3 P.2d 639 | Kan. | 1931
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained in an automobile casualty. The jury answered special questions and returned a general verdict for plaintiff, and defendants have appealed.
The case was here before (Billings v. Aldridge, 129 Kan. 772,
Plaintiff resided in Wichita. He was about fifty years of age, a dentist, and had been engaged in that profession about twenty-five years. On the morning of September 15 he was going by automobile with J. A. Elliott, as his guest, from Elliott’s home near Kechi, Kan., to Butler, Mo. It was an almost new Graham-Paige sedan,
“Q. 1. If your verdict is in favor of the plaintiff, then state what act or acts of negligence you find the defendants guilty of which caused the accident. A. Failed to put up proper closed-road signs.
*772 “Q. 3. At what rate of speed was the automobile moving as it approached the ditch in question and before the brakes were applied? A. From thirty to thirty-five miles per hour.
“Q. 4. Was the plaintiff watching the road ahead of the automobile as it approached the ditch? A. No.
“Q. 5. If the plaintiff sitting in the rear left seat of the automobile had been watching the road ahead of the automobile, at what distance west of the ditch in question could the tree limbs or brush in the road have been seen by him? A. Fifteen feet.
“Q. 6. Could the ear in which the plaintiff was riding have been stopped as it approached the ditch without going into the ditch after the brush or tree limbs came into the range of vision of the headlights of the car? A. Yes, if it was recognized as a warning of danger.
“Q. 7. Do you find that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence? A. No.
“Q. 9. Could the automobile in which plaintiff was riding have been stopped as it approached the ditch in question without going into the ditch after the light of the lantern came into view of those riding in the automobile? A. No.
“Q. 10. If you find for the plaintiff, then state what precaution, if any, plaintiff took for his own safety as he approached the ditch. A. Not any.
“Q. 11. If the plaintiff sitting in the rear left seat of the automobile had been watching ahead of the automobile, at what distance west of the ditch in question could he have seen the light of the lantern? A. Twenty-five feet.
“Q. 12. Was there anything plaintiff could have done to have avoided the accident after the trees or brush came into the range of vision of a person in the position of the plaintiff on the highway at the time of this accident? If so, what? A. No.
“Q. 13. Was there anything thé plaintiff could have done to have avoided the accident after the light of the lantern came into the range of vision of a person in the position of the plaintiff on the highway at the time of the accident? If- so, what? A. No.”
Defendants’ motion to set aside the answers to special questions numbers 5, 9 and 11 as not being supported by the evidence was sustained. Defendants’ motion to set aside the answers to some other special questions was overruled, also their motion for judgment in their favor on the answers to special questions 3, 4, the first part of 6, 'and 10. Their motion for a new trial was overruled. In this appeal they complain: (1) That the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law; (2) that the negligence which the jury found against defendants was not the proximate cause of the injury; (3) that there was misconduct of the jury; (4) misconduct of counsel for the plaintiff; (5) that the setting aside of the answers to the three special questions compelled the granting of a new trial; and (6) that there was error in not setting
We will discuss these questions in the order stated. Defendants argue that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence which barred his recovery, and ask us to so state as a matter of law. It is argued that a passenger riding in the back seat is obliged to look out for his own safety and to warn the driver of danger, citing Cooper v. Railway Co., 117 Kan. 703, 709, 232 Pac. 1024, and allied cases. It is true that in whatever situation a person is he is under the duty to use due care for his own safety, but what constitutes due care depends upon the situation which he is in, and perhaps on many other circumstances. With respect to watching the road, observing possible dangers, handling the car, and the like, it is clear that the duty of the passenger in the back seat is not commensurate with that of the driver of the automobile. It is difficult to state a hard and fast rule by which it may be determined whether the passenger or guest is negligent. Circumstances may be such that he “would not be at fault if he took a nap.” (Howse v. Weinrich, ante, pp. 132, 135, 298 Pac. 766.) As bearing on the question, see, also, Link v. Miller, ante, pp. 469, 472, 300 Pac. 1105, and Houser v. Nelson, ante, pp. 142, 147, 298 Pac. 777. Generally speaking, the question of contributory negligence is for the jury. It is only when the facts show such negligence so clearly that reasonable minds should not differ concerning it that the court can declare such negligence exists as a matter of law. In this case the car was almost new, was in good working order, and was driven by an experienced driver, and there had been nothing up to the time of the casualty to indicate to plaintiff that the driver was not using due care. The trial court submitted to the jury the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence by appropriate instructions. No complaint is made of these instructions, nor of the fact that such question was submitted to the jury. Defendants point out that the jury found, in answer to special questions: (No. 4) That the plaintiff was not watching the road as the automobile approached the ditch, and (No. 10) that the plaintiff took no precaution for his own safety as he approached the ditch, and (No. 3) that the car was traveling thirty to thirty-five miles per hour as it approached the ditch and before the brakes were applied, and (No. 6) that the car could have been stopped without going into the ditch after the brush came into the
Appellants next argue that the acts of negligence of which the defendants were found guilty were not the proximate cause of the
“If your verdict is in favor of the plaintiff, then state what act or acts of negligence you find the defendants guilty of which caused the accident. A. Failed to put up proper closed-road signs.”
