171 S.W.2d 1012 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1943
Reversing.
On December 10, 1940, at about 4 o'clock p. m., Peggy Joyce Spurlock, an infant about six years of age, was struck and killed by an automobile at Cawood, an unincorporated town, on the highway between Harlan, Kentucky, and Pennington Gap, Virginia. The automobile was being operated as a taxi and was driven by Jack Pennington. It is claimed that it was owned by the appellant, Maud Jones Burton, but proof of its ownership was meager. Dewitt Spurlock, father of the deceased child, qualified as administrator of her estate, and brought suit to recover damages for her death.
Cawood has a population of 700 to 900, and extends along the highway a distance of one-half mile. Several houses front on the north side of the road. Across the road is a drain, or ditch, then the tracks of the Louisville Nashville Railroad, and beyond the railroad a row of houses, fifteen or twenty in number. Over the ditch is a footbridge used by pedestrians going to and from these houses. Mrs. Spurlock, mother of the deceased, was distributing agent for a Knoxville newspaper and for about a month the deceased had been delivering papers for her mother to the subscribers. Her father knew of this arrangement and approved of it. The Spurlock home was on the north side of the highway almost opposite the footbridge. On the afternoon in question deceased had crossed the footbridge and railroad to deliver papers to subscribers on the south side of the railroad. It was on her return trip that she was killed. A bus traveling from Harlan to Pennington Gap *338 had stopped near the footbridge to let off or take on a passenger. The rear end of the bus was near the end of the footbridge and its left side was about two feet from the center of the highway, the surfaced part of which was about 18 feet in width. Another bus, described as a V. T. C. bus, was approaching from the opposite direction, traveling toward Harlan. It stopped about 100 feet from the scene of the accident and while it was stopped or just as it was starting the taxi driven by Pennington passed it. According to the great preponderance of the evidence, the deceased ran from behind the bus standing near the footbridge and ran immediately in front of the taxi when the front end of the taxi was about five feet from the rear of the bus, which was headed in the opposite direction. The child was struck by the left front fender of the taxi and lived only a few minutes. Pennington turned to the right and ran into a ditch and against a fence. He said that his taxi traveled about 15 feet after it struck the child, while witnesses for the appellee fixed the distance at 70 feet. Pennington testified that he did not see the child until she was about five feet in front of his taxi, and that he could not have seen her because she came from behind the parked bus. All of the witnesses except one estimated the speed of the taxi at 15 to 25 miles an hour. One of the witnesses who was a passenger on the V. T. C. bus estimated the speed at 40 to 45 miles an hour. Pauline Spurlock, the 18-year old sister of the deceased, was standing on the road behind the parked bus and about 150 feet from the place where the accident occurred. She testified that she saw her sister cross the footbridge, run behind the parked bus and into the path of the taxi. The witness saw the taxi approaching and knew it would strike her sister. She called to her sister, but the latter apparently failed to hear her. She testified that the deceased was "skipping, sort of running along," and that "she ran out from behind the bus right into this car." Traffic on the highway through the town of Cawood is heavy.
At the first trial on August 18, 1941, the jury returned a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff filed his motion and grounds for a new trial and on September 17, 1941, the court sustained the motion, set aside the verdict and judgment, and granted the plaintiff a new trial. The defendant moved the court to include in its order the reasons and grounds for sustaining the *339 plaintiff's motion and granting the new trial, and the court overruled her motion. The defendant prayed an appeal to the Court of Appeals from the order setting aside the verdict and judgment and granting plaintiff a new trial, and she was given until a day in the succeeding term of court to file her bill of exceptions and transcript of the evidence and, within the time granted, she tendered her bill of exceptions together with a transcript of the evidence which was examined, approved, and signed by the presiding judge. The second trial was begun on November 26, 1941, but a mistrial resulted because a witness for the plaintiff brought out the fact that insurance was involved. The third trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $10,000, and from the judgment entered thereon this appeal is prosecuted. The record of the first trial has been made a part of this record.
Appellant insists that the trial court abused its discretion in setting aside the verdict of the jury on the first trial without any reason or without any error being shown by the record, and that the judgment on the last trial should be reversed and the trial court directed to reinstate the judgment rendered on the first trial. A number of other grounds are urged for reversal of the last judgment, but we need not consider them since we have concluded that the first ground must be sustained.
