62 Colo. 528 | Colo. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the ■court.
This action is for damages resulting from a colli.sion between a motorcycle driven by plaintiff, and an automobile driven by defendant, at the intersection of Twenty-sixth Avenue and Downing Street, in the City of Denver. The western continuation of Twenty-sixth Ave
From the testimony it appears the accident occurred in the evening — it was dark at the corner, and that the defendant’s automobile was a little to the left of the center of the street, and had no headlight burning, although the side lamps of the machine were lighted. It also appears from plaintiff’s testimony that when he entered Downing Street from Twenty-sixth Avenue he neither looked or turned to the right, as it was Ms duty to do if he desired to continue westward along Twenty-sixth Avenue, but that he looked straight ahead, without turning either to the right or left. Although the accident occurred between six and seven o’clock in the evening, the plaintiff testifies that he could have seen an automobile seventy-five feet away, but that he did not look to the north, until the automobile was within five feet of him. Another witness testifies that he himself saw the automobile a block away from the point where the collision occurred.
In Colorado Springs v. Allen, 55 Colo. 391, 135 Pac. 790, it is held that contributory negligence is not a sufficient defense unless it appears that the contributory act was the proximate cause of the injury. When, how
The testimony is conclusive that, had Livingston looked to the north when he reached the intersection of Twenty-sixth Avenue and Downing Street, as the municipal ordinance required him to do, if he desired to continue westward along Twenty-sixth Avenue, he could not have failed to observe the approach of defendant’s automobile, and so have avoided the collision. The ordinance required the defendant to look to the right, and it gave him the right of way across Twenty-sixth Avenue. It appears that he must have been looking to the right as he crossed Twenty-sixth Avenue, otherwise he would have seen the plaintiff as the latter turned into Downing Street. In any event, no negligence on the part of the defendant will relieve the plaintiff from the positive duty of looking to the right before he crossed Downing Street at Twenty-sixth Avenue. He was bound to know that any vehicle proceeding south along Downing Street had the right of way. He made no effort to discover whether or not there was any vehicle approaching. His failure to do so is a contributive omission so proximately connected with the injury complained of that but for such omission the injury could not have occurred.
In the several cases cited by counsel for plaintiff in error there were doubts as to the commission of the several acts of contributive negligence, and these doubts were properly left to be solved by the jury. But when, as in the case at bar, the facts are not in dispute, and clearly establish negligence on the part of the plaintiff, it is the duty of the court to so declare as a matter of law. Colorado & Southern Ry. v. Reynolds, 51 Colo. 231,
In Fairmount Cemetery Association v. Davis, 4 Colo. App. 570, 36 Pac. 911, the language- used seems particularly applicable to the case at bar:
“The question of negligence is a mixed one of law and fact. Where the facts are disputed, or of doubtful character, the question must be submitted to the jury under the instructions of the court; but where there is no controversy as to the facts, and from these it clearly appears what course a person of ordinary prudence will pursue under the circumstances, the question of negligence is purely one of law. ’ ’
The rule is again laid down in Jackson v. Crilly, 16 Colo. 103, 26 Pac. 331:
“But where the facts and inferences therefrom are undisputed, where the precise measure of duty is determinite — the same under all circumstances — where a rule of duty in a given exigency may be certified and accurately defined, the question is for the court and not for the jury.”
In Headley v. Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Company, supra, at page 505 [154 Pac. 733], it is said:
“Indeed, it is elementary that if in a given case it appears that the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty to use due care, that he violated that duty, and that the plaintiff by reason thereof suffered an injury, the plaintiff nevertheless, cannot maintain his cause of action, if his own conduct was not that of a reasonably prudent and careful man, and such conduct contributed in some measure to bring about the injury sustained. Colo. Cent. R. R. Co. v. Holmes, 5 Colo. 197; C. R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Crisman, 19 Colo. 30, 34 Pac. 286; Westerkamp v. C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 41 Colo. 290, 92 Pac. 687; Liutz v. Denver City Tram. Co., 43 Colo. 58, 95 Pac. 600.
Prom the testimony which plaintiff himself gave it appears that, on entering Downing Street he failed to look either way, and it also appears therefrom that his view was Unobstructed. Had his vision been in any manner cut off, or interfered with, or had he looked, or otherwise attempted to avoid injury, then the question might have been one of fact for the jury. But he failed totally to observe, by not looking to 'the right, the duty imposed upon him by positive law, as set forth in the ordinance. In addition he violated the law of self preservation, founded on instinct, by which anyone driving on a public street is required at all times to use the faculties with which nature has endowed him, to avoid danger. Upon the undisputed facts it is manifest that plaintiff cannot, and ought not to, recover, since plainly the injury sustained resulted from his own failure to exercise that degree of care for his own protection which both the law
Judgment affirmed.
Decision en banc.