336 P.2d 779 | Utah | 1959
Plaintiff recovered judgment for $860 for damages caused his car when it sideswiped another car and veered across the highway into defendant’s truck, which was stopped alongside the road. It is regrettable, from plaintiff’s point of view at least, that we can see no basis upon which the judgment can be justified.
Upon special interrogatories, the jury found the defendant negligent; but also found the plaintiff negligent in causing the collision. This would ordinarily settle the matter with finality because one cannot recover for an injury caused by his own negligence, even though the negligence of another may have also contributed to cause it. But a complication exists here because the court also submitted the case to the jury under the doctrine of last clear chance, upon which the jury found that the defendant had the last clear chance to avoid the collision. This, if justified, would support the judgment notwithstanding plaintiff’s negligence.
On November 17, 1957, just before 6 a. m. the plaintiff left his home in Park City to go to work in Salt Lake. It was dark and the road was made slick by an inch or
The jury’s finding that the plaintiff was driving too fast for existing conditions seems patently correct. Notwithstanding this, plaintiff insists that he should be permitted to recover, relying on the case of Beckstrom v. Williams,
Should we accept the other aspects of the plaintiff’s argument, there would still be no basis to find that defendant had a clear chance to avoid the accident. There must be, as the phrase implies, a fair and clear chance, and not a mere possibility that one might have avoided the accident “by the skin of his teeth.” It would have required unusual perspicacity, if not outright prescience, for the defendant to have presaged that an accident of this character was going to happen on the basis of a quick analysis of the factors involved. As indicated above, it would require him to assume that the plaintiff would continue to be negligent, and based thereon to realize the approaching danger in time to have dimmed his lights, coupled with the further assumption of a correct reaction on the plaintiff’s part to arrest his speed and guide his car properly to avert the collision. Such conjecture does not satisfy the requirement of last clear chance because it must exist with at least reasonable certainty.
The doctrine of last clear chance is based upon the humanitarian principle that one who negligently injures another cannot escape liability merely because the
Reversed. Costs to defendant (appellant).
. Graham v. Johnson, 109 Utah 346, 166 P.2d 230; see also eases cited in footnote 2, Beckstrom v. Williams, 3 Utah 2d 210, 282 P.2d 309.
. 3 Utah 2d 210, 282 P.2d 309.
. Pollari v. Salt Lake City, 111 Utah 25, 176 P.2d 111.