OPINION
Plаintiff, Clifford Ames, appeals from a jury’s verdict in favor of defendant, Shauna Maas, claiming the trial court committed prejudicial error by giving the jury an instruction on “unavoidable accident,” denying plaintiff’s motions with respect to liability, and awarding certain costs to defendant. We affirm.
FACTS
On the morning of Saturday, January 16, 1986, between 8:00 and 9:30 a.m., plaintiff and his wife left their Layton home to go skiing. On that morning, the streets in plaintiff’s neighborhood were quite slick. After having traveled only a few blocks in their automobile, plaintiff discovered he and his wife had left their ski pass vouchers behind. Plaintiff turned his vehicle around and proceeded home the same way he had come.
At the time plaintiff was driving back toward his home, defendant, a neighbor of plaintiff, had left her home to go to work. Defendant was driving a pick-up truck with four-wheel drive capability. Defendant noted that the street was snowpacked and icy. As plaintiff proceeded northbound toward his home, defendant reached a curve in the road while traveling approximately 20-25 miles per hour. The posted speed limit in the area was 25 miles per hour.
As she rounded the curve, defendant did not see anything unusual on the road. 1 Defendant suddenly lost control of her vehicle. Her truck slid across the center of the road and struck plaintiff’s automobile. Defendant did not have her truck in four-wheel drive at the time of the collision. 2
Plaintiff brought a personal injury action against defendant Maas 4 seeking damages for injuries sustained by plaintiff as a result of the January 16 collision. The case was ultimately tried to a jury. At the close of evidenсe, plaintiff moved for a directed verdict on the issue of liability, which was denied. At defendant’s request, and over plaintiffs objection, the jury was given an “unavoidable accident” instruction. 5 Special interrogatories were submitted to the jury, the first of which asked whether defendant was negligent at the time and place of the accident. The jury responded “No.” Plaintiff filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or in the alternative, for a new trial, both of which were dеnied. The trial court awarded defendant her costs. This appeal ensued.
Plaintiff argues on appeal that the trial court erred in (1) giving the jury the “unavoidable accident” instruction; (2) denying plaintiff’s motion for directed verdict and post-trial motions; and (3) its award of costs to defendant.
UNAVOIDABLE ACCIDENT INSTRUCTION
A. Standard of Review
Plaintiff argues that the trial court committed prejudicial error in giving the jury an instruction on “unavoidable accidents.” Determining the propriety of the instructions submitted to the jury presents a question of law, and we therefore review the trial court’s instructions under a correction of error standard.
State v. Ontiveros,
B. Propriety of “Unavoidable Accident” Instruction in General
The parties have called our attention to severаl Utah cases addressing the propriety of the “unavoidable accident” instruction. In several of those cases, the Utah Supreme Court approved the submission of such an instruction under limited circumstances. In
Porter v. Price,
In
Woodhouse v. Johnson,
the more basic reason for criticizing such an instruction is that it is a duplication. Inasmuch as the jury is elsewhere advised that the defendant’s negligence must be proved, and that in the absence of such proof of negligence he is not liable, it is unnecessary to state again that if the accident was unavoidable because not caused by negligence, he is not liable.
Id.
Our Supreme Court has also cautioned that an unavoidable accident instruction should not be used in every negligence case. “Such an instruction should be given with caution and
only
where the evidence would justify it.”
Woodhouse,
In
Stringham v. Broderick,
It is only in a rare case that an instruction on unavoidable accident is applicable. If either party can avoid an accident by the exercise of proper care, it cannot be said to be unavoidable. The issue of unavoidable accident arises only where the evidence shows that the accident happened from an unknown or unforeseen cause or in an unexplainable manner which circumstances rebut the defendant’s alleged negligence.
Id. at 426. The Stringham court found the unavoidable accident theory inapplicable where “the negligence of a party puts him in such a position that a collision is inevitable.” Id. In such a case, it is error to submit an unavoidable accident instruction. See id.
The Utah Supreme Court approved the unavoidable accident instruction in two cases cited by plaintiff. In Anderton v. Montgomery, 607 P.2d 828 (Utah 1980), the plaintiff unsuccessfully brought an action against a sheet metal vendor after a display device holding sheet metal samplеs collapsed and injured him. In upholding the trial court’s submission of an unavoidable accident instruction, the Utah Supreme Court held that the submission of such an instruction is not error “[w]here the injury arises from a set of circumstances which do not reflect a lack of due care on anyone’s part.” Id. at 834. The Court further held that “an unavoidable accident instruction is not error if it clearly and concisely states the principle involved, and does not create аn imbalance in the jury instructions.” Id. at 835.
