Defendant appeals from a judgment entered against him in a suit for damages growing out of an automobile collision. The contention is that the trial judge should have found plaintiff guilty of negligence or contributory negligence “as a matter of fact and of law.”
Essentially this case falls into the same mold as many other intersectional collision cases which we have had occasion to review in the past. In almost every instance we have held as we did in Shu v. Basinger, D.C.Mun.App.,
Here the evidence was conflicting as to defendant’s speed, which car entered the intersection first, which had the right of way, and which car struck the other. From these conflicting versions the trial judge was required to resolve the claims of negligence and contributory negligence. This was a fact-finding function. The evidence and the inferences deducible therefrom were not “so clear and ed” as to present a strictly legal question. The finding being supported by substantial evidence is not subject to reversal here. 1 undisput-
Appellant says that plaintiff Catron violated certain traffic regulations and for that reason was contributorily negligent as a matter of law. The answer is that although violation of traffic regulations may be negligence per se, it is still a question of fact whether or not the regulations were actually violated, and if so whether their violation was the proximate cause of the collision.
2
Again, “[i]t is only in the clearest of cases where the facts are undisputed and it is plain that reasonable persons could draw but one conclusion from them that these questions become ones of law.” Singer v. Murphy, D.C.Mun.App.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Custom Taxicabs v. Hatch, D.C.Mun. App.,
. Peigh v. Baltimore & O. R. Co., 92 U.S. App.D.C. 198,
