42 Del. 242 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1943
The declarations in these actions are substantially the same and will be considered as one. All of the counts are challenged by the demurrers in respect of the sufficiency of the allegations of special damages. It is alleged that the plaintiffs had incurred expenses in their efforts to be cured of injuries sustained through the defendant’s negligence, and the special damages are stated as follows: $500 for doctor’s bills; $100 for X-rays; $100 for medicines and medical supplies; $50 for nursing expenses; and $2,000 lost as wages in employment as a school teacher.
The defendant’s objection is that the allegations in respect of certain of the special damages are not sufficiently informative in that the names and places of residence of the physicians, X-ray specialists and nurses, and the place of employment as a school teacher are not stated. The plaintiff’s general argument seems to be that it would be unfair to require precision in detail on their part while the defendant may avail himself of indefiniteness of the general issue. In particular they insist that the physicians are their witnesses ; that the facts in their possession are matters of professional privilege not to be divulged except with their express sanction; and this being so they ask, How can knowledge of their names and residences be essential to the defendant ? As to the place of employment as a school teacher they are content with saying that the information would be of doubtful value in any event.
Much of the argument is irrelevant and some of it founded on a misconception. The requirements of certainty and particularity in alleging special damages and pleading in defense by way of the general issue stood side by side at the common law. Bullitt v. Delaware Bus Co., 7 W. W. Harr. (37 Del.) 62, 180 A. 519, in which the allega
The sufficiency of the fifth count is challenged on another ground. The count is based on 5632, Sec. 94 of the Revised Code, providing that the driver of an automobile shall not follow another vehicle more closely than is reasonable and prudent, having due regard to the speed of such vehicles and the traffic upon and condition of the highway. It appears that the plaintiff’s car, followed by the defendant’s truck, was proceeding in a northerly direction on a dual highway, and that the plaintiff’s car, while making a left turn from the north to the south lane of travel, was struck in the rear by the defendant’s truck. The negligence alleged is that the defendant’s tractor and trailer “followed the plaintiff’s automobile more closely than was reasonable and prudent, having due regard to the speed of the plaintiff’s automobile; that as a result the defendant’s servant was unable to avoid colliding with the plaintiff’s automobile when * * * it slowed down while' turning left into the aforesaid intersection.”
It is objected that the count is not sufficiently particular in its allegations as to the positions of the vehicles; and the argument is that the speed of the plaintiff’s car and the interval between the two vehicles should have been alleged, failing which the allegation of an unreasonably short space between the two vehicles is no more than a conclusion. In Lynam v. Hastings, 7 W. W. Harr. (37 Del.) 450, 185 A. 91, cited by the defendant, the count under attack was substan
The statute under consideration is directed to a particular act of negligence. The prohibition is against an imprudently close following of one vehicle by another. The language employed is descriptive of the offense, and, in itself, is reasonably informative. The speed of the vehicles and the interval between them were within the actual or imputed knowledge of the defendant. He is not left in any substantial doubt as to the precise nature of the negligence against which he must make defense. See O’Brien v. Wilmington Provision Co., 4 W. W. Harr. (34 Del.) 214,148 A. 294. The demurrer to the fifth count, in this respect, is overruled.