96 Vt. 89 | Vt. | 1922
In the evening of November 13, 1920, the plaintiff was driving his automobile from Adamant to Montpelier. When he rounded the curve in front of the dwelling of Gr. E. Anderson in East Montpelier, the defendant’s Ford car was standing in the highway with its engine running and lights out. It was headed toward Adamant, and stood a little to its left of the middle of the road. When the plaintiff’s car completed the curve and its lights shone down the straight road, he discovered the defendant’s car, but thought it was coming toward him and acted accordingly. He took his foot off the accelerator, applied his foot brake, and turned out to his right. When he first saw the defendant’s car, he was about 133 feet from it, and was driving 18 or 20 miles an hour. As he turned out, he slowed down to 14 or 16 miles an hour, and being mindful of a bank which dropped off several feet on the right side of the road, he watched out for it lest he should turn out too far. When he reached a point 25 or 30 feet from the standing car, he discovered it was not moving and that a collision was imminent. He immediately applied his foot brake in an attempt to stop his car — applied it so vigorously that his rear wheels slid 'for a distance of eight feet or more. His car slowed down to 10 miles an hour, but did stop. It collided with the defendant’s ear, and was thrown over the bank and wrecked. This suit was brought to recover for the damages to his ear and the injuries to his person that resulted. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence below, a verdict was ordered for the defendant, and the plaintiff excepted.
Then, too, .some of the witnesses testified that they saw no one in the defendant’s car at or before the time of the collision. Of course this was not conclusive that there was no one then in the ear, but in the circumstances shown, the jury might think that if any one was in the Ford, some one in the plaintiff’s car would have seen him and conclude that the car in fact was unoccupied. So there was credible evidence tending to show a deliberate violation of the statute referred to.
Jiidgment reversed and cause remanded.