Whitfield v. Dunn

117 S.E.2d 710, 202 Va. 472, 1961 Va. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1961
DocketRecord 5178
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 117 S.E.2d 710 (Whitfield v. Dunn) 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
Whitfield v. Dunn, 117 S.E.2d 710, 202 Va. 472, 1961 Va. LEXIS 131 (Va. 1961).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action for damages instituted by Ocie W. Dunn against Eugene Samuel Whitfield, who, while operating his automobile, struck the plaintiff, a pedestrian, on a state highway. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant’s motion to strike was overruled. Thereupon, defendant rested without testifying personally, or offering any evidence in his own behalf. The jury returned *473 a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $13,500.00, and, over the objection of the defendant, judgment was entered accordingly. We granted this writ of error.

Defendant, in his petition for a writ of error, made four assignments of error. At the bar of this Court, he abandoned two of them, and conceded that if we did not sustain his assignment that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, it would not be necessary to consider the remaining assignment.

The evidence is without material conflict.

The accident occurred on May 2, 1959, about 8:30 p. m., on State secondary Highway No. 634, in Pittsylvania County, a short distance from the residence of the plaintiff, Ocie W. Dunn. The highway, 30 feet wide, runs generally north and south. It has a hard surface, with a width of about 18 feet, and dirt and gravel shoulders on each side 2 or 3 feet wide, with a ditch or drain, about 2 feet wide, ranging in depth from 6 to 12 inches adjoining the outward side of each shoulder. There is no sidewalk on either side. At the point of the accident, the road is almost straight, but with a slight curve to the south beginning about 400 feet distant to the north. The night was dark, the weather clear, and the roadway dry.

Dunn, 55 years of age, was wearing a white shirt with yellow stripes, and blue trousers. He had been to a store about 700 feet north of his residence on the opposite side of the highway, purchased some articles, and was returning to his home. He walked on the left side of the highway about 300 feet, crossed the road, and proceeded southerly along the right shoulder, off the hard surface, for about 80 feet to the edge of a driveway leading to the residence of Sidney M. Jones, intending to take a path off of the right-of-way of the highway, back of the ditch line, to his residence which adjoined the property of Jones on the south. As he reached the edge of Jones’ driveway, he was struck from behind by the defendant’s automobile and severely and permanently injured.

Just before the accident, M. O. Akers, a Deputy Sheriff, who was driving in a northerly direction, observed Dunn walking along the shoulder “just about a foot off the pavement,” and saw defendant’s automobile approaching at a “pretty good rate of speed,” estimated to be 50 to 55 miles per hour. Akers dimmed the headlights of his car as did the defendant. Knowing that there was a “dip in the road or lump” like a “rock under the surface or something like that,” which would affect “a speeding car,” Akers drove to his right into *474 the shallow ditch or incline beside the eastern shoulder of the highway, in order to give the oncoming automobile ample room on the road. The two cars passed each other about 125 feet north of Jones’ driveway. Thereafter Akers heard the noise made by defendant’s car striking Dunn. He immediately turned his car around, returned southerly, and found Dunn lying, “longways,” in Jones’ driveway, with his head on the hard surface of the highway, on which there was a blood spot. He observed defendant’s automobile stopped about 175 to 18'0 feet to the south. He then met the defendant and his two companions near the rear of defendant’s automobile, and asked the defendant why he hit Dunn, to which defendant replied that he did not see him. Akers said there was a certain amount of dust and gravel on the highway south of Jones’ driveway, some skid or tire marks on the hard surface, west of the center, and a scuffed place on the edge of the hard surface, which appeared to be “freshly” made, south of and beyond the point of the accident.

C. R. Gunter, a State Trooper, who investigated the accident, testified as to the highway, its surface, direction, width, and shoulders. He located the blood spot above mentioned about 1 foot on the hard surface, some dirt, light skid marks leading to the left of the northbound lane, south of Jones’ driveway, and a scuffed place on the edge of the hard surface, also beyond the driveway. He said that a slight dent was found in the rim of the right headlight of the defendant’s car; that the rear-view mirror on the right side of the automobile was broken, and a part of it found in the ditch on the west side, south of the point of accident; that the car was dusty, and it looked as if something had rolled down or against its right side. He found no marks on the highway north of the place of the accident or the blood spot, nor any indication that defendant’s automobile had gotten off the hard surface before the accident. He asked the defendant how the accident happened, and the defendant replied that “He was traveling along about forty-five or fifty and he met this car and the headlights sort of blinded him and he didn’t remember the man at all until — He didn’t remember seeing the man until after he hit him.”

Dunn testified that he was walking southerly, on the right shoulder of the road completely off the hard surface; that there was “plenty of walking space” on the shoulder; that he saw Akers’ car approaching from the south; that he also observed the reflection of the lights from defendant’s car; that he heard no horn blow; that he did not *475 look around or backwards; and that after Akers’ car had passed him, and just as he reached the edge of Jones’ driveway, defendant’s car struck him.

Excepting his statements to Akers and Gunter, defendant made no explanation of the accident.

The jury was fairly and fully instructed as to the respective theories and duties of the parties.

Defendant claims that Dunn, in walking on the right side of the highway, and in failing to heed the lights of defendant’s car behind him, was negligent as a matter of law.

The first point involves the application of Code, § 46.1-234, and subsections (10), (10a) and (10c) of § 46.1-1, 1958 Replacement Volume, as amended in 1958.

Section 46.1-234 provides as follows:

“Pedestrians not to use roadway except when necessary; keeping to left. — Pedestrians shall not use the roadways or streets, other than the sidewalk thereof, for travel, except when necessary to do so because of the absence of sidewalks, reasonably suitable and passable for their use, in which case, if they walk upon the hard surface, or the main travelled portion of the roadway, they shall keep to the extreme left side or edge thereof, or where the shoulders of the highway are of sufficient width to permit, they may walk on either shoulder thereof.”

Subsection (10) of § 46.1-1 defines “Highway” as:

“The entire width between the boundary- lines of every way or place of whatever nature open to the use of the public for purposes of vehicular travel * *

Subsection (10a) defines “Roadway” as:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.E.2d 710, 202 Va. 472, 1961 Va. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitfield-v-dunn-va-1961.