53 P.2d 472 | Kan. | 1936
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action for damages for personal injuries sustained in an automobile casualty alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. The jury answered special questions and returned a verdict for plaintiff for $8,000. The defendant has appealed. We shall speak of the parties as they appeared in the trial court.
Defendant and her husband, who was an employee of the telephone company and whose work had taken him away from home that day, lived in an apartment at Caldwell. A Mrs. Randall and her husband lived in an apartment on the same floor. The two women were good friends and spent much time together. A Mr. Moore also lived in the same apartment house, and was well acquainted and on friendly terms with defendant and her husband and with Mr. and Mrs. Randall. The afternoon of February 15 defendant and Mrs. Randall were spending the time together, and sometime in the afternoon concluded to drive to Wellington, twenty-eight miles, and back, simply for the ride. Defendant had a Buick coupé, 1928 model, which she drove. They drove to Wellington, and without getting out of the car there turned and drove back to Caldwell at a speed of 35 to 40 miles per hour. They got back to their apartments about seven o’clock. As they were coming into Caldwell from the east defendant had the lights burning on her car. Near the S curve they met a car coming from the west. Defendant was driving and kept close watch of the black center line of the highway. Neither the defendant nor Mrs. Randall saw the plaintiff, nor did they notice any impact on their car, or anything else to indicate that they had struck anything or anybody. After being at their apartment perhaps fifteen or twenty minutes they went down to defendant’s car to go to a restaurant for supper. As Mrs. Randall
The jury answered special questions as follows:
“1. At what rate of speed was the defendant’s automobile moving immediately prior to the accident? A. Forty miles per hour.
“2. Did the defendant see the plaintiff immediately prior to the accident? A. No.
“3. Where did the accident occur with reference to the edge of the paved slab?' A. Shoulder close to edge of slab.
“4. Were there two lighted headlights on defendant’s automobile at the time of the accident? A. Yes.
“5. What, if any, negligence do you find as against the plaintiff? A. None.
*38 “6. What, if any, negligence do you find as against the defendant? A. Failure to anticipate presence of pedestrians on the highway and to keep a lookout for pedestrians.”
The answer to the seventh question itemized the amount of the verdict.
Defendant’s motion to set aside the answers to special questions 3, 5, 6 and 7 for the reason that they were not sustained by the evidence was overruled. The answer to special question No. 3 apparently was not construed as a finding that defendant’s car was driven off the slab and onto the shoulder of the highway. If it were so construed there is no evidence in the record to sustain it, and it should have been set aside. If it is construed as meaning that the casualty occurred near the edge of the slab where it meets the shoulder of the highway, it is sustained by the evidence.
Appellant further contends that the answers to special questions 5 and 6 are not founded upon any substantial evidence, but are based upon speculation and conjecture; and further, that the answer to question No. 6, as it applies to the facts in this case, is not a finding of negligence of defendant which will support the verdict. We find no evidence in the record that defendant failed to keep a lookout for pedestrians, or to anticipate their presence on the highway. Appellant argues this finding of the jury could be arrived at only by arguing backwards, thus: Plaintiff was struck by defendant’s automobile; defendant did not see him prior to the time she struck him, therefore she failed to anticipate his presence on the highway and to keep a proper lookout for him. Plaintiff answers this argument by saying that even if the finding were arrived at in that way it is logical. But that does not necessarily follow. It would have been just as reasonable and as logical under the evidence for the jury to have found that when plaintiff, walking along the shoulder of the highway, heard defendant’s car approaching from behind him he turned, faced the south, as he testified, and stepped up on the edge of the pavement, as he testified was his custom, and stood or leaned so near the car as to be struck by it.
In support of the view that the answer to question No. 6 is a finding of negligence of defendant upon which the verdict in this case could be based, quotations are made from several of our cases respecting the duty of the driver of .an automobile to anticipate pedestrians or other vehicles on the highway and to keep a lookout for them. The earliest of these cited is Arrington v. Horner, 88 Kan.
“The driving of a motor vehicle against a person standing upon the highway, where the pedestrian was seen by the driver, and there was ample time and opportunity to pass or to avoid striking the person, will ordinarily constitute negligence of the driver.” (Syl. f 3.)
The court also held:
“Pedestrians and drivers of motor vehicles have equal rights upon a highway, but each must use as reasonable care as the circumstances require and exercise his right with due regard to the rights of others using the highway.” (Syl. H 1.)
The case before us is readily distinguished from any of these cases cited and relied upon by the plaintiff. Here defendant did not see plaintiff, nor did she have any knowledge that he was walking along the shoulder of the paved portion of the highway; neither did she drive off the paved portion of the highway. His clothing was dark, and he was walking with his head down in the collar of his topcoat. He was on the shoulder near the right-hand side of the paved portion, going with the traffic on that side of the pavement, instead of being on the other side of the paved portion going against the traffic, where both he and the driver of the vehicle could see each other more plainly.
Defendant testified that about the time when her car must have come in contact with plaintiff she was meeting and passing a car from the opposite direction on the S curve, and that she was watching closely the black mark in the center of the pavement. She was asked how far she could see the mark with her lights. She disclaimed any judgment of distances, but being pressed answered affirmatively when she was asked if she could see it twenty feet ahead of her. She did not know whether she could see it a greater distance or not. Plaintiff argues from this that defendant’s lights were not good enough to enable her to see objects ahead of her in the highway a sufficient distance to enable her to stop. We understand her
In Whiteker v. Wichita Rld. & Light Co., 125 Kan. 683, 265 Pac. 1103, it was held:
“A finding of negligence cannot rest on mere conjecture, but must be established by competent proof.” (Syl. HI.)
See, also, Beeler v. Railway Co., 107 Kan. 522, 192 Pac. 741; Norman v. Railway Co., 101 Kan. 678, 168 Pac. 830, and A. T. & S. F. Rly. Co. v. Toops, 281 U. S. 351, reversing Toops v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Rly. Co., 128 Kan. 189, 277 Pac. 57.
From a careful examination of the record in this case we are forced to the conclusion that the verdict in favor of plaintiff is predi
It is so ordered.