217 Va. 415 | Va. | 1976
This is a gross negligence case in which the administrator of Charlie Wayne Duffer, the deceased guest-occupant, recovered a jury verdict in the court below against the estate of Earl Danny Camp, the deceased host-driver. We review the action of the trial court in setting aside the verdict of the jury upon the ground that “there was insufficient evidence introduced in the trial of this case to carry the issue of defendant’s gross negligence to the jury----”
This action grew out of a single car accident which occurred about midnight on June 27,1972 in Charlotte County. It involved a Chevrolet automobile being driven by Earl Danny Camp in a westerly direction along Route 47, a blacktop highway. All three occupants of the automobile, Camp, Duffer and Charles Eugene Daniel, were killed in the accident.
The only evidence introduced to establish gross negligence, other than the testimony of the trooper and the photographs, was the testimony of Mrs. Mary D. Hensley who, after leaving work at midnight,, was driving home in an easterly direction on Route 47. She said that as she “was coming down this highway ... I really don’t know the distance how far I was from this, I saw a car lights in the darkness of the night. And I dimmed my lights, and just in a few seconds I saw a light, car light go into some trees just like you throw a ball into the trees”.
Mrs. Hensley was asked to “explain to the jury what you observed after the headlights came into your line of vision”, and she responded: “I just saw some lights dash right into the woods is all that I saw.” This witness, who said she had been driving some 26 years and “had an opportunity to observe headlights on other vehicles moving on the highway towards her at night”, was asked if she had formed an opinion as to the rate of speed this particular vehicle was traveling when it went into the woods.
Mrs. Hensley did not stop at the scene but did go to the home of a friend and request that the rescue squad and a trooper be called.
Appellant argues that: “This case is clearly unlike those cases in which all of the parties are dead amidst great destruction and there were no witnesses to how or why the event occurred.” He says that Mrs. Hensley’s testimony makes the question of gross negligence an issue for the jury. Appellee says the real issue is “what caused the defendant’s vehicle to go out of control and cross over to the left side of the road and into the woods”.
In a well considered opinion the trial judge, after reviewing the pertinent authorities, concluded that:
“[I]nasmuch as the evidence here shows only excessive speed and an absence of alcohol and an absence of warning of any type and an absence of inattention, and inasmuch as the evidence fails to establish why and how the accident was caused, I feel constrained to sustain the motion to set aside the jury verdict and I do so hold.”
We agree with the conclusion reached by the trial judge. Giving the testimony of Mrs. Hensley full weight, it, together with the physical facts, would justify the inference that the Camp automobile was proceeding at a rapid rate of speed. However, the evidence fails to establish that the speed of the car was so great as to constitute gross negligence. True, the Camp automobile was virtually demolished. However, in Richter v. Seawell, 183 Va. 379, 32 S.E.2d 62 (1944), we recognized that if an automobile traveling at 55 miles per hour or less gets out of control it may be demolished when it strikes an immovable object. And unlike Arnold, Adm. v. Reynolds, Adm’x, 215 Va. 431, 211 S.E.2d 46 (1975), where, in addition to excessive, speed,
It is clear that Camp lost control of the vehicle he was driving at or about the time Mrs. Hensley observed the lights of the car. However, there is a total lack of evidence as to what caused him to lose control. We cannot guess or speculate that excessive speed was the cause. We cannot presume negligence from the mere happening of the accident. The party who affirms negligence must establish more than the probability of a negligent act. This is but another case where a plaintiff has failed to meet the burden imposed on him to show how and why the accident occurred. See, e.g., Waters v. Holloman, 216 Va. 726, 222 S.E.2d 549 (1976); Brennan v. Kaylor, 213 Va. 33, 189 S.E.2d 371 (1972).
The judgment of the trial court is
Affirmed.