266 P. 69 | Kan. | 1928
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by Martina G. Barzen against H. A. Kepler to recover for personal injuries sustained in a motor-vehicle accident which occurred on December 11, 1925, on
In a petition plaintiff alleged in substance that on the evening of December 11, 1925, she and three other students of the Kansas University were traveling along the highway from Lawrence to Kansas City in a motor car owned by her father. Fred Ward was driving the car, and after passing Tonganoxie they approached a caravan of trucks owned by defendant, going in the same direction. The rear truck, it was alleged, was carrying large timbers about seventy feet long and about twenty-four by fourteen inches square, which had' been placed one on each side of the truck, projecting about eight feet in front of it and about thirty feet back of it, and it was alleged that the timbers were closer together at the front than at the rear, and were so placed that they were about four or five feet above the surface of the highway. It is charged that although it was dark, there were no red lights on the ends of the timbers nor on the rear truck so as to be visible without obstruction by other parts of the truck; and that Ward, who was driving the car in which the plaintiff was riding, did not discover the projecting timbers until he ran into, one of them, although it is said that Ward was looking ahead and exercising diligence to avoid injury to himself and those riding with him. The plaintiff suffered serious injuries due, it was alleged, to the negligence of the defendant and his employees in operating trucks after dark with the long timbers projecting without a red light or signal thereon, or the giving of any warning so as to apprise others using the highway of the fact that the timbers projected beyond the truck. The following are the special findings returned by the jury:
“1. At what hour did defendant’s five-ton Mack' truck arrive at Pleasant street and Victory highway in Tonganoxie, on December 11, 1925? A. 5:50.
“2. Did the driver of said truck stop the same east of said intersection on said date for the purpose of placing lights thereon? A. Yes.
“3. If you answer the last' preceding question Yes, state how far east of said intersection said truck was stopped. A. 200 feet.
“4. If you answer question 2 Yes, state the hour of the evening of December 11, 1925, said truck was stopped. A. 5:55.
“5. Did the driver of said truck at said time and place fasten a lighted red light cm the west end of the timber on the north or left side of said truck? A. No evidence who placed lights.
“6. Did the driver of said truck at said time and place put a lighted white*650 light on the east end of said timber and turn on its two front white headlights? A. No evidence who placed lights.
“7. At what hour of December 11, 1925, did the Cadillac coupé driven by Frederick JET. Ward, in which plaintiff was riding, arrive at the intersection of said Pleasant street and Victory highway? A. 6:02.
“8. Was Frederick H. Ward acting as plaintiff’s agent in driving said Cadillac coupé from Lawrence toward Kansas City, and at the time of the accident, on December 11, 1925? A. Yes.
“9. How far east of the intersection of Pleasant street and Victory highway did the collision between plaintiff’s car and defendant’s truck occur? A. 860 feet.
“10. What distance ahead or east of the Cadillac coupé was defendant’s said truck when the driver of the coupé first saw it? A. 70 feet.
“11. .At what rate of speed was said Cadillac coupé traveling at the time the driver thereof first saw said truck? A. 25 or 30 miles per hour.
“12. In what distance could said Cadillac coupé have been stopped while traveling at the rate of speed given in your answer to question 11? A. 25 to 30 feet.
“13. Could said Cadillac coupé. have been stopped at said time within the distance its lights revealed defendant’s said truck ahead of it? A. Yes.
“14. Did the driver of the Cadillac car see a huge object in the line of his vision just prior to said collision? A. Yes.
“15. If you answer question 14 Yes, then state how far ahead of said Cadillac coupé said huge object was when the driver of the Cadillac coupé first saw it. A. 70 feet.
“16. Could the driver of said Cadillac coupé have stopped it within the distance its lights revealed said huge object ahead of it? A. Yes.
“17. Was defendant’s said truck the huge object which Ward, the driver of said Cadillac car, testified he saw in front of his car shortly before the accident? A. Yes.
“18. Did the plaintiff ride in said Cadillac coupé with Ward, the driver thereof, from Lawrence up to the time of said accident? A. Yes.
“19. If you answer question 18 Yes, then state whether plaintiff had an unobstructed vision at all times of the highway ahead of said Cadillac coupé from the time it left Lawrence until the time of the accident. A. We do not know.
“20. Was this light placed on the west end of the north timber prior to the accident? A. Yes.
“21. If you answer the preceding question Yes, then state at what point on the highway said truck was standing when said red light was placed thereon. A. 200 feet east of Pleasant street.
“22. Was there a red light on the end of the north timber of the 5%-ton truck at the time of the accident? A. No.”
The defendant moved for a new trial and also for judgment in his favor upon the special findings of the jury, notwithstanding the general verdict. Both motions were overruled. It appears from the record that the Victory highway on which the accident occurred is a
As the findings disclose, the driver of the rear truck stopped about six o’clock in the evening for the purpose of placing a light on the truck. That a red light was placed on the end of the .north timber sometime prior to the accident, but it is expressly found that there was no red light on the end of the north timber at the time of the accident, and it is admitted that there was no tail light on the truck itself. The defendant appears to have depended on lanterns alone for lighting purposes. While it appears that the driver of the truck undertook to put a light on one of the projecting timbers on the truck, and actually did so in some fashion before the accident, it is settled that there was no light there at the time of the accident. Whether the lantern placed there was not securely attached or was not lighted is not found, but the jury has found that there was no light there when the collision occurred. Driving in the nighttime, it was the bounden duty of the defendant to place and keep lights on the truck, loaded as it was with projecting timbers. As the seventy-foot timbers on each side of the truck were closer together at the front and widened out toward the rear in a sort of V-shape, it would appear that more than a single light on the end of one of the timbers would be necessary to properly warn and protect others traveling on the highway. The operation of such an unusual and dangerous instrumentality on a congested highway in the nighttime without taking reasonable precautions for others lawfully on and using the highway, as described in the record, cannot be regarded as the reasonable and ordinary care required by law.
