This is a tort action in which plaintiff seeks to recover for injuries suffered by her minor daughter when she was struck by an automobile operated by the defendant, Ethel Chagnon. Trial by jury, with a view, resulted in a verdict for the defendant. Plaintiff excepted to the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury concerning the provisions of RSA 262-A:35. The questions of law raised by plaintiffs exception were reserved and transferred by Loughlin, J.
On May 18, 1974, the defendant was operating her automobile on Route 152 in Nottingham. It was a clear day and the road was dry. As her vehicle climbed a hill, defendant’s view was partially obstructed by a large embankment on the right-hand side of the road. The embankment was situated at the crest of the hill, one-and-a-half feet from the road. Upon reaching the crest of the hill, defendant observed the three Dupont children, Debbie, age 7, Linda, age 6, and Michele, age 3, standing on the right-hand shoulder. They were approximately fifty to sixty feet away from her vehicle on an unimproved shoulder that served as a drainage run for surface water. It is clear that the children were not standing on the paved portion of the roadway at the time defendant saw them. The jury could have found that the children were anywhere from one-and-a-half to ten feet from the pavement, depending upon whose testimony they accepted. Upon observing the children, the defendant, traveling at a speed of twenty-five to thirty miles per hour in a forty miles per hour zone, removed her foot from the accelerator. As her vehicle passed the children, Michele, in an apparent attempt to cross the roadway, suddenly ran into the side of the defendant’s vehicle. Michele suffered severe facial lacerations and permanent scarring.
In the charge, the trial judge properly instructed the jury that “[n]egligence... is the want of due care. It is the lack of such care as a reasonably, prudent person would exercise under like or similar’ circumstances.” It is plaintiffs contention, however, that the trial judge’s failure to tailor his instructions to the jury to the provisions of RSA 262-A:35 was reversible error. That statute provides that “every driver of a vehicle shall exercise due care to avoid colliding with any pedestrian upon any roadway and shall give warning by sounding the horn when necessary and shall exercise proper precaution upon observing any child . . . upon a roadway.”
Plaintiff argues that RSA 262-A:35 imposes a higher standard of care than the common law duty of care as to which the jury was
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instructed. Whether this argument has merit is unclear.
See Leonteos v. Haase,
It is a well-established principle of statutory construction that all words used should be given their ordinary meaning unless a different meaning is indicated from the context in which they are used.
Londonderry v. Faucher,
Inasmuch as our statute was adopted from the Uniform Vehicle Code, it is important to consider the definition of the word “roadway” as used by the drafters of that code.
See Sagendorph v. Marvin,
“It is not our function to speculate upon any supposed intention [of the legislature which is] not appropriately expressed in the act itself.”
Ahern v. Laconia Country Club Inc.,
Exceptions overruled.
