92 Vt. 57 | Vt. | 1917
This is an action to recover damages for an alleged injury to the plaintiff, occasioned by the defendant’s negligence in operating an automobile. The injury occurred on a street in the village of Irasburg, running northerly and southerly along the easterly side of the common in that village. At the time of the injury, the plaintiff was crossing the street diagonally on foot in a northwesterly direction, intending to cross the common in a beaten path used for that purpose and when struck by defendant’s car was west of the center of the street, which was from twenty-five to thirty-five feet wide. Just before the' accident, the plaintiff came out of a store on the east side of the street, looked north and south, saw no team, auto or person in the street, traveled northerly on the sidewalk or platform of the store about fifty or sixty feet and then started to cross the street as stated above and in doing so looked neither to the north nor south for approaching teams or autos, except only so far as he could see without turning his head. Just before the accident, the defendant was on the westerly side of the common and in coming onto the street on the easterly side of the common he first went south to the southwesterly corner of the common, then turning easterly came to the southeasterly corner of the common, where he turned northerly onto the street in which the accident occurred, about two hundred feet south of where the plaintiff attempted to cross it. As he came onto that street, there was nothing to prevent his seeing the plaintiff while attempting to cross the street, if he had looked. lie admitted that he did not blow the horn or give any signal, in making the sharp turns at the southwest and southeast corners of the common and did not see the plaintiff until just before the collision and not in season to avoid it. The plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that he did not see the automobile until about the time he was struck by it and not in time to avoid it.
The case was tried by jury and verdict and judgment were rendered for the- defendant. Only two exceptions
In the Willey case the holding would permit a recovery when the negligence of the plaintiff was concurrent with that of the defendant. That case makes the negligence of the defendant the controlling factor in the consideration of his liability, regardless of the plaintiff’s negligence. In the French case the Court comments upon the Willey case and impliedly, at least, overrules it. The Willey case has never been relied upon by this Court since it was promulgated, as an authority for the law stated in the opinion. French v. Grand Trunk R. R. Co., supra; Flint’s Admr. v. Central Vt. Ry. Co., 82 Vt. 269, 73 Atl. 590. The Willey case does not state the law as this Court understands it, and, as it is sometimes referred to in briefs of attorneys, we take this occasion to expressly overrule it. There was no error in the court’s refusal to charge as requested.
The other exception of the plaintiff was as follows: “The plaintiff excepts as to the charge of the court which eliminates the sounding of the horn as being a matter of negligence, because the plaintiff claims that the pathway across a highway and common was an intersection of the highway under the statute.” The plaintiff argues that this last exception is to the court’s failure to charge respecting the defendant’s neglect to sound the horn or give any other signal before making the turn at the southeast corner of the common. The defendant argues that that question is not raised by the exception taken, and that the only exception saved by the plaintiff with respect to giving a signal is to the court’s failure to charge that the path across the- highway and common was an intersection of highways and that it was the duty of the defendant to sound the horn on approaching that crossing. We think the exception taken was not to the court’s failure to charge that it was the duty of the defendant to sound the horn on approaching the southeast corner of the common, but was to the court’s failure to charge that it was the defendant’s duty to sound the horn on approaching the pathway crossing. The reason stated as the ground of the exception shows that-the exception related to the crossing and nothing else, and the court was justified in so understanding it.
There was no error in the court’s omission to charge that the path across the highway and common was an intersection of highways within the meaning of the statute and that it was the
Judgment affirmed.