290 N.W. 464 | Neb. | 1940
Plaintiff, a guest in an automobile, owned and driven by Peter Redwelski, brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him as the result of an automobile accident when the' car in which he was riding collided with a repair truck belonging to the defendant. The cause was submitted to a jury, resulting in a verdict for the defendant. Plaintiff appeals.
The pleadings of the respective parties are sufficient to join the issues on the negligence pleaded therein and will not be here set out. The record discloses the following:
About 8 o’clock in the evening of February 26, 1938, the plaintiff was riding as an invited guest, seated at the right of the driver, Peter Redwelski, in his 1934 Chevrolet sedan, proceeding south on Twenty-fourth street in the city of Omaha. The street was dry, the night dark, cold and cloudy. The car proceeded past Twenty-fourth street and Poppleton avenue, toward Wool worth avenue, there being a gradual slope to the south. The car was six feet distant from the west curb of Twenty-fourth street on the right side of the south-bound street car tracks. When it approached the intersection of Twenty-fourth street and Woolworth avenue, having traversed about three-fourths of a block, at 20 miles an hour, its headlights set for city driving, throwing light for a distance of 50 feet ahead, plaintiff observed the truck approaching them. The headlights on the truck were not burning, and when the Chevrolet’s lights disclosed the truck, plaintiff immediately exclaimed: “Look out, Pete, there is a car.” At that moment the truck lights were switched on, blinding plaintiff. There was no torch burning in the telephone pole immediately in front of the Gurley house, which will be referred to later in the opinion, and there were no flares or wicks burning in the vicinity to warn of danger. There was north-bound traffic on Twenty-fourth street just before the accident. On cross-examination, the plaintiff testified that he had known Redwelski for six or seven years, had been in the car on two or three occasions within a month or so; did not see a street light
Sebastian Sortino testified • that on the evening in question he was driving south on Twenty-fourth street at a speed of 20 to 25 miles an hour, and when approaching the intersection of Twenty-fourth and Woolworth avenue, driving five or six feet from the west curb, his lights disclosed at a distance of 50 feet in front of him the street car truck, which was between the south-bound tracks and the west curb and standing stationary; he swerved his car to the right, barely missing a pedestrian; then turned the corner and parked on the north side of Woolworth; walked north on Twenty-fourth street, noticed the repair truck 15 to 20 feet from the corner north of Woolworth, between the west curb of Twenty-fourth street and the south-bound tracks. He was bound for the Gurley home, which was about 40-to 45 feet north of the intersection of Twenty-fourth and Woolworth. While he was standing on the third step of the Gurley home, he saw, 30 or 35 feet away, the Chevrolet car traveling south, about six feet from the west curb. The truck kept moving slowly toward the north, with no headlights burning. The Chevrolet suddenly swerved toward the curb; the lights of the truck flashed on, and the two cars collided. After the accident, the rear wheels of the Chevrolet were up against the curb, the car facing southeast. The truck was about five feet from the front of the Chevrolet north; the front bumper of the sedan was headed right into the left door of the truck. The witness testified that he saw no flares on the telephone pole, the only pole between the place of the accident and the corner. On cross-examination he testified that when he first observed the truck it was straddling the west rail of the south-bound tracks at a distance of about 15 feet from the north curb line of Woolworth avenue, standing stationary.
J. W. Gurley testified that he was looking out of a sopth window in his home, which faces east on Twenty-fourth street and is 35 or 40 feet north of the intersection of Twenty-fourth and Woolworth; he noticed the flash from the trolley wire that made connection with the rail in the intersection, near the southwest corner, on which corner are located a grocery store and a street light. The street light was not burning. He could see from the lights in the filling station the men working on the trolley wire; “saw some one o-ut with a stick or something that looked as if they were trying to rake the trolley wire away from the rail;” the repair truck was straddling the west rail of the south-bound track; he watched at the window for a moment or so; then left the window, subsequently heard a crash, went to the door and met Sortino. After calling for an ambulance, he went out into the street, saw a Chevrolet automobile standing in the street, headed toward the southeast; the rear wheels of the car were near the west curb of Twenty-fourth street, directly in front of his home; the truck was five or six feet north of the left side of the Chevrolet; there were no flares burning and no torch burning on the telephone •pole.
The measurements of distances, as shown by exhibit 42, made to scale of one inch to 10 feet, disclose the distance from curb to curb on Twenty-fourth street, running north and south, to be 39 feet, 3 inches, with double car tracks running through the center of the street, leaving a distance, from the east rail of the north-bound track to the curb, of 12 feet, 8 inches, and, from the west rail of the south-bound track to the curb, 12 feet, 11 inches, on the west side. A trifle over 48 feet north of the intersection in question is the pole directly in front of the steps of the Gurley home, where the flare was presumably placed, and this location was also the scene of the accident. On the southwest corner of the intersection is the grocery store and in front of it an overhead street light. There is also a light on Twenty-fourth street north 144 feet distant from the filling station. The proximate distance from the grocery store to the scene of the accident would not exceed 80 feet. Estimates of the proximate distance between the filling station and the scene of the accident vary from 90 to 100 feet.
By measurement, a person standing inside of the Gurley home, looking south to a place in the center of the southbound tracks, would be looking from a distance of 821/2 feet to discern an object. Gurley testified that he discerned at that distance, from the lights in the filling station, a man with a stick lifting a wire. The witness Woodward, employed by the police department, arrived at the scene of
The left fender of the Redwelski car collided with the left front fender of the truck. The jury had the benefit of the testimony showing that men were working on the truck tower with appliances, repairing the trolley wires, at the time of the accident, and whether or not, if the position of the truck was such as testified to by plaintiff’s witnesses, the men could have accomplished the work.
Plaintiff contends that the court erred in instructing the jury on the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, when, in fact, the evidence was insufficient to show the plaintiff guilty of any negligence. In instruction No. 5 the court properly instructed: “The negligence of the driver of the car in which the plaintiff was riding is not imputed to the plaintiff.” The court then, in the .same instruction, instructed with reference to the drivers negligence being the proximate and sole cause of the accident without any negligence on the part of the defendant, and in instruction No. 9 gave the comparative negligence rule, as applied to the plaintiff and the driver of the defendant’s truck; likewise, instruction No. 12, wherein the jury were told that, if they found plaintiff to have been negligent but not to the extent to defeat recovery, then they would be privileged to reduce the amount of recovery in the proportion which plaintiff’s negligence bears to the total negligence of plaintiff and defendant.
Other assignments of error need not be discussed.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.