In his motion for a new trial, after the verdict and judgment in the first trial, the plaintiff relied upon six grounds: (1 and 2) Errors in admission and rejection of evidence; (3) error in giving instruction E offered by the defendant; (4) error in failing to define contributory negligence in the instructions; (5) the verdict was flagrantly against the weight of the evidence; and (6) the verdict was not sustained by the evidence. Appellee does not claim that there was any merit in grounds 1, 2, 5, and 6. No error in the admission or rejection of evidence on the first trial prejudicial to the plaintiff is pointed out, and a careful reading of the record discloses none. The verdict was not only not flagrantly against the evidence, but, on the contrary, was sustained by a great preponderance of the evidence. Instruction E told the jury that if they found from all the evidence that the parents of plaintiff's decedent negligently sent or permitted her to go upon the highway and across the highway and place herself in a position of danger upon and near the highway upon which defendant's car was *340
running and that but for such negligence of the parents, if any, the deceased would not have been injured, then the law was for the defendant and the jury should so find unless the jury further found from the evidence that the driver in charge of defendant's car either saw the decedent or, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have seen her, before she was struck, in time, by the exercise of ordinary care, to have avoided striking and injuring her. A similar instruction was given on the last trial, and it is not seriously contended that the instruction was improper. Under KRS
The plaintiff offered six instructions, and all of them were given over the objections of the defendant. Instruction No. 4 submitted the question of contributory negligence of the deceased, and told the jury to find for the defendant if they believed from the evidence that the deceased failed to exercise ordinary care, as defined in instruction No. 3, for her own safety and by reason thereof she ran or walked into the path of the defendant's car thereby contributing to bring about her injury and death to such an extent that but for such failure on her part she would not have been struck and killed, unless they further believed from the evidence that after the driver of defendant's automobile discovered her peril or, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have discovered it, he failed to use ordinary care and *341 the means at hand to avoid striking the deceased, in which event they should find for the plaintiff. Instruction No. 3 defined ordinary care as applied to the deceased as that degree of care usually exercised by ordinarily careful, prudent girls of her age, intelligence and experience under circumstances like or similar to those of this case. There was no merit in the plaintiff's claim that the court erred on the first trial in failing to define contributory negligence. The term was not used in the instructions, which were given in concrete form and set out facts constituting a definition of the term. Furthermore, the plaintiff offered no instruction on the subject.
On this appeal appellee apparently concedes that none of the grounds relied upon in his motion for a new trial was sufficient to authorize the court to sustain the motion, but on the authority of Louisville I. Ry. Company v. Pulliam's Adm'x,
"It will be seen by looking at the instructions given by the court in the first trial that the court gave an instruction on contributory negligence of the parents of the decedent, and also an instruction on contributory negligence of the child herself. Obviously, and manifestly, the defendant was not entitled to two (2) different sets of contributory negligence instructions. We believe that the instruction on contributory negligence of the parents was the proper one, but the instruction given on contributory negligence of the child herself, who was only six (6) years old, was improper. This court has held that a child under seven (7) years of age, as a matter of law, cannot be guilty of contributory negligence, and therefore such an instruction is improper. *342 See Tupman's Adm'r v. Schmidt,
200 Ky. 88 ,254 S.W. 199 . The rule seems to be well settled that a child under seven (7) years of age is not capable of being contributorily negligent. At any rate, and in all events, it is perfectly apparent to us that it was unfair to the plaintiff below for the court to give two (2) different sets of contributory negligence instructions. The court must have realized this and therefore was prompted to grant the new trial on that account, in part at least."
Appellee is confronted by an insuperable difficulty. The instruction on contributory negligence of the child was offered by him and was given on his motion. Consequently, he could not take advantage of the error, if any, and the court was not authorized to sustain his motion for a new trial on the ground that instruction No. 4, which had been offered by him, was erroneous. One who participates in or invites an error may not complain. The maxim omnis consensus tollit errorem applies.
The trial court is vested with a sound discretion in disposing of a motion for a new trial, and unless that discretion has been abused this court will not disturb its ruling. Clark v. Bean,
"The trial court has a wide discretion in passing on motions for a new trial and, ordinarily, its action will not be disturbed, but a careful consideration of the record in the present case fails to disclose any substantial reason for the court's action in setting aside the verdict on the first trial. It is not a case where conflicting conclusions could be reached. As we have seen, the grounds assigned for a new trial were untenable, and the only ground other than these upon which the court could have based its ruling was insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. The evidence, however, preponderated on the side of the plaintiffs in whose favor the verdict was returned."
Appellee insists, however, that appellant has failed to preserve her right to have the judgment entered on the last trial set aside and the first judgment substituted therefor. The argument is based on her failure to move the trial court, after the entry of the last judgment, to set it aside and to reinstate the verdict and judgment on the first trial and her failure to make any point of this in her motion and grounds for a new trial. The whole matter was before the trial court. Under the practice in this jurisdiction an appeal from an order setting aside a verdict and judgment and granting a new trial is held in abeyance until another trial is had and an appeal is taken from the last judgment. In order to preserve one's right of appeal from the order, an exception must be taken, an appeal prayed, and a bill of exceptions prepared and tendered within the proper time. Whallen's Ex'rs v. Moore,
"The rule is that in granting a new trial the lower court is not confined to errors specified, nor is this court confined, in reviewing the court's ruling made thereon, to the reasons given by it for granting (or refusing), a new trial, but is authorized to approve the granting of it if, for any reason appearing in the record, the new trial should have been granted."
The judgment is reversed, with directions to reinstate the verdict returned by the jury on the first trial, and to enter a judgment in conformity therewith.