223 P. 217 | Wyo. | 1924
H. L. Garner, the plaintiff and respondent, sued the defendant and appellant H. H. Brown for the recovery of damages in the sum of $2945.90 alleged to have been caused to the person and property of plaintiff by the defendant Brown in negligently colliding with plaintiff’s car at the street intersection of Ninth Street and David Street in the city of Casper. The plaintiff recovered judgment for $240.00 and from that judgment defendant appeals.
I. Defendant claims that plaintiff’s petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, on the alleged ground that the acts of negligence of appellant are not stated. The petition alleges that the appellant drove his automobile, at the time in question, northward on David Street “in an improper, unlawful, negligent and reckless manner,” and that while so propelling it, in the manner aforesaid, he drove it into the automobile of plaintiff, causing the injuries of which complaint is made. The specific acts of negligence are not otherwise stated. The general rule, well supported by authority, is that negligence is a mixed question of law and fact; that hence a petition charging defendant with an act injurious to plaintiff, with a general allegation of negligence in the performance of the act, is sufficient to withstand a general demurrer and need not be made more specific as to such allegations of negligence in the absence of a motion for that purpose. No such motion was made in this case, and under the rule mentioned, the petition herein must be held sufficient.
2. Counsel for defendant further contends that the judgment herein is contrary to law, in that there is no evi-
3. It is also contended that the judgment is erroneous for the reason that the evidence fails to show that the defendant was negligent. The testimony in the record is sufficient to warrant the trial court in finding, among other things, the following facts:
On the morning of the accident in question, plaintiff drove eastward on Ninth Street in a ford automobile in a careful manner at the rate of about 12 miles an hour. Prior to reaching the intersection of said street with David Street
“The legislative act was not intended to provide an exclusively hard and fast rule, applicable to all hazards and in all situations, regardless of actual conditions, and thus liberate from responsibility one who by fortuitously adhering to the regulation may be otherwise reckless and indifferent to the situation of others lawfully exercising equal rights upon the highway.”
We find no error in the record and the judgment of the lower court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Affirmed.
NOTE — See 3 C. J. p. 880; 4 C. J. p. 920; 28 Cyc. pp. 37, 45, 47 (1925 Anno), 913, 914 (1925 Anno)