Appellants argue this answer as though it applied to the first group only of allegations of negligence referred to, and argue that neither the plaintiff nor the driver of the car in which he was riding saw even the intersection which they passed about seventy-five feet west of the place of the casualty, and that if they didn’t see the intersection they wouldn’t have seen the signs if they had been there. Without analyzing that argument, it cannot be said that the answer limited it to the first group of allegations of negligence. Signs would have been proper under the second group of such allegations. The fact that the jury rendered the verdict against both defendants indicates they so regarded it. The question was for the act of negligence “which caused the accident,” and the answer was the failure to put up “proper closed-road signs.” The answer is susceptible, at least, of meaning appropriate signs for the dangerous excavation which defendants had made in the highway. No one contends that the intersection warnings, detour signs, etc., had been put up, as rer quired by statute. The court instructed the jury it was admitted they had not been put up. The case was not defended on the theory they had been put up. It was defended on the theory that what had been done was sufficient and appropriate under the second group of allegations of negligence. It seems reasonably clear that was what the jury was referring to in their answer.
Appellants argue that plaintiff’s counsel were guilty of such misconduct as required the granting of a new trial by injecting the question of insurance in the case. In examining the jurors on their voir dire counsel asked each of them if he was connected, as stockholder or otherwise, with any insurance company that has for one of its purposes the insuring of public work contractors against damages which third persons may sustain, or if he held a policy in any
A witness for defendants, Lester Clark, had testified that he had no pecuniary interest in the case. He was asked, on cross-examination, if he had not received something in the case. After some reluctance he said he had received something. In answer to other questions he stated that he had received $10 by check, sent through the mail, which he had cashed; that he did not know who it was from, or remember the name on the check. He was asked if he did not tell a named person that both he and another fellow “got $10 apiece out of this from an insurance company.” He answered that question in the negative. He stated he had claimed his fees, $4.50, for appearing as a witness at the former trial of the case, but that money had not been paid to him, and his claim for fees had not been assigned to anyone. It developed another witness for defendants had received a check for $6.50. He did not remember who signed it, but it came from Wichita. Appellants complain of this as being misconduct of plaintiff’s counsel. We do not so regard it. The only question propounded to the witness tending to develop that the payments had been made by an insurance company was denied by him. The fact that some one, not a party to the action, is paying witnesses, or others, in connection with it, is a proper subject for inquiry. It may constitute maintenance. (11 C. J. 232.)
A Doctor Finney was called as a witness for defendants. It developed from his testimony that soon after the plaintiff was taken home from the casualty, at a time when plaintiff was seriously injured, the doctor called at plaintiff’s house to make a physical examination. It developed he had not been- called by the plaintiff, or any member of his family. Part of his cross-examination is as follows:
“Q. Were you called out by Doctor Billings to make this first examination? A. No.
*778 “Q By whom were you sent? A. Dulaney, Johnston, Yankey & Priest.
“Q. Who are they? A. Insurance company of Wichita.
“Q. Where was that examination made? A. At his house. . . .
“Q. Did he know you were coming? A. I don’t know whether he did or not.
“Q. Had you visited him in the past? A. No.”
