139 F.2d 374 | D.D.C. | 1943
Lead Opinion
This is an action begun by appellants in-the District Court to recover damages for personal injuries sustained while riding as-guest passengers in appellee’s automobile. The accident happened on Virginia State-Route 644, some eight or ten miles frona Alexandria. The trial judge, on plaintiffs” evidence, directed a verdict for defendant.. The appeal followed.
What is popularly known as the guest-automobile statute is in effect in Virginia. It provides that no person 'transported as a. guest by the owner of a motor vehicle shall
The undisputed evidence shows that the three appellants were riding ás guest passengers in appellee’s automobile, and were injured when the automobile went out of control and ran with great force into a telegraph pole on the side of the road. The car was being driven by appellee on State Road 644, and he and his guests had only a little while before concluded a visit at the home of appellee’s relative. The time was about ten o’clock in the evening. It was raining and very dark. As the automobile approached the intersection of Route 644 with Route 617, where there is a slight curve, the driver accelerated his speed to approximately fifty miles an hour, failed to heed a “Stop” sign protecting the intersection, and drove at the same high speed from the dirt-gravel road on which he had been travelling onto the macadamized portion of the road which begins at the intersection, and which was slippery as a result of the rainfall. As the automobile reached the paved section of the road it went out of control, skidding from one side to the other for a distance of more than three hundred feet, where it struck a telegraph pole some twelve to fourteen inches in diameter, broke it off and careened to the opposite side of the road where it stopped.
The single question in the case is whether, in the proper consideration of this evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from it, enough was shown which, if credited by the jury, would in law justify a verdict under the provisions of the Virginia statute. The question is close, but we think there can be no doubt that driving an automobile fifty miles an hour in the rain on a very dark night, across a slightly curving intersection, from a dirt road to a paved one, in disregard of a “Stop” sign, is negligence. But under the Virginia statute that in itself is not sufficient to justify a verdict for plaintiffs; it must go farther and reach the degree of “gross.” Here, if that test be applied to the spoken evidence of the witnesses, it may well be doubted whether it sufficiently measured up, for none of the occupants of .the car testified that the owner-driver did any other act than increase his speed to cross the intersection. The night was dark and they could only guess the extent of acceleration. But in this class of cases, as we have found, it sometimes happens that the physical facts shown speak more effectively than the words of witnesses. Here it is admitted that though the car got out of control at the entrance to the intersection, it was then travelling at such speed that three hundred or more feet further its momentum was sufficient to cause it to cut down a twelve to fourteen inch pole, without stopping its progress. Viewed in this light, we are unable to say that fair-minded men might not differ in determining from all the evidence whether the negligence was ordinary or gross. Accordingly, we are of opinion that the question was primarily for the jury and not for the court. In saying this we are mindful of the difficulty of so defining the term “gross negligence” as to furnish the jury a safe guide whereby to reach a right conclusion, • — but this the Virginia Court of Appeals has essayed to do time and again as the question arose, before and since the passage of the act. In one of the latest cases, the court quotes with approval the definition of Justice Rugg, in a Massachusetts case, where he said that gross negligence “is a manifestly smaller amount of watchfulness and circumspection than the circumstances require of a person of ordinary prudence.”
In still another case the Virginia court said that gross negligence is “that degree of negligence which shows an utter disregard of prudence amounting to complete neglect of the safety of another.”
Reversed.
Virginia Code (Act of March 28, 1938), Sec. 2154 (232).
Thornhill v. Thornhill, 172 Va. 553, 2 S.E.2d 318, 322.
Lennon v. Smith, 173 Va. 322, 327, 2 S.E.2d 340, 343.
Wright v. Osborne, 175 Va. 442, 9 S.E.2d 452, 454.
Thomas v. Snow, 162 Va. 654, 174 S.E. 837, 839.
Mt. Adams, etc., R. Co. v. Lowery, 6 Cir., 74 F. 463.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur but I do not think that the majority opinion sufficiently brings out the capricious and arbitrary character of the ruling of the court below directing a verdict for the defendant. Defendant was driving forty miles an hour at night, and in the rain. He put on additional speed in crossing another highway in disregard of a stop sign. In the absence of some contradictory testimony or some excuse, such conduct constitutes gross negligence. I cannot agree with the majority opinion in so far as it intimates that any other conclusion is possible on the evidence before us.