FEDERATED MILK PRODUCER‘S ASSOCIATION, INC., a corporation, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. STATEWIDE PLUMBING AND HEATING COMPANY, a corporation, Defendant and Appellant.
No. 9214.
Supreme Court of Utah.
Jan. 9, 1961.
358 P.2d 348 | 295
Hurd, Bayle & Hurd, Salt Lake City, for respondent.
WADE, Chief Justice.
Defendant, Statewide Plumbing and Heating Co., appeals from a judgment on a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff, Federated Milk Producers Association, Inc. for accidental damage to a large milk truck which turned over after running into a windrow of dirt piled by Statewide in laying a sewer on the east half of Redwood Road at Number 8708 South. The accident occurred after 2 a. m., before daylight, in the morning of June 13, 1958, while the truck was traveling north in its righthand traffic lane shortly after passing a southbound vehicle which dimmed its lights.
Defendant Statewide claims two grounds for reversal: (1) Plaintiff Fеderated‘s driver was negligent as a matter of law in driving the truck after dark at a speed at which the truck could not be stopped within the distance that substantial objects could be seen. (2) The court erred in commenting on the evidence in its jury instructions.
(1) Plaintiff was not negligent as a matter of law.
Plaintiff‘s truck was driven on Redwood Road from south of the intersection with 90th South Street north to about 8708 South where the accident occurred. It was a dark night. Every other utility pole on the west side of Redwood Road had a small electric light, and at 90th South a large luminated sign five feet long by 30 inches wide with the words, “Construction Zone” faced the northbound traffic on the southeast corner of
Contributory negligence as a matter of law relied upon by defendant1 is shown only when the evidence to that effect is so conclusive that when considered with all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to plaintiff it would be unreasоnable to find otherwise.2 The Dalley case rule on which defendant relies requires a showing from which “it must inevitably follow that plaintiff did not keep a lookout ahead, or * * * he * * * did not heed what he saw or he could not see the truck (windrow of dirt) because his lights were not such as were prescribed by law.”3 In many cases we have followed this rule4 but have often
The unseeability of substantial objects on the highway in time to avoid an accident may depend on many things other than inattention, faulty headlights, or failure to give heed to what was there to be seen. A sudden heavy smoke, fog, snow or rain storm, lightning or approaching headlights or a combination of some or all of these elements, coupled with the negligence of the other party, mаy make an accident unavoidable regardless of how alert and competent a driver is or how well equipped his car is with brakes, lights and other necessary appliances. The visibility of substantial objects mаy depend on their size, shape, color or whether they absorb or reflect light or blend with or stand out in contrast to the background. To be alert to all surrounding conditions, to have good eyesight, to have proрer headlights and brakes and to keep the vehicle under relatively safe control are all very important, but under some circumstances all of these things are not sufficient to enable a reasonably prudent driver to avoid an accident.
Here on a dark night while driving at a moderate rate of speed plaintiff‘s truck driver encountered the dimmed headlights of an approaching car which substantially in
Another question presented is whether the truck driver‘s failure to see the warning signs off the side of the road before the accident shows the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. This fact suggеsts that maybe with more attention to the road or a reduced speed or both, this accident might have been avoided. However, from a careful consideration of all of the surrounding facts and circumstances, and especially since there was no evidence of any immediate hazard near these signs, and the smaller signs nearest where the accident occurred were near the ground and on the side of thе road without too much light, establishes a reasonable basis for the jury‘s refusal to find the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence and refutes the suggestion that plaintiff was guilty of negligence as a matter of law.
(2) The trial court did nоt erroneously comment upon the evidence. Defendant contends that the court‘s instructions “that everyone who has driven an automobile in the nighttime, and every observant person who has ridden in an automobile in the nighttime, and has met an oncoming automobile with burning lights knows that the lights obscure objects behind them for a considerable distance before the automobile is reached until a time after its lights are passed; * * *” was a сomment on the evidence and an expression of the court‘s opinion of the facts contrary to Rule 51, U.R.C.P.
We recognize that a trial judge should not comment on the evidence or ex
Affirmed. Costs to respondent.
MCDONOUGH and CROCKETT, JJ., concur.
HENRIOD, Justice (concurring).
I concur, for one reason, thаt it is not clear whether the driver of plaintiff‘s truck saw or should have seen the two signs. One kerosene torch, I am satisfied, would not illuminate two signs which were 18” x 40” and off the highway, sufficiently to make them readily readable. The fact that a police officer could read them apparently was because of his headlights and not because of the torch. There is no indication as to the comparative strength of the officеr‘s headlights and those of the truck. Had the officer‘s headlights been on the bright beam and the truck‘s on dim, considerable variation in visibility on this dark night might prevail. I do not believe the jury should be charged with an imputation that because one person‘s headlights made visible an object on the side of a road on a dark night that the same would be true of another person‘s headlights. Furthermore it appears that the truckdriver had travelled this road periodically. It is significant that the trenching operation was moving south and it is reasonable to believe that a reasonable person may have believed it had not moved so far south and relied entirely on the torches that theretofore had warned of the south-shifting windrows, and that the fact of their absence on this particular night reasonably may have lulled the driver into a false sense of security that well might insulate him against contributory negligence in the jury‘s estimate.
CALLISTER, Justice (dissenting).
I dissent. The evidence is uncontradicted that the warning signs were posted and visible. The investigating officer, who approached the scene of the accident from thе
The driver of plaintiff‘s tank truck did not testify that the signs were not visible, but only that he did not remember having seen them.
It would seem that this failure to see that which was plainly there for any driver using minimal care to observe was negligence.1 A person must be held to have seen adequate signs on a highway which would warn the ordinarily prudent driver of highway conditions, so as to require him to govern the operation and speed of his motor vehicle accordingly.2
In the instant case, plaintiff‘s driver did not slacken the speed of the truck or exercise a greater degree of care than usual after passing the warning signs. He should have had the truck under such control that he could bring it to a stop befоre striking the pile of dirt.3
The plaintiff‘s driver either failed to look, or having looked, failed to see what he should have seen.
