129 Va. 269 | Va. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
A street car owned and operated by the Virginia Railway and Power Company, collided with and injured an automobile truck owned by Smith & Hicks, Incorporated. An action for damages followed, in which Smith & Hicks, hereinafter called the plaintiff, recovered against the railway company, hereinafter called the defendant, a verdict upon which the court entered the judgment now under review.
It may be well, in this connection, to clear up a doubt or misapprehension which might arise upon one branch of the opinion in the Meyer Case. As is well understood, the last clear chance doctrine is an exception to the general rule that a plaintiff’s contributory or concurring negligence bars a recovery. The court in -the Meyer Case expressly approved the instruction in question as a sufficiently correct presentation of that theory, but in a subsequent portion of the opinion declined to pass upon a further objection based upon the fact that the instruction ignored the defense of contributory negligence, holding that - the point, not having
It has been repeatedly held by this court that an instruction must not direct a verdict upon a hypothetical case embracing only a partial view of the evidence, and that, therefore, when there is evidence tending to show contributory negligence, it is error to tell the jury that they must find for the plaintiff, if they believe the defendant’s negligence
“And if the jury believe from the evidence that, under all the circumstances by which the driver of the plaintiff’s vehicle was surrounded at the time of the accident, it would have been reasonably apparent to an ordinarily prudent person that if the motorman in charge of the defendant's car should’ use ordinary care in running and controlling said car, he could drive across the track without danger of a collision, then the driver of said car was not guilty of negligence in driving across said track.”
This was a fair and correct statement of the law as applied to the evidence from the plaintiff’s standpoint. The
8. Instruction No. 6, complained of in another assignment of error, was as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff’s vehicle was a large one and moving slowly across the street with the apparent purpose of crossing the street car tracks, and if they further believe from the evidence that the motorman in charge of defendant’s car, as he approached, saw, or ought to have seen, that plaintiff’s vehicle was in close. proximity to the street car tracks and about to cross the same, or was on said tracks, then it was the duty of the motorman, if sufficient time elapsed, to reduce the speed of his car to such an extent as to enable him to stop his car to avoid a collision.”
The objection to this instruction is that, although it does not conclude with a direction to find for the plaintiff, it is a
The only remaining assignment of error is that the court overruled the motion of the defendant to set aside the verdict. From what has already been said, it follows that this assignment must be overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.