82 S.W.2d 347 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1935
Reversing.
A suit begun by Miranda Gillespie against Leonard Cook and Allie Baldwin to recover $5,260 for injuries received by her in an automobile collision resulted in the following judgment entered upon a verdict signed by ten jurors:
"It is adjudged that the plaintiff, Miranda Gillespie, recover of the defendants, Leonard Cook and Allie Baldwin, jointly, the sum of five hundred ($500.00) dollars — from Leonard Cook the sum of three hundred ($300.00) dollars and from Allie Baldwin the sum of two hundred ($200.00) dollars, and her costs herein expended."
Cook's motion for a new trial having been overruled, he appeals.
This accident occurred about 5:30 p. m., August 20, 1932, on the Dixie highway about one-half mile north of the village of Richwood and at the entrance of the Frogtown road, which there enters the Dixie highway from the west and forms a T-shaped intersection with it.
Cook in his truck had been traveling north on the Dixie highway and was turning to the left into this Frogtown road when the collision occurred. Baldwin was also traveling north on the Dixie highway, but on the left or west side thereof, and was endeavoring to pass Cook's truck when the left front wheel of the truck was brushed by one of the right fenders of Baldwin's coupe which caused the coupe to leave the road, *283 to run over some logs into a Coca-Cola sign, into a fence, and finally when about eighty feet from this intersection to strike against and break off a fifteen-inch telephone pole by which the coupe was wrecked.
Mrs. Gillespie was a guest in the Baldwin coupe, and in the wreck was seriously injured.
The operator of the trailing vehicle must remember the man ahead is engaged in handling a high-power, dangerous machine, requiring constant attention and quick action, and that his outlook is ahead and not behind. Wright v. Clausen,
Mrs. Gillespie must look for Cook's negligence in some violation of the statutes, for back in the days of horse-drawn vehicles the rights of the man on his right side of the road were superior to the rights of the man *284
on his left side of the road, and the rights of the man in front were superior to those of the man behind, the overtaking vehicle had to use proper caution in passing and watch for oncoming vehicles (29 C. J. p. 654, sec. 419), and the man in front could turn across the road, and he need not under all circumstances look behind him or sideways before crossing the street, or necessarily anticipate that a team is behind, or give a signal. See 29 C. J. p. 655, sec. 420. In 1836 in Payne v. Smith, 4 Dana (34 Ky.) 497, Smith's gig struck and killed a horse that sauntered across the street in front of him, and this court held he was liable to Payne for the value of his horse. "Except in matters of detail [our statutes regarding motor vehicles] are largely declaratory of what the law was before they were written, and the duties of automobile drivers are not limited to those mentioned in the statute." Hardware Mutual Cas. Co. v. Union T. S. Co.,
(a) See that there is sufficient space for such change or turn to be made in safety.
(b) If it appears that the movement or operation of another or other vehicles may reasonably be affected by such change, he must give plainly visible signals, etc. Section 2739g-50, Ky. Stats. In other words, he must look; then, if he sees any one to whom to give a signal, he must do that. The law does not impose upon him the duty of giving a signal if his contemplated turn or change of course will not affect any one, though the giving of signals on all such occasions would be a good habit to cultivate.
Negligence is never presumed, it must always be proven, and the testimony of Mrs. Gillespie and Mr. Baldwin (both interested witnesses) that Cook did not hold out his hand is contradicted by Cook (another interested witness) and by six other witnesses who are entirely disinterested; thus there is a sharp issue here as to whether Cook was negligent or not.
Elaborate statements of the duties of the operator of the machine ahead may be found in 42 C. J. p. 948, *285
sec. 670, and 13 Rawle C. L. p. 277, sec. 288, and of the duties of the operator of the machine behind in 42 C. J. p. 949, sec. 671, and 13 Rawle C. L. p. 275, sec. 227, and in Crescent Motor Co. v. Stone,
Cook complains of instruction No. 6, which peremptorily began thus:
"The jury will find for the plaintiff against either or both of the defendants, and will award her as damages," etc.
If both these men were unquestionably negligent, and Mrs. Gillespie had suffered therefrom without being negligent herself and without the negligence of either being attributable to her, this instruction would be correct; but, as we pointed out above, there was a sharp issue as to the negligence of Cook, and this instruction No. 6 was calculated to induce the jury to believe that it was the court's conclusion Cook's negligence was clearly established. It is in effect a peremptory instruction, and was prejudicially erroneous as to Cook. There is in this evidence enough to cause the court under proper instructions to permit the jury to find against Cook, but not enough to direct it to do so, which is practically what was done.
The judgment obtained by Mrs. Gillespie in so far as it affects Cook is reversed.