The principal contention of the defendant, however, is that the di’iver of the automobile failed to exercise due care in operating his car, and that his negligence directly contributed to the collision and the injury sustained. He argues that the driver of the automobile saw a huge object ahead of him when he approached within seventy feet of it, that he could have brought his car to a stop in twenty-five feet from the point where he was when the object was first seen, that it was the duty of the driver of the automobile then to bring his car under control and be prepared to avoid the danger of running into the overtaken truck, and also to keep a vigilant lookout for cars coming in the opposite direction. The contention is that even if the huge object was without any lights it was neverthe
in the circumstances, can it be said that the driver was guilty of contributory negligence, or was it a question of fact for the jury? The driver was going at a reasonable rate of speed, when there loomed up in front of him what the jury called a huge object. It must be assumed that the truck was not properly lighted to warn the driver of the overtaking automobile. It appeared to be on the right side of the road, and the natural thing for the driver of the automobile to do was to pass to the left of it. He turned to the left, but then he saw a car coming in the opposite direction, whereupon he applied his brakes and endeavored to turn in behind the truck. If there had been lights on the projecting timbers so that he could have seen them, the collision might have been avoided. As it was, he did avoid striking the north timber, but collided with the south one. It may be assumed that the driver, when he turned to the left, then saw the body of the truck, and acted upon the theory that it was an ordinary sized vehicle, but timbers not actually seen projecting behind the vehicle about thirty feet was something not to be anticipated by the driver.
It is true, as the defendant contends, that a driver of an overtaking car who turns out to pass another should use care not only to safely pass the vehicle overtaken, but should also have regard for vehicles approaching in the opposite direction, but it was not easy for the driver of the automobile to determine the proximity or the speed of the on-coming car until he turned from behind the truck in front of him. When he did turn to the left he discovered that he had to pass, not only a single vehicle, which might have been accomplished, but that he had to pass a caravan of three trucks on which were the projecting timbers, and which he-found he could not safely do. In the darkness, with the lights of his car focused on the pavement,
“Where one is placed by the negligent acts of another in such a position that he is compelled to choose upon the instant, and in the face of apparently grave and impending peril, between two hazards, and he makes such a choice as a person of ordinary prudence placed in the same situation might make, and injury results therefrom, the fact that if he had chosen the other hazard he would have escaped injury does not prove contributory negligence.” (Syl.)
In Barnhardt v. Glycerin Co., 113 Kan. 136, 213 Pac. 663, the court-approved a rule cited from another authority, in which it was said that—
“ ‘Persons suddenly placed in a position of peril and impending danger do things which ordinarily would be acts of negligence, but acts done in such extreme circumstances are not to be judged by ordinary rules, and if an act has to be performed in a brief period, with no time in which to determine the best course, negligence cannot be predicated of it.’ ” (p. 138.)
A case having some of the features of the instant one is Lane v. Mullen, Inc., 285 Pa. 161. There the plaintiff was driving an automobile at night, and suddenly there loomed up about twenty feet in front a large steam shovel which had been parked on the street without warning lights. The motorist could have stopped his car within ten feet of the object, but instead of doing so turned to the
“As the steam shovel loomed out of the darkness, plaintiff could have stopped his car before striking it, but concluding there was space sufficient to go around it, he turned his car to the left. In so doing, the projecting box on the left side of the steam shovel, even if the rays of his lamps had shown high enough to reach its elevation, would have been thrown into the shadow of the shovel, and would have been obscured from his view — this would have been the case whether his lights as he was turning extended for 200 feet or SO feet — and therefore the state of his lights as to their disclosure ability did not cause him to strike the projection; defendant’s failure to so light it that it would be seen was the sole cause.” (p. 164.)
We conclude that the question of the contributory negligence contended for by defendant was one for the determination of the jury, and that there is evidence in the record to support the finding adverse to defendant’s contention.
Another contention of defendant is that the court erred in failing to define the term “proximate cause” in its instructions to the jury. While the court did not give in a separate paragraph an abstract definition of proximate cause, it did set out fully the claims of the parties what must be shown by the plaintiff to establish the liability of the defendant, stating that if defendant failed to exercise ordinary and reasonable care, and his negligence was the cause of ' the injury, he would be responsible for it unless plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The court explained at length the rules of, contributory negligence, and after explaining the precautions which the driver of an automobile must take upon a highway, stated that if there was a failure to use such care, and “such failure on the
In another part of the instructions, in dealing with speed at which the automobile was driven, it was added that if the driver was driving at a speed in excess of that prescribed by statute, and failed to exercise reasonable care for the safety of himself and others, and that if in such failure “he was violating the aforesaid statute, and that the collision in this case was caused or directly contributed to by reason of the violation of the statute, then you are instructed that the operator of said car was guilty of contributory negligence and the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover.”
In view of the instructions given with reference to the direct cause of the accident and injury, we think the defendant has suffered no prejudice by the lack of a further definition or instruction as to proximate cause. In referring to the matter of negligence of the driver of the automobile, the court, on the other hand, further said:
“If by reason of the shape, size, location, or from any extraordinary and unusual cause, an object in his path is difficult to see and determine the character thereof, and he runs into it and damages result, then it’s a question for the jury to determine whether under ail the circumstances disclosed by the evidence the motorist has exercised reasonable and ordinary care and taken reasonable and prudent precautions for his own and the safety of others,” etc.
We find no prejudicial error in the record, and therefore the judgment is- affirmed.