Watt v. Combs

12 So. 2d 189, 244 Ala. 31, 145 A.L.R. 667, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 18, 1943
Docket6 Div. 80.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 189 (Watt v. Combs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watt v. Combs, 12 So. 2d 189, 244 Ala. 31, 145 A.L.R. 667, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 131 (Ala. 1943).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

The appellee, plaintiff below, brought suit against three defendants, namely, Carol Watt (appellant), Lucius Colmant, Jr., and Virginia Woodson, claiming damages for the loss of the services of his wife, for expenses incurred in the treatment of her injuries, and for property damages to his automobile, as a result of an automobile accident which occurred on the 21st day of August, 1940. Mrs. Combs, the wife of the appellee, also brought suit against the same defendants, claiming damages for personal injuries which she received as a result of the accident. The two cases were consolidated and tried together in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County under the statute authorizing circuit courts in counties of 300,000 or more population to consolidate pending causes of like nature. Section 221, Title 7, Code of 1940. The trial of these cases resulted in separate verdicts in favor of the plaintiffs. Mr. Combs, the appellee in this case, received a verdict in the amount of $2,500. Carol Watt, the appellant, is the only one of the three defendants who has prosecuted an appeal. We are here concerned only with the case in which Mr. Combs was the plaintiff, as separate appeals were taken.

The case of Mr. Combs, appellee, was submitted to the jury on counts A, B, C and D of the amended complaint, all charging simple negligence, and the defendant’s plea in short by consent in the usual form. In count A the plaintiff sues to recover damages for the loss of the services of his wife, and for the expense incurred in the treatment of the injuries which she received as a result of the accident. The plaintiff alleges that such injuries to his wife were proximately caused by the negligent operation of automobiles by each of the defendants. Count B is in all respects similar to count A except that the plaintiff sues for property damages to his automobile. Count C is similar to count A in regard to allegations of negligence, but alleges that the negligence of the defendants Carol Watt and Lucius Colmant, Jr., and the negligence of Robert Gunn, while acting within the line and scope of his authority as agent of Virginia Woodson, proximately contributed to the injury of the plaintiff’s wife, and the resulting damages to the plaintiff. Count D is the same as Count C except that the plaintiff sues for property damages to his automobile.

*34 The accident occurred on what is known as the Birmingham-Anniston highway approximately one-half mile beyond the city limits of Birmingham.

On the afternoon of August 21, 1940, a group of young people left the city of Birmingham to go to Baker’s Dairy, located on the Birmingham-Anniston highway several miles from the city. They were riding in two cars, a Buick driven by Miss Carol Watt, the appellant, and a Chrysler driven by Miss Virginia Woodson. Miss Watt was seventeen years of age at the time and Miss Woodson sixteen. The cars were owned by the parents of these two young ladies.

They did not get out of the cars when they reached the dairy, but stopped in the driveway. The Buick driven by Miss Watt was in front of the Chrysler, driven by Miss Woodson. Within a few minutes after their arrival, a Dodge car driven by Lucius Colmant, Jr., sixteen years of age, drove up behind the Chrysler. The Dodge car was owned by the father of young Colmant. While the cars were parked at the dairy, Miss Woodson got in the back seat of the Chrysler car and Robert Gunn took her place under the wheel. Within a short time after the Dodge arrived at the dairy; the three cars started back to the city of Birmingham, thus going in a westerly direction on the Birmingham-Anniston highway. The three cars proceeded toward the city, with the Buick leading, followed by the Chrysler, which was in turn followed by the Dodge. They were moving more or less as a unit, approximately twenty yards apart, and were travelling at a speed variously estimated as being from fifty to sixty-five miles per hour. Within a short time after they left the dairy, the Dodge car driven by Lucius Colmant, Jr., passed the Chrysler car, driven by Robert Gunn, and thereafter they travelled toward Birmingham with the Buick in front, followed by the Dodge, which was trailed by the Chrysler.

As the three cars approached the scene of the accident, the appellant, Carol Watt, decreased the speed of the Buick car which she was driving. Lucius Colmant, Jr., the driver of the Dodge car, which was only a short distance behind the Buick, applied his brakes and turned his car to the right, thereby placing both right wheels onto the shoulder of the x'oad. Immediately thereafter the Dodge veered to the left, cutting directly across the road into the path of a Ford car, owned by the plaintiff, travelling east, and driven by Mrs. Combs, wife of the plaintiff. The Ford ran into the right side of the Dodge and then went into the ditch on the south side of the road, the side on which it was travelling. The Chrysler, which was the last of the three cars, ran into the left side of the Dodge. The Buick (front) car, driven by appellant, was not damaged in any way other than on the left side of the rear bumper, where it was struck by the Dodge.

Mrs. Combs, the driver of the Ford car which was travelling in an easterly direction, away from Birmingham, testified as a witness for her husband, but was unable to give an account of the events immediately preceding the accident. She testified:

“I left my home in Ragland on the morning of August 21, 1940, to come to Birmingham. The purpose of that trip was just coming in town to shop. I had some friends with me. I was driving. On the afternoon of August 21st we started back home. At the railroad tracks which mark the city limits of Birmingham on the Binningham-Anniston Highway we stopped. We met Mrs. Ralph Nicholson of 8 Rock-dell Lane there and talked with her a little bit. Her husband is connected with the company that my husband works for. When we left that point I do not know what happened from then on. I do not have of my own knowledge any memory concerning how this accident took place. The last thing I remember I started the car and started down the highway. At that time I don’t think I was going rapidly. I don’t know how fast I was driving.”

That Mrs. Combs was seriously injured as a result of the accident and that the plaintiff incurred considerable expense thereby as well as injury to his automobile is undisputed.

The testimony of the appellant, the driver of the Buick car, as it relates to the manner in which the accident occurred, may be summarized as follows:

That her car and Miss Woodson’s car left the dairy at approximately the same time and, although she knew there was another car behind her, she did not know whose it was or who were in it. That after leaving the dairy she drove at a speed of approximately fifty miles an hour until she got to within one-half or one-quarter of a mile from the place where the accident occurred, at which point she reduced the speed of the car to forty miles an hour. *35 That as she came around a curve onto a straight stretch of road she noticed a car, which is referred to as the “unknown” car, crossing the road from south to north, moving toward the right lane, the one in which her car was travelling. That the “unknown” car “looked like it just came out of somewhere, or else was on the wrong side and was pulling into the correct lane.” That when she saw the “unknown” car it was opposite a road which enters the highway from the south.

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 189, 244 Ala. 31, 145 A.L.R. 667, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watt-v-combs-ala-1943.