294 S.W.2d 541 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1956
In this action for personal injury and property damages appellee, Betty Jane Veach, recovered from appellant, Fayette County, $6,343.97. - The action grew out of an accident alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the operator of appellant’s fire truck when it collided with appellee’s car. A reversal is sought on the following grounds .*
(1) The court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for appellant (a) because appellee failed to establish that the driver of the fire- truck was negligent or that his negligence was the proximate cause of the accident, and (b) ■ because it was shown appellee was guilty of contributory negligence.
(2) The court erred in allowing one of appellee’s witnesses, after the evidence was all in, to testify that he made a statement different from that shown in the record as his testimony when first on the stand.
(3) The court erred in its instructions to the jury.
(4) The court erred in failing to grant a new trial on the basis of the alleged misconduct of one of the jurors who of his own volition visited and viewed the scene of the accident during a noon recess.
Appellant’s duties and privileges in driving an authorized emergency vehicle, such as fire apparatus, are set forth in KRS 189.080(2), 189.320 and 189.390(6), which in substance state that such a vehicle has the right of way and is exempt from speed limitations when answering an emergency call if it flashes a red light visible under normal atmospheric condition 500 feet to the front and sounds a signal ' audible a similar distance when it is necessary to warn others of the approach of the vehicle. These same sections provide that the operator of the emergency vehicle is not relieved of his duty to drive with due regard for the safety of all persons using the streets.
The witnesses were in accord that the red light on top of the fire' truck was flashing but the evidence is conflicting as to whether or not the siren was in operation just prior to the accident and, if.it was, whether it could be heard for a distance of 500 feet from the intersection, as required by KRS 189.080(2). Appellant maintains there was no adequate basis in the evidence for a finding that the siren was not being . properly sounded. The three firemen who were riding the fire , truck testified it was audible for the prescribed 500 feet. Victor • 'Ruble, a witness for appellant, stated he .heard; it-, at a position ■ 300 feet away. Harold -.Traugott, who alsq testified, in .appellant’s behalf, declared he heard it at •.a similar distance, but to .some extent his testimony was impeached by a pri.or statement that he had not heard it until he was 25 feet from it. Appellee testified she did not see or hear the fire truck until her car was hit. She also presented several witnesses to bolster her contention that no signal was being sounded just before the vehicles ran together. One of these was a block away, with his car motor going at that . time. Another was- two blocks distant and this person admitted his hearing was not normal. These two witnesses merely testified they did not hear a siren. However, a third witness of hers, Louis Bannister, was on the corner at the intersection where the collision took place. On his initial appearance on the stand he, too, apparently testified he did not hear any siren but on recall stated unequivocally that the siren was not audible when the fire truck entered the. intersection.
In view of this evidence, was a case made out for the jury? We believe there was. We have many times written, one of the most recent cases on the subject being Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Galloway’s Adm’x, Ky., 267 S.W.2d 90, that purely negative testimony is inadequate in the face of positive evidence to create a jury issue. In other words, applying this principle to the facts under consideration, testimony to the effect that a siren was not heard is not enough to overcome positive proof that a siren was being sounded. Nevertheless, negative evidence of this type coupled with slight positive testimony has been held sufficient to off-set contradictory positive testimony and to sustain a jury verdict that no sound was being given. Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Ratliff’s Adm’r, 260 Ky. 380, 85 S.W.2d 1006; Nashvilld, C. & St. L. Ry. v. Byars, 233 Ky. 309, 25 S.W.2d 733. (Reversed on other grounds.) From the evidence introduced, we conclude there was’‘ample evidence to support’.appellee’s theory, that the siren was not being sounded or, if it was, that it was. being sounded only . intermitteptly and weakly. A jury determination that the siren was sounded in such a fashion,
