125 Neb. 139 | Neb. | 1933
This is an action to recover $35,000 in damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant in running over plaintiff with an automobile in a street in Omaha. In his petition plaintiff pleaded that, after driving from the west on Q street after
In an answer to the petition, defendant denied the negligence charged and pleaded that any injury sustained by plaintiff was the result of his own negligence and that of the hit-and-run driver. The reply to the answer was a general denial.
At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, the district court sustained a motion by defendant to excuse the jury and dismiss the action for insufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict against him. Plaintiff appealed.
The question presented by the appeal is: Did plaintiff make a case? The solution depends on the evidence of witnesses who testified in his behalf. In some respects his own testimony is at variance with his petition, but he said in effect that he got out of his own car on the north side of it, intending to walk to a store a few rods farther east on the north side of Q street. The evidence shows without conflict that, while he was lying, on the pavement, defendant’s car approached from the west and that the front end of it ran over him. Plaintiff was pulled out in front of the rear wheel on the north side of defendant's car not far from the center of Q street south of the en
“As a general rule it is negligence as a matter of law for a motorist to drive an automobile so fast' on a highway at night that he cannot stop in time to avoid a collision with an object within the area lighted by his lamps.” Roth v. Blomquist, 117 Neb. 444.
To the general rule, as pointed out in the opinion in the case cited, there are exceptions, where the object or obstruction or depression is the same color as the roadway and for that reason, or for other sufficient reasons, cannot be observed by the exercise of ordinary care in time to avoid a collision. The present case is clearly within the exceptions.
The evidence was insufficient to support a verdict in favor of plaintiff and the district court did not err in dismissing the action.
Affirmed.