This appeal is from an order overruling a demurrer to respondent’s complaint. The demurrer specified that the -complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The comрlaint alleged that, on February 14, 1926, at 1:15 a. m., .while the plaintiff was -crossing Phillips avenue in the city of S-ioux Falls, betweеn Tenth and Eleventh streets, the defendant struck with his automobile and ran over plaintiff, thereby causing great bodily injury; thаt the injuries were directly caused- by the negligence and carelessness of defendant in driving the car at аn excessive rate of speed, to wit, 40 miles an hour, in failing to give any warning of his approach, in failing to have the lights on his automobile lit, and in being on the wrong side of the street traveling south, to wit, on the east side of the strеet; that the injuries were sustained through no fault or negligence on the part of the plaintiff, but wholly on account of the carelessness and negligence of the defendant. The complaint further alleges the рarticular physical injuries received, and asks damages therefor.
Appellant contends that the complaint admits an act on the part of the plaintiff commonly known as “jay-walking”; that this,
Appellant points to Culhane v. Waterhouse, 51 S. D. 584,
But this court did not hold, in Culhane v. Waterhouse, that merely standing in a ditch at the side оf a road was negligence as matter of law. That opinion will disclose, among others, the following additional facts: The -ditch was 16 feet wide, and sloped gradually from a graveled’highway 24 feet wide. From the bottom оf the ditch to the top o-f the road was about 20 inches. The- party injured was standing at the left of a car, whiсh was facing the oncoming car. She could not be seen by the driver of the oncoming car, becausе of the darkness of the night and the shining headlights of the standing car. Because the standing car faced
The complaint demurred to pleads no ordinance prohibiting a pedestrian from crossing Phillips avenue, nor are we cited in appellant’s brief to any statute having a like effect. There is аuthority to the effect that, in the absence of prohibitory statute or ordinance, a pedestrian mаy cross a city street at any place, unless so dangerous that no reasonably prudent person 'wоuld attempt to cross it, being bound, in so doing, however, to exercise care commensurate with the incrеased danger incident to being at a place where pedestrians do not usually go. Berry, Automobiles (5th Ed.) р. 281, § 339; Remington v. Machamer,
“A pedestrian has a right to cross a street diagonally in the middle of the block, subjeсt to the duty of making reasonable use of his senses in order to observe impending danger, and whether he is in the .exercise of ordinary care in so doing is usually for the jury.” Blashfield, Cyc. Auto. Law, § 15, vol. 2, p. 1043; Fox v. Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co., 84 N. J. Law, 726,
“There is no rule of statute or ordinance which prohibits ‘jay walking,’ and it therefore is not negligence per se. Whether or not it would 'be negligence under a given state of facts is a question of fact for the jury.” Gett v. Pacific Gas & El. Co.,
We are of the opinion that the complaint does not allege any facts from which it necessarily follows, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.
The order of the trial court is affirmed.
