130 S.E. 810 | W. Va. | 1925
The defendant prosecutes this writ of error from a judgment of the circuit court of Jefferson county entered against him for the sum of $2,000.00, for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff in an automobile accident.
On the night of May 17, 1924, the plaintiff was returning home from Charles Town in a Ford touring car, which was *454 being driven and operated by her husband, along the historic state highway in the direction of Harper's Ferry, when the car was hit by a Hudson coach, which was being driven by one William Young, the sixteen year old son of the defendant. He was accompanied by a young lady, who was also under age. He had driven to Harper's Ferry that evening and was returning to Charles Town, where he resided with his father. The place of the accident is a few hundred feet from the foot of a four per cent grade — and on a straightaway which continues for a distance of 400 feet to the top of the hill, and approximately 1,000 feet in the other direction. The plaintiff and her husband were coming down the grade at about 15 or 20 miles per hour, on the right-hand side of the road, and claim that the Hudson car was being driven at a rapid rate of speed — according to the husband, "running around 40 miles an hour" and the wife, "hit us that quick — quick as lightning." According to Mr. Ambrose the Hudson struck the Ford "around along toward the back fender, just turned right up on end and pulled it right on over." Harry D. Miller, a mechanic, called as a witness for defendant, in testifying as to the condition of the Ford after the accident, said: "The front left fender was practically torn off. Front wheel, the axle was torn off entirely. Radius rods torn off. Front right fender battered up.Rear left fender mashed down against the wheel in such a waythat we had to tie it up before we could move the car. Running board mashed up — shield — windshield broken. Several other small items." On cross-examination he was asked: "If you knew that this automobile had been struck by a Hudson car coming at 40 or 50 miles an hour, car weighing 3800 lbs., could you account for the condition in which you found the car that you saw, as to the damage, general damage?" To this he answered: "Yes, sir, I believe that would pretty near do it." The Hudson after the impact, veered further to its left and ran a distance of 75 or 100 feet up the grade, smashing through a fence and knocking down a post before it finally stopped. Mr. Clipp, a garage man, another witness for defendant, testified that Mr. Young hired him to get his car in. That he found the front end of the car through the *455 fence, a part of it buried in the bank; that the left front wheel was broken and the axle bent; that he had to use a crane to get the car out. Kerns, the state patrolman, was called to the scene, arriving there within fifteen minutes after the accident. He measured the width of the travelled portion of the road to be 16 feet, and testified that from indications on the road the Hudson car was some 18 inches or more over on plaintiff's side of the road when it struck the rear end of the Ford car. There is no controversy over the fact that the Hudson ran into the Ford; and no evidence that the Ford ran into the Hudson. There is, however, some controversy as to the location on the road of the point of impact between the two cars. J. W. Young testified that he was the owner of the Hudson car; that on the night of the accident that his son, James, had permission to use the car; that he maintained this car for the pleasure and convenience of himself and family; and that his son had been in the habit for some time prior to the accident of using the car by himself and in company with such friends and guests as he chose to invite to ride with him. As a result of this accident one of plaintiff's ribs was fractured and the coccyx was separated from the sacrum. She also received several bruises. Plaintiff testified that she has been a nervous wreck since the accident, and is in agony all the time.
Counsel for defendant contends in his brief that the court erred in: (1) refusing to sustain the demurrer to the declaration; (2) refusing to discharge the jury upon the testimony of witness Kerns that the defendant was insured; (3) admitting testimony of a conversation held between a witness and the driver of the car as to the speed he was driving the car; (4) giving instructions for the plaintiff; (5) refusing instructions at the request of the defendant; and (6) denying defendant a new trial.
1. Is the declaration sufficient? It is alleged that the first count is not sufficiently definite, for the reason that it does not allege that the automobile at the time of the accident was being operated upon the business of the defendant. The family doctrine with respect to the use of an automobile by a member of a family was first announced by this court *456
in Beard v. Davis,
2. In response to a question by the attorney for the plaintiff as to whether the defendant Young said he owned the car, witness Kerns replied: "Yes, sir. And he also made the statement on the road down there that night at the scene of the accident that his car was insured." This answer insofar as it referred to the insurance of the car was excluded by the court. The defendant thereupon asked the court to discharge the jury, which the court refused to do. The defendant says this is error, and cites Christie v. Mitchell,
3. The traffic officer, Kerns, testified that James Young, who was driving the car, told him on the night of the accident and at the place of the accident within about fifteen or twenty minutes after the collision, that he (Young) was driving at the rate of forty-five miles an hour when he came over Butler Hill, which was about an eighth of a mile from the place where the cars collided. Kerns was there in performance of his duty as traffic officer and endeavoring to fix the responsibility for the accident. Young was also still on the scene. This statement of Young appears to have been a spontaneous, undesigned and illustrative incident and part of the litigated act. These are the tests of admissibility under the res gestae rule. 1 Wharton's Ev., sec. 259; 1 Greenleaf on Ev. 162; 14 Am. Eng. Ency. Law, 914; U.S. v. King, (C. C.) 34 F. 314. The rule itself is incapable of any precise definition. Its application, say all the law books, to a particular case depends upon the circumstances of that case, and necessarily rests at last in every instance upon the discretion of the trial court. Such discretion and judgment, of course may be subject of review, but in doubtful cases there ought to be and is a presumption in favor of the action of the court below. It is not always easy to apply the rule correctly. In this case, while realizing that by analogy there may be some cases, such as Hawker v. Ry. Co.,
4. The next ground of error finds its lodgment in the instructions given to the jury by the court at the instance of the plaintiff. No good purpose would be served by incorporating all of them in this opinion. A general objection was made to numbers one, three, four, five, six and eight. It is sufficient to state that they are the ordinary instructions given in a personal injury case of this nature, and we perceive no material error in them. The second instruction is specially challenged by counsel for defendant. This instruction told the jury in effect, that if they believed from the evidence that the defendant's car was exceeding the speed limit, prescribed by law, at the time it collided with the car in which the plaintiff was riding, and further believe that said excessive speed at which defendant's car was going at the time of said collision was the proximate cause of the collision and the resultant injury to the person of the plaintiff, then and there, then the defendant is liable to the plaintiff and the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant *460
damages as, in the opinion of the jury, would be a just compensation for the physical pain, mental anguish and distress suffered and endured by the plaintiff, in an amount not in excess of $3,500.00. It is claimed that the speed at which the car was being driven could not have been the proximate cause of the collision if it had been driven on the proper side of the road — and this latter provision was omitted therefrom. But, the instruction complained of within itself announces a correct principle of law. The running of an automobile on a state highway at an excessive rate of speed in violation of the statute is itself negligence, but of course the wrongdoer is only liable for such injuries as are the proximate cause of the illegal speed. This doctrine is recognized everywhere. Moore v.Hart,
5. Instructions numbers three and four requested by the defendant were properly refused because they were substantially covered by other instructions given. By the first instruction the defendant would have had the court tell the jury to find for the defendant. Under this record the court was clearly right in refusing to give it to the jury.
6. The record discloses, from the evidence offered and that admitted on the trial, an earnest desire on the part of the learned trial judge, to give each litigant every right to which he was entitled, to the end that a fair trial be had. The evidence is conflicting on several points. The jury is the final arbiter in such cases. The trial judge refused to set the verdict aside. Our duty is to affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.