These consolidated actions arose out of an accident which occurred on the "West Yirginia Turnpike at Milburn Bridge near Milepost 52 about 16 miles north of Beckley, West Yirginia on January 8, 1964. The vehicles involved were a highway postal van owned by HPO Service, Inc. then proceeding south and a tractor trailer owned by the Hennis Freight Lines, Inc. proceeding north. The drivers of both vehicles were killed as well as three post office employees who were working in the back of the HPO van. Marvine Dotson, Administratrix of the estate of Louis Gr. Rose, deceased, the driver of the Hennis vehicle, instituted an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Kanawha County, West Yirginia, against HPO Service, Inc., Helen E. Williams, Administratrix of the estate of Cyril Williams, deceased, and the West Yirginia Turnpike Commission, for the wrongful death of her decedent in the amount of $25,000. In that action a couu- *699 terclaim and cross-claim in the amount of $25,000 was filed by Helen E. Williams, Administratrix of the estate of Cyril Williams, deceased, driver of the HPO van, against Marvine Dotson, Administratrix of the estate of Louis G-. Rose, deceased, Hennis Freight Lines, Inc. and the West Virginia Turnpike Commission for the wrongful death of her decedent. The HPO Service, Inc. also filed a counterclaim and cross-claim against Marvine Dotson, Administratrix of the estate of Louis G. Rose, deceased, Hennis Freight Lines, Inc. and the West Virginia Turnpike Commission for damages in the amount of $28,365.21.
Ruby Mae Christo, Administratrix of the estate of George Christo, deceased, Vincenta A. McGee, Ad-ministratrix of the estate of Hubert H. McGee, deceased, and Mae Robinson, Administratrix of the estate of W. Brent Robinson, deceased, all three deceased men being postal employees who were working at the time of the accident in the rear of the HPO van, instituted actions against Marvine Dotson, Adminis-tratrix of the estate of Louis G. Rose, Hennis Freight Lines, Inc., Frank Blackstone, doing business as Blackstone Motors, HPO Service, Inc., and the West Virginia Turnpike Commission, in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County each for $25,000 for the wrongful deaths of their respective decedents.
All of these actions were consolidated in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, West Virginia, and tried by that Court in lieu of a jury. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, Ruby Mae Christo, Administratrix, Vincenta A. McGee, Ad-ministratrix, and Mae Robinson, Administratrix, personal representatives of the post office employees, in the amount of $25,000 each against the defendants, Marvine Dotson, Administratrix of Rose, Hennis Freight Lines, Inc., HPO Service Inc., and the West Virginia Turnpike Commission. The trial court held that the plaintiff Marvine Dotson, Administratrix of Rose, Helen E. Williams, Administratrix of Williams, *700 and HPO Service Inc. recover nothing in said action on their counterclaims and cross-claims. Motions to set aside the judgment rendered hy the trial court were overruled on June 29,1965, and upon application to this Court by all parties against whom judgments had been rendered an appeal and supersedeas were granted on June 27,1966 to the West Virginia Turnpike Commission, but were refused as to all other parties. The judgments against all parties to these consolidated actions have become final except the judgments against the West Virginia Turnpike Commission, and the appeal granted to it was set on the April, 1967, Special Docket of this Court and was submitted for decision upon argument and brief for the West Virginia Turnpike Commission, along with an amicus curiae brief filed on behalf of the Hennis Freight Lines, Inc.
Considerable evidence was taken before the trial court during the trial of this case. The evidence tended to show that both the driver of the Hennis vehicle, Louis Rose, and the driver of the HPO vehicle, Cyril Williams, were guilty of negligence, which, of course, is imputed to their employers Hennis Freight Lines, Inc. and HPO Service, Inc. In fact, the trial court found from this evidence that they were guilty of primary and contributory negligence and appeals having been refused the trial court’s judgment as to these matters is final, and the only question involved in this appeal is whether the West Virginia Turnpike Commission is also liable to the three plaintiffs whose deeendents were riding or working in the HPO van at the time of the accident.