We discern from these cases no intention on the part of the Utah Supreme Court to abandon the unavoidable accident instruction altogether, as plaintiff would have us do. Both Anderton’s and Anderson’s approvаl of the instruction in appropriate circumstances suggests that Utah will not follow those states that have abandoned the use of such an instruction. 8 However, the Utah cases clearly require that the instruction should be used only in extraordinary circumstances.
In
Kusy v. K-Mart Apparel Fashion Corp.,
C. Propriety of Unavoidable Accident Instruction in This Case
In the instant case, plaintiff argues the trial court erroneously gave the unavoidable accident instruction because the circumstances of thе case are dissimilar to those present in cases where the instruction has been approved. Specifically, plaintiff argues that defendant’s loss of control of her vehicle on an icy road is neither “unusual” nor “unexpected” as
Kusy
requires.
We agree. In view of the unusual circumstances present in the cases where such an instruction has been aрproved, and in consideration of the Court’s refusal in Stringham to find error in the trial court’s failure to instruct on unavoidable accident in a weather-related highway accident case, we conclude that the trial court’s submission of such an instruction in this case was in error. The facts here do not present a “rare case” in which the unavoidable accident theory should be employed. On the contrary, hazardous winter driving conditions in northern Utah are not unusual or unexpected. The cause of this accident is not unknown, nor was it unforeseeable.
PREJUDICE
None of the many Utah cases called to our attention by the parties involves reversal of a jury verdict on the sole ground that an unavoidable accident instruction was given when it should not have been, yet this is exactly what plaintiff would have us do. Giving such an instruc
This wide-ranging, essentially skeptical review for prejudice stems from the recognition that the instruction is essentially “duplication,”
Woodhouse,
The record provided to us by plaintiff is not complete. Only a partial transcript has been furnished. Our record does not include closing arguments. We are thus wholly unable to gauge any undue emрhasis that the defendant might have placed on the instruction. The bare instructions, as a whole, do not appear to have been weighted in favor of the defendant but rather to have been an accurate statement of the applicable law.
9
Certainly the cases make clear that the mere reading of the unavoidable accident instruction, in and of itself, is not prejudicial. Without the whole record before us, we assume the regularity of the proceedings below, especially in light of the fact that the portions before us do not indicate prejudice.
See, e.g., Jolivet v. Cook,
Plaintiff assigns error to the denial of plaintiffs motion for directed verdict and to the post-trial motion for judgment notwithstanding thе verdict or in the alternative for a new trial. The crux of his argument is that the trial court should have found the defendant negligent as a matter of law because she violated traffic safety ordinances without legal excuse or justification, and the evidence of negligence is such that reasonable people would not differ on the outcome.
The verdict of a jury must stand unless “the evidence so clearly preponderates in favor of the appellant that reasonable people would not differ on the outcome of the case.”
E.A. Strout Western Realty v. W.C. Foy & Sons,
This court has held that the violation of a statute is evidence of negligence but subject to justification or excuse if the evidence is such that it reasonably could be found that the conduct was nevertheless within the standard of reasonable care under the circumstances.
Gaw v. Utah Dept, of Transp.,
AWARD OF COSTS
Plaintiff alleges the trial court erroneously awarded costs for depositions, witness fees, and service and subpoena fees. 11 The nub of the argument is that defendant did not demonstrate the depositions were “reasonably necessary,” as that term has been defined by Utah courts.
Rule 54(d)(1), Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, allows “costs ... as of course to the prevailing party unless the court othеrwise directs.” The Utah Supreme Court has defined “costs” to encompass the expense of depositions “where they were deemed necessary to the preparation and presentation of a case.”
Frampton v. Wilson,
Defendant’s original verified memorandum of costs sought the costs for the depositions of eleven individuals, but the trial court, after objection by the plaintiff, carefully considered the matter and limited the recoverable costs to the depositions actually used at trial, those of the “adverse parties,” and those of any expert witness the plaintiff indicated he might call. Upon reapplication, the trial court awarded defendаnt the costs for the five depositions that fit these criteria. Plaintiff has not shown the depositions were taken in bad faith or were not essential for the development of the case, or that the information elicited could have been obtained through less expensive means. In light of the nature of this case, we cannot say the trial court abused its discretion by allowing these deposition costs.