It is alsp appellant’s contention that it was entitled to a directed verdict as a matter of law because appellee was guilty of contributory negligence. Appel-lee admits that her car did not swerye or ■ slow down just before the impact. She argues she became aware o.f the fire truck’s presence and was hit “all at the same time.” . However, there.was other testimony of hers .that she-'first'noticed -the fire truck at a point just north of .the crosswalk. on. her ■ side of • tfye .intersection, apparently some 50 feet from., the'point of collision. - Even ¿accepting the- yersion • that she saw the fire truck ,While. she was still north pf. the intersection, it .would- nevertheless seem to be, a .jury .question whether .she acted . reasonably, in the emergency Or whether in any event she could have avoided, the accident .while traveling such a- . short distance at a.speed of 25 to 30 miles per hour, the estimated rate she was moving. Her testimony that she saw the truck when she was just north of the intersection, we believe, does not appear irreconcilable with her statement that she saw it and .was hit simultaneously. - •. ■
Appellant vigorously insists the court erred, when it permitted appellee to recall her witness, Louis. Bannister, and query him about the answer he had already -made tó a certain question. After both sides had concluded their evidence and while the instructions were being prepared, a dispute arose among’- counsel on both sides as to the reply given by Bannister to a particular question put to him during the trial. This witness was interrogated, “Was there a siren going on the fire truck?” and the court reporter’s stenographic notes showed he answered, “I don’t know, I didn’t hear it.” Counsel for appellee maintained the reporter misunderstood Bannister’s reply to this question, which reply was, this counsel argued, “No, I didn’t hear it.” The trial judge resolved the controversy by allowing counsel for appellee to recall this witness and to inquire of- him what his answer had been. This ruling was strenuously objected to by appellant’s counsel. The witness, when asked the. same question, stated-in positive ■ terms that thp siyen was not being sounded when the two vehicles met.
Did the . court abuse its discretion when it ruled under- the circumstances that Bannister could be recalled as a witness "to clarjfy his testimony on the point raised? We conclude there was no abuse of discretion. CR 43.02(3) describes the. order in which the respective parties shall present their proof and provides in part. that, “the order of proof shall be regulated by the court so as to expedite the trial and, enable the tribunal to obtain a clear view 'of the whole evidence.” CR 43.02(4), which relates primarily to the introduction of rebuttal testimony after each side has produced its evidence in chief, reads: “The parties will then be confined . to rebutting evidence, unless the court, for good reasons in . furtherance of justice, permits them to offer evidence in chief.” It is apparent from the plain language of these Rules that the court may digress from ,the traditional order of hearing proof if such is necessary to “enable the tribunal to obtain a clear view of the whole evidence” "and'if such action is “for good 'reasons in furtherance'of justice”.’
Coming now to the instructions, appellant’s-first, complaint is leveled at section, 2 -of “Instruction N,o. 1’.’. given hy .the court. -However, we note that the-first part of section 3 of Instruction A offered by appellant is in almost exactly the same wording, except that the order of the language is reversed. For this reason appellant cannot say it did not have the jury instructed in the manner it requested. Furthermore, the basis of appellant’s objection in respect to this instruction is
-Finally, appellant urges as a ground for reversal the alleged misconduct of a juror who, during- recess, - supposedly went to the site of the accident, inspected it and. upon his return communicated his views about the matter to the' other jurors. The only evidence presented in support of this contention was an affidavit- of one of appellant’s attorneys which recited that he was “reliably informed and believes, by reason' of which he avers”, in substance, that one of the jurors (the name is not disclosed) had- visited- the scene of the accident and' had examined it, and upon his return to -the jury room had “voiced his opinion, reported his conclusions and persuaded and overreached-the'other members of the - jury.”' Appellee moved to strike this affidavit. Upon a hearing by the court, no additional proof being'offered, the motion to strike was sustained. The affidavit under- scrutiny contained nothing but pure hearsay, or,', stated ' differently, set forth only a rumor which was never verified; consequently, the court’s action in striking it from the record wus justified. Appellant lays great emphasis on the fact that appellee failed to controvert this charge, but we agree with appellee that there was nothing to controvert.
Wherefore,- for the reasons given; the judgment is affirmed.