The evidence was conflicting as to whether there was ice on the Milburn Bridge at the time the accident occurred which caused the vehicles to slide into each other and therefore became one of the proximate causes of the accident. The trial court was of the opinion that if the Turnpike Commission was negligent in allowing this ice to remain, liability could exist as to it. Six witnesses testified that there was ice on the *701 bridge creating a slippery condition. Most of these witnesses arrived at the scene of the accident after it occurred. One of the witnesses testified that he almost fell down when he entered the bridge and another witness testified that there was an accumulation of snow on the bridge although this is clearly discredited by photographs taken soon after the accident showing that there was no snow on the bridge. Ten witnesses testified that there was no ice or snow on the bridge in question. These witnesses were drivers of ambulances, trucks, passenger buses, two state policemen and two employees of the Turnpike Commission. There was evidence that at some places on the Turnpike there were spots of ice but one of the state policemen who was patrolling the Turnpike and one of the Turnpike employees whose duty it was to scatter cinders and chemicals on any icy spots on the Turnpike and who was patrolling the Turnpike for that purpose stated that there was no ice on the bridge in question less than an hour before the accident occurred.
The accident occurred at 4:20 a.m. and the evidence indicated that the temperature was around freezing during at least the period of time stretching back to about an hour before the accident. The trial court held that the West Virginia Turnpike Commission had a duty to remove ice and snow if it had reasonable notice of the existence of such condition and had an opportunity to take preventive measures, and that while it was not an insurer, it did owe the drivers and passengers on the Turnpike the duty to use reasonable and ordinary care. It further found that as a matter of fact the Turnpike had on it .ice in several places, and that from the testimony of the Turnpike Commission’s employee and the state policeman the Turnpike Commission had actual notice of the conditions of the roadway and the bridges at least four hours prior to the accident. This finding of fact is not supported by the record as to the presence of ice on the bridge where the accident occurred, because the evi *702 dence shows, as heretofore stated, that the state policeman and the Turnpike Commission employee testified that there was no ice on the bridge in question less than an hour before the accident occurred. The fact that there was ice on other bridges or other places of the highway would not necessarily be controlling-in any event.
It has been held that the West Virginia Turnpike Commission is not an agent of the State of West Virginia as being immune from being sued in courts of law under the provisions of Article VI, Section 35, West Virginia Constitution.
Hope Natural Gas Company, a Corporation v. West Virginia Turnpike Commission,
The method of establishing liability on the part of the Turnpike Commission in such a case as the instant one has never been before this Court for decision. This is a case of first impression in this State, and we are of the opinion that it is covered by the statutes providing for such cases which are not found in many other states.
The statutes in question relate to the liability of county courts, cities, towns, villages and turnpikes for injuries to persons by reason of any road, bridge or street, under their control, being out of repair. Code, 17-10-17, as amended, applies to county courts, cities, towns and villages and reads in part as follows:
“Any person who sustains an injury to his person or property by reason of any road or bridge under the control of the county court or any street or sidewalk or alley in any incorporated city, town or village, being out of repair may recover all damages sustained by him by reason of such injury, in an action against the county court, city, town or village in which such road, bridge, street, sidewalk or alley may be, except that such city, town or village shall not be subject to such action unless it is required by its charter to keep the road, bridge, street, sidewalk or alley therein, *703 at tlie place where such injury is sustained, in repair. If it is not so required, the action and remedy shall he against the county court.”
This statute changed the common law and created a basis of liability which did not exist at common law.
Cunningham v. County Court of Wood County,
A comparable statute applicable to turnpikes is found in the next section of the Code, Code, 17-10-18, as amended, and it reads in part as follows:
“Any person who may be injured by reason of a turnpike, road or bridge belonging to any company or person, or to any county in its corporate capacity, being out of repair, may recover all damages sustained by him by reason of such injury, in the manner prescribed in the preceding section [§17-10-17], against such company, person or county, or against the lessee for the time being of any such road or bridge. ’ ’
It may seem strange that although numerous cases have been decided by this Court construing and applying the companion preceding statute, Code, 17-10-17, as amended, none have been decided construing and applying Code, 17-10-18, as amended. However, it is clear beyond question that the same reasoning, the same law, and the same decisions apply to one statute as well as the other. There is no doubt under this section as to the liability of any company or person for an injury to any person by reason of such turnpike, road or bridge so owned or leased being out of repair. *704 All damages sustained may be recovered by reason by reason of such injury in the same manner as prescribed in Code, 17-10-17, as amended. Therefore, in the disposition of the case at bar we can, with complete assurance as to propriety, use the authorities decided under the preceding section, Code, 17-10-17, as amended. See Hope Natural Gas Company, a Corporation v. West Virginia Turnpike Commission, supra.