Viewing the trial court’s award of the other costs under an аbuse of discretion standard, and realizing “[t]he trial court may exercise reasonable discretion in awarding taxable costs,” we see no abuse of discretion.
12
Cornish Town v. Roller,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
BENCH and BILLINGS, JJ., concur.
Notes
. Defendant testified at trial that she drove her vehicle to work at approximately the same time of day on Tuesday and Thursday previous to the day of the accident. On both the Tuesday and Thursday, the roads were snowpаcked. Defendant testified that she traveled at approximately the same speed on those days as she did on Saturday morning and had not had any problems negotiating the turn. On the day of the accident, the road looked the same to defendant as it had on the two prior occasions.
. Defendant testified at trial that prior to the collision, she had no reason to put her truck in four-wheel drive as she had not experienced sliding or slipping, nor had she lost traction or become stuck while driving prior to the collision.
. At trial both plaintiff and his wife testified that on that Saturday, the roads were very icy. The police report stated that "[t]he road surface was complete glare ice."
. Another defendant, J.C.B. Produce, was dismissed from the case at the close of plaintiffs case-in-chief on motion for directed verdict. Plaintiff does not appeal that disposition.
. The instruction given was as follows:
The law recognizes unavоidable accidents. An unavoidable accident is one which occurs in such a manner that it cannot justly be said to have been proximately caused by negligence as those terms are herein defined. In the event a party is damaged by an unavoidable accident, he has no right to recover, since the law requires that a person be injured by the fault or negligence of another as a prerequisite to any right to recover damages.
. The
Woodhouse
court refused to declare categorically that an unavoidable accident instruction should never be given, noting that such a refusal "does not square up with the law, nor with the practical realities of life.”
. In
Anderson,
the Court noted that while the Court in
Stringham
rejected the defendant’s argument that an unavoidable accident instruction was proper, “highway accident cases are of doubtful precedent in this case involving a specially constructed recreational vehicle on trеacherous open terrain.”
Anderson,
. In
Woodhouse
the Court noted that "[t]he fact that such an instruction is sometimes erroneously given in cases where it is not properly applicable is no good reason for banning it entirely."
Woodhouse,
. The unavoidable accident instruction in this case, quoted in note 5, was the fifteenth instruction among twenty-eight given by the trial court. The other instructions are unexceptional. Instructions 1-8 dealt with ancillary matters such as weight, credibility, and the judge’s inability to comment on the evidence. Instructions 9-14 and 16 concisely stated basic negligence law, defining the duty of care and proximate cause, as well as offering guidance on particular aspects of reasonable care in the instant context. For instance, in instruction 16, the jury was told that reasonable care in this case included
[djriving at such a speed as was safe, reasonable and prudent under the circumstances, having due regard to the width, surface and condition of the highway, the traffic thereon, the visibility, night time or day time, condition of weather and any actual or potential hazards then existing.
Instructions 17-23 dealt with damages and 24-28 with the process and procedure of jury deliberation. It does not appear that plaintiff objected to any other instruction given by the court.
. Defendant contends that the police report introduced into evidence indicated that defendant may have been trаveling as slow as 10 mph.
. The following costs were awarded:
A.Depositions:
1. Deposition of Clifford Ames $228.50
2. Deposition of Dr. Morrow 190.55
3. Deposition of Carl Lewis 363.75
4. Deposition of Dr. Sorenson 137.70
5. Deposition of Shauna Maas 45.10
B. Witness Fees:
1. David Sturm 17.00
2. Nikki Huizenga 17.00
3. Bruce Sorenson, MD 17.00
4. Lowell Daines, MD 17.00
C. Service & Subpoena Fees: 99.04
. Utah Code Ann. § 21-5-8 permits witness fees paid in civil actions to be taxed against the losing party. Plaintiff argues, however, that the witness fees were inappropriate because the witnesses were not called by the defendant and it would "clearly seem necessary that the witness actually be called to testify.”
There is no legal rule which requires witnesses to testify before witness fees may be taxed to the losing party. In
Cole v. Ducheneau,
We do not think that a pаrty is necessarily precluded from taxing costs for his witnesses because they were not sworn in the case. If a party subpoenas his witnesses in good faith, and they attend court in compliance with such subpoena, he is entitled to tax as costs the fees for such witnesses, unless it is made to appear that an unnecessary number of witnesses were brought into court, for the purpose of unnecessarily increasing the costs as a punishment to the opposite party.
Id.
