter of law, that the emergency was self-imposed by the defendant through his own negligence in not seeing the child before she reached the edge of the road. This we can not do in the face of the verdict of the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 S.E. 236, 166 Va. 45, 1936 Va. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wash-v-holland-va-1936.