87 Vt. 230 | Vt. | 1913
At the close of the evidence, the defendant moved for a verdict on the grounds (stated in abridged form),
It appears from undisputed evidence that at the time of the accident in question "the defendant was operating his automobile in North Main Street in the City of Barre. He came into that street quite a distance north of the place of the accident, and was proceeding southward in the right hand side of the street, and at the right of the track of the electric railroad, there extending along practically in the center of the street. It was some minutes past noon. The plaintiff and her companion, one Mrs. Baldwin, had been waiting in a store just a little north of a stopping place for the electric cars, intending to take the next car northerly towards their homes. The plaintiff, hearing or seeing an electric car coming from the south and going northerly, spoke to her companion and hurried out to stop it, going along the sidewalk to a point opposite where the cars stop. At ■that place the distance from the curbstone at the edge of the street to the line of the running board of the open electric 'cars on the track, was eighteen feet. The defendant, in his automobile, was coming up the street from the north, the machine being not more than five and one-half feet wide. From the place of the accident northerly, the street is straight for a long distance, the day was clear, the plaintiff’s eyesight good, and there was nothing to obstruct her view in that direction when on the sidewalk just before stepping into the street.
\\ The evidence immediately touching the happening of the accident, will be stated according to its fair and reasonable tendency most strongly in favor of the plaintiff. She testified in effect that just before stepping off the curbstone into the street to go over to the electric ear track to stop the car, she looked southerly, but neither saw nor heard an automobile coming. From this it is argued in defence, that she could not have been looking as the exercise of due care required, for if she had been, she must have seen the defendant’s automobile coming in plain sight only some fifteen feet away, and she will be charged with seeing what, in the exercise of such care, she ought to have seen. This position of the defendant may be sound in law (see Labelle v. Central Vermont Ry. Co., 87 Vt. 87, 88 Atl. 517), and yet
Thus the evidence on the part of the plaintiff fairly and reasonably tended to show that when injured she had safely
On the question of defendant’s negligence, in addition to plaintiff’s evidence tending to show the speed of the automobile to have been twelve miles an hour, was the testimony of the defendant that it was eight miles an hour, and that he stopped the machine as soon as he possibly could after seeing the plaintiff step off the' sidewalk into the street, some fifteen feet ahead of it. The defendant further testified that when a little distance back he saw the electric car coming, and knew the place of the accident to be approximately where cars stop for people to get off and on; that his machine was twelve feet long, weighing twenty-five to twenty-eight hundred pounds, and equipped with a 1912 model brake. The place of the accident was in the principal business street, and within the central business portion, of the city.
In view of the circumstances, "it cannot be said as a matter of law that the speed of eight miles an hour was within the exercise of due care, to say nothing of the evidence of greater speed. Whether upon the whole evidence the defendant was in the observance of such care, was for the jury to determine.
Jlodgment affirmed.