To discuss liability under the statute, we will discuss one of the early cases, that of
Yeager v. City of Bluefield,
In considering and disposing of the question of liability in such cases the Court stated in the Yeager case:
“Our state has great and often-recurring precipitation of rain and snow, especially in winter. Mud follows inevitably everywhere. Ño means at a town’s command can prevent its presence in some quantity, even on crossings, and in small quantity it makes them slippery.
“In applying this statute we can consider the location of the road, the nature and circumstances of the particular section, the difficulty of keeping it in high repair without unreasonable expense, the season of the year, and the nature and amount of travel. * * * The mere slipperiness of a sidewalk occasioned by ice or snow — the same, certainly, as to mud — ‘not being accumulated so as to constitute an obstruction, is not ordinarily such a defect as will make the city liable for damages occasioned thereby. Where there is snow upon a *705 sidewalk, there is danger from slipping and falling, even on the best constructed sidewalks.’ 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. §1006. This mud’s presence was not a structural defect, not an obstruction. ’ ’
The general rule as to municipal corporations in such eases is that snow and ice alone do not constitute a defect. 63 C.J.S., Municipal Corporations, §811. This principle was clearly stated in the case of
Gorges v. State Highway Comm.
137 Kansas 340,
It was held in the case of
Boyland v. City of Parkersburg,
In the case of
Holsberry v. City of Elkins,
The case of
Rich v. Rosenshine,
The same principle in the construction of the statute in question was enunciated in the ease of
Barniak v. Grossman Jewelry Co.,
“A city which is authorized and required by its charter to keep in repair public sidewalks is, within the meaning of Chapter 40, Article X, Section 17, Acts of the Legislature, 1933, First Extraordinary Session and Section 1, Chapter 89, Acts of the Legislature, 1949, Regular Session, liable for damages to a pedestrian occasioned by the slippery condition of the sidewalk when such sidewalk is obstructed by an accumulation of snow and ice so as to render it out of repair and unsafe for travel in the usual mode with ordinary care by day or night.”
The mere fact that a street or sidewalk becomes slippery causing a person to fall does not constitute a cause of action under the statute in question as being out of repair.
Costello v. Wheeling,
“It is generally held that a municipality or other public authority is not liable for injuries resulting from the general slipperiness of its streets and sidewalks due to the presence of ice and snow which have accumulated as a result of natural causes, provided the street or walk is properly constructed, and no other defect is shown. ’ ’
It was held in the recent case of
Jones v. City of Mannington et al.,
*708
It was also held in the 5th point of the syllabus of the
Jones
ease that: “While a municipality may be held liable in damages under the provisions of Code, 1931,17-10-17, as amended, in the absence of negligence chargeable to it, a plaintiff may, nevertheless, be barred from recovery of damages in such a case either on the basis of his contributory negligence or assumption of risk. ’ ’ In any event, the accumulation of ice and snow on a street or highway, even where it constitutes an obstruction and comes within the meaning' of the statute as being out of repair, must be the proximate cause of the injury before any recovery can be allowed.
Webb v. Sessler,
The trial court held, and we think correctly so, that both the driver of the Hennis truck and the driver of the HPO vehicle were guilty of negligence, or contributory negligence, causing the accident and resulting in the fatal injuries out of which these actions arose. However, if the accident occurred by reason of the negligence of the drivers of these vehicles and would have occurred regardless of any conditions of the highway, there could be no liability on the part of the Turnpike Commission in any event. This principle is clearly stated in the case of
Overton et al. v. Wenatchee Beebe Orchard CV.,
(Wash.)
Even if there were some ice on the bridge where this accident occurred it appears questionable whether or *709 not it was the proximate cause of this accident without which there could be no recovery. However, there is nothing in the evidence contained in the record of this case to indicate that even if there were some ice on the bridge in question there was any accumulation of ice of such magnitude as to create an obstruction and to come within the meaning of the statute as being “out of repair”. Therefore, from the authorities cited herein construing the nature of the absolute liability imposed upon the West Virginia Turnpike Commission under the statute, Code, 17-10-18, as amended, there could be no liability.
Under the facts contained in the record of this case the trial court should have, under the provisions of Rule 50(b), R.C.P., granted the defendant Turnpike Commission’s motion for a directed verdict, either at the conclusion of the evidence when the motion was properly made or when the motion was again made to set aside the judgment and render judgment in its favor.
For the reasons stated herein, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County is reversed and set aside and a new trial is granted to the defendant West Virginia Turnpike Commission.
Judgment reversed and set aside; new trial granted.