At the conclusion of his testimony defendants moved “to strike out the questions and answers of this witness in regard to who called him to attend him, as prejudicial.” This was overruled, as was also defendants’ motion to discharge the jury because of prejudicial conduct of counsel. Appellants complain of this cross-examination as injecting the question of insurance into the case. The circumstances of a physician calling to make an examination of a sick or injured man, without having been called by him or any member of his family, is in and of itself so unusual, if indeed not so unprofessional, as to be a proper subject of inquiry as to how he happened to go there for that purpose. It will be observed that there was no objection to any of these questions propounded .to this witness. The witness himself is the one who placed in the record the fact that an insurance company at Wichita had sent him. Had it been especially desired to keep that fact out of the record he might have said that the defendants, or some one representing them, had sent him. If it be true that an insurance company was really defending this action, that it had its physician intrude himself into the sick room of plaintiff, it is not in position to complain when the physician whom it has so employed injects into the record the fact that he was appearing for an insurance company. To so hold would permit anyone representing an insurance company who had anything to do with the case, and who was called as a witness, to say that he was representing an'insurance company, and thereby force a new trial.
Appellants cite Van Pelt v. Richards Paint & Paper Co., 132 Kan. 581, 296 Pac. 737, and argue that that case is similar to this with respect to the insurance feature. We think there is quite a distinction. There, unquestionably, there was persistent effort to inject the question into the case, and when a physician was asked who sent him, counsel was not frank with the court in stating that he did not know what the answer of the physician would be. That was clearly shown on the hearing of the motion for a new trial. There is no such showing here. The complaint of misconduct of plaintiff’s counsel is not well taken.
Defendants complain of the refusal of the court to submit to the jury the following question requested by them:
“Q. At what distance west of the ditch in question could the light of the lantern be seen at the time of the accident by one traveling east on the highway?”
From the evidence contained in the abstract and a plat furnished us it is clear that some persons approaching the ditch from the west might see the light of the lantern earlier than others, depending upon the position in the highway, the height above it, or the thickness of the foliage on the brush. The brush was piled about the center of the highway twenty-four feet west of the excavated ditch. The smallest dimensions given to it by any witness are that it was six feet long north and south, two feet high, and about two feet thick. Other witnesses for the plaintiff estimated it as being seven or eight feet long and from three to three and one-half or four feet high. Witnesses for 'defendants estimated it as being larger than that, one of them placing its length at twenty-four feet. The lantern was near the center of the highway, about half-way between the ditch and the pile of brush, which would make it about twelve feet east of the brush. It was an ordinary farm lantern. There is testimony that the globe was badly smoked at the time of the casualty. It had been placed on a mound of dirt seven or ¿ight inches high, the light of the lantern being about three or four inches higher than the bottom of the lantern. This would make the light of the lantern about eleven or twelve inches from the ground. We are told that the highway approaching this brush from the west was practically level — slightly upgrade. If the pile of brush were only two feet high the light of the lantern was a foot below the top of the pile. If the brush were three or four feet high the light was two or three feet below the top of the brush. It would seem difficult, therefore, if not impossible, for one approaching from the west to see the light of the lantern over the pile of brush. The defendant Nelson testified that he gave his workmen instructions to place the lantern so it could be seen through the brush. Naturally, whether the lantern could be seen through the brush would depend upon the density of the foliage, which, of course, might be more dense at some places than others. All the testimony on the point showed that the
Defendants moved to set aside the answer to question No. 1 as being contrary to the evidence. The court overruled the motion. By their answer to this question the jury found that the negligence of defendants which caused the accident was the failure to put up proper closed-road signs. Defendants had ignored the statutory requirement as to signs and had undertaken to do something else. They had excavated a dangerous ditch, entirely across a much-traveled state highway. The only thing in the nature of a warning sign which they put up was to pile some brush in the road and to
Defendants moved to set aside that portion of the answer to question No. 6 after the word “yes” as not being-responsive to the question. The motion should have been sustained. It was not responsive, and was surplusage. (Hall v. Kansas City, 112 Kan. 752, 212 Pac. 875.) Defendants moved to set aside the answers to special questions 12 and 13 as being contrary to the evidence, and the court overruled the motion. There was no error in this ruling.
The fact that the jury added surplusage to the answer to question No. 6, and their answers to questions 5 and 11 obviously did not take into consideration the fact that the question was predicated on what could have been seen had plaintiff “been watching the road ahead,” disclosed either that the jury did not fully comprehend these questions or was not altogether frank in the answers given. The latter view might indicate an unfairness on the part of the jury which would require, or at least justify, the granting
We find no material error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.