111 S.W.2d 657 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1937
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *208 Affirming.
John Hauser, William Craig, and Helen Tanner brought separate suits against the Public Service Company of Indiana to recover for personal injuries. The cases were tried together, and at the conclusion of the evidence for plaintiffs the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. Plaintiffs appeal.
State street is one of the main thoroughfares leading into New Albany, Ind. There is a bridge which is a part of the street over Falling Run Creek. There is a slight curve in State street north of the bridge, and what is described by the witnesses as a jog in the car tracks. The curve begins 90 feet north of the bridge and runs north, curving to the east over a 70-foot curve for about 3 feet. From the point where the curve begins the street car tracks run in a straight line to a gasoline station south of the bridge, a distance of about 325 feet. The paved roadway was about 40 feet in width to a point a short distance north of the creek. The street is narrower as it approaches the bridge, and is about 30 feet in width between the bridge railings. The west rail of the car track is 13 feet 6 inches from the west side of the bridge, and the east rail of the car track 15 feet from the east rail of the bridge. South of the bridge the distance of the west rail of the car track to the west curb or gutter is 15 feet 4 inches. In addition to this, the gutter itself is from 4 to 5 feet wide.
Hauser, Craig, and Miss Tanner were friends and lived in Louisville. On the day of the accident they went in Hauser's car to the home of a man by the name of Egler at St. Mary's, Ind. After remaining there a while they started for Louisville. They reached New Albany about 8 o'clock. Hauser was driving and Miss Tanner was seated between him and Craig. On reaching a point about 190 feet south of the bridge there was a head-on collision between the automobile and a street car of the Public Service Company of Indiana, and the occupants of the car were all injured.
The main question is, whether there was sufficient evidence of negligence to take the cases to the jury? Appellants insist that the case should have gone to the jury on excessive speed, failure to sound the gong, *209 insufficient lights on the street car, and the negligence of the motorman leaving his post of duty.
There was no attempt to prove the law of Indiana, where the accident occurred, and in the absence of any proof on the subject it will be presumed that the common law prevails there and it is the same as the common law of Kentucky. Louisville
Nashville Railroad Company v. Southern Railway Company,
But the occupants of the car say that they did not hear the gong sounded, and one witness says that it was not sounded, and it is claimed that the case should have gone to the jury on that question. We have ruled that, although an automobile and a street car have equal rights in the street, the street car's path of travel is limited to the track, and an automobile may be turned from its course. Consequently, when the motorman observes an automobile approaching where there is ample room for the automobile to pass, he may act on the assumption that before reaching a place of danger the automobile will turn aside and pass without injury. We have also ruled that the duty to sound the gong is for the protection of those using cross streets, and those who are so placed that they do not see the approaching car, and not for those who are approaching the street car on the same street. Louisville I. R. Co. v. Bedford's Administrator,
We come next to the question of lights. It will not be necessary to set forth the evidence concerning *210
the confusion of lights on the street, as counsel for appellant very properly concedes that no recovery can be had on that account. Public Service Company of Indiana v. Schneider's Adm'r,
It is true that the credibility of the witnesses is for the jury, and that as to the amount of evidence necessary to take a case to the jury the "scintilla" rule prevails, but that rule requires that the evidence be of relevant consequence, possessed of the quality of proof, and having fitness to induce conviction. Clark v. Young's Ex'x,
But it is said that the case should have gone to the jury on the ground that the motorman was negligent in leaving his post of duty and failing to exercise ordinary care to stop his car and avoid the collision. The basis of this contention is the evidence of Harvey McCormack, who testified that when he got over there the motorman was standing a few feet back in the car, and who also said that he did not see the motorman run from his post, but the motorman was back in the car when he got there. This evidence does not tend in the least to show that the motorman had left his post of duty. The witness was several feet away, and necessarily a few seconds elapsed between the collision and the time of his arrival on the scene. In the meantime the motorman may have stepped back and have gone to the place where he was seen. Then, too, it must not be overlooked that the motorman had the right to assume that the approaching automobile would turn out of the pathway of the street car, and was not required to act until it became reasonably apparent that the driver of the automobile was unaware of the approach of the street car, and in the circumstances here presented it was then too late to avoid the collision.
There is the further contention that the court erred in refusing to permit three witnesses to testify to a previous accident near the same place where the accident in this case occurred, and in refusing to permit Roy Darneal to testify that he requested the defendants to put a brighter light or more light on his street cars. If the recovery had been sought on the ground that the accident was due to the physical conditions prevailing at the place of the accident, evidence of a prior accident due to such conditions might be admissible for the purpose *213 of showing appellee's knowledge of the conditions. But that is not the situation. Recovery was sought on the ground of negligent operation of the street car, and clearly the evidence of a prior accident that might have been due to the contributory negligence of others who were injured was not admissible for the purpose of showing negligence in this case.
It follows that the peremptory was proper.
Judgment affirmed.