16 A.2d 179 | Vt. | 1940
The accident which is the basis for this tort action for negligence occurred on August 17, 1939, at about 6:15 in the afternoon. The defendant, accompanied by a man named Savage, drove her automobile westerly on Hopkins Street in the City of Rutland and stopped near the middle of the street and nearly in front of the driveway easterly of the house occupied by her companion's brother, which is number thirty-one on the north side of the street. Defendant's companion left the car and entered the house where he remained about five minutes while the defendant waited in the car. When Mr. Savage returned to the car he made a suggestion to the defendant which resulted in her attempting to park the car closer to the north side of the street. As she started to back the car for this purpose it struck a three year old boy who was removed, when the car was stopped, from a position under the car near the right front wheel. He had then suffered the injuries for which he here seeks, by his next friend, to recover damages. Trial by jury *335 below resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff and the case is here on the defendant's exceptions.
After the conclusion of arguments of counsel but before the charge of the court to the jury the defendant moved for a directed verdict and saved an exception to the denial of her motion. The plaintiff contends that this motion was not properly for the consideration of the court because it was too general and was not made until too late. The sole ground for the motion was stated to be "that from all the evidence in the case there appears no evidence that the defendant was in any way negligent in the operation of her motor vehicle at the time and place and event in question." In Stoddard Son v. North Troy,
A motion for a directed verdict made at the close of the evidence is seasonably interposed and is in accordance with *336
the rules of practice in this state. Derragon v. Village ofRutland,
The only witness who testified to seeing the accident was Mrs. Buffum who was sitting on some part of the porch of her house distant 400 or 500 feet easterly from the place where it occurred. She testified that she had been watching the child *337 playing on the sidewalk for some time before the defendant stopped her car in the street and all of a sudden Mrs. Disorda backed her car up or started to back, he dashed out behind her and the wheel went over him and he just crumpled right up under the car. The credibility of the witness was attacked by the plaintiff, but her testimony was not directly contradicted. Mr. Savage testified that when he went to his brother's house he saw this child about thirty feet from the car, on the sidewalk in front of the next house easterly. When the witness returned five minutes later the child was still there but he could not say whether or not the child followed him to the car.
Taking the evidence in the light most favorable for the plaintiff, as it must be taken, the jury would have been justified in finding that the defendant knew or ought to have known that the child was in the immediate neighborhood. She was charged with the common knowledge that very young children are erratic and likely to move quickly and without regard for their own safety. If one knows that a child is in the highway he is bound to a proportionate degree of watchfulness. Robinson v.Cone,
The evidence also showed that she inquired of Savage, who was standing beside the car on the right hand side, concerning the conditions behind her, and he told her to back the car. Savage testified that he saw no child behind the automobile at that time. But the child, as the evidence tended to show, was nearby and so close that the accident occurred almost at the moment the car was put in motion. P.L. 5110 — XI imposed upon the defendant the duty to make such use of her eyes and *338
ears before and while backing as a prudent person would make under like circumstances. Lee v. Donnelly,
The defendant excepted to the finding that the defendant ought to be confined in close jail. The finding filed by the court reads as follows: "And now, at the time of rendering the judgment in the above entitled cause, it is adjudged by the court that the cause of action on which said judgment is founded arose from the wilful, malicious and negligent acts of the defendant causing injuries to the person of the plaintiff, and that from a consideration of the facts, it is considered by the court that the defendant ought to be confined in close jail." Upon close scrutiny of this sentence it is apparent that the statement "it is considered by the court that the defendant ought to be confined in close jail" is a part of what is stated to be adjudged by the court. This conforms to the requirement of P.L. 2195. The statute does not require a finding or adjudication as to who if anyone received injuries. Therefore the clause "causing injuries to the person of the plaintiff" may be treated as surplusage and it is unnecessary to decide whether the infant suing by next friend is therein correctly termed the plaintiff. The contrary not appearing, we must assume that the trial court made such separate and independent examination of the evidence as the statute authorizing this proceeding (P.L. 2195) contemplates shall be made as a basis for the adjudication. Domina v. Pratt,
*339Judgment affirmed.