160 P. 117 | Utah | 1916
The plaintiff sued the defendant to recover damages for personal injuries which he alleged he suffered through its negligence. The ease was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.
The plaintiff has assigned numerous errors relating to alleged erroneous rulings of the court during the progress of the trial and upon alleged errors committed in charging the jury. The assignments are grouped under nine heads, and we shall, without following their order, consider such as are deemed material.
The controlling facts, briefly stated, are as follows: On the 15th day of February, 1911, the defendant, while engaged in conducting an automobile business in Salt Lake City, wa3 transferring two automobiles from the railroad station in the western part of the city to its storehouse or garage located in the central part of the city, and perhaps one-half or two-thirds of a mile from the station. The two automobiles were being transported by being attached to each other and to a live one by means of ropes. The ropes were about sixteen feet in length, and the space between the automobiles, when attached as aforesaid, was about twelve feet, or, perhaps, a little more. Plaintiff’s evidence upon that point was that they were farther apart, but the jury was authorized to take the defendant’s evidence which made it the distance just stated. A driver or chauffeur was in charge of the first or live car, and there was also a chauffeur steering each one of the two dead ones. The three men aforesaid left the railroad station,- with the cars about five minutes after six o ’clock p. m. and while proceeding on their way up town to defendant’s garage, on the south side of Second South Street, at a point about two hundred feet east of Main Street, the plaintiff, in attempting to p.ass be
It is, however, strenuously insisted that the court erred in refusing to charge the jury that the. defendant was negligent as a matter of law in not providing the two dead cars with lights as prescribed by the statute in force when the accident in question occurred. Chapter 113, Laws Utah 1909, Section 4, subd. 2, then in force, so far as material here, provided:
"Every motor vehicle while in use on a public highway shall be * * * so constructed as to exhibit, during the period from one hour after sunset and one hour before sunrise, two lamps showing white lights visible within a reasonable distance in the direction towards which such vehicle is proceeding, and also a red light visible in the reverse direction. ’ ’
As we have seen, the plaintiff contends the accident oecur-red-more than one hour after sunset, while the defendant contends that it occurred less than that time thereafter. Plaintiff’s counsel, however, insist that inasmuch as the evidence respecting the time the accident occurred was conflicting, he was entitled to an instruction in conformity with his evidence. As hereinbefore pointed out, the first or live car was provided with sufficient lights, but the dead cars were not. Did the statute apply to the dead cars? We think not. The statute applied to cars only “while in use on a public highway.” It is manifest to our minds that it was the intention of the Legislature in adopting the statute to limit its provisions, to such cars only as were actually being used on the public
In concluding this opinion we desire to say that the jury no doubt were impressed with the fact that the plaintiff, in hurrying to reach his destination, a cafe, deliberately passed between two of the moving ears, and that he did so in spite of the warnings of the chauffeurs; that in stepping on the rope by which the two cars were attached he lost his balance and fell immediately in front of the front wheel of the rear car; that under the circumstances defendant’s employees stopped the cars as soon as they could be stopped; and that the plaintiff’s carelessness, and not that of the defendant, was the proximate cause of the injury. That such was the jury’s conclusion, is, we think, made manifest from the evidence and the court’s charge. The court in its charge to the jury followed the principles which we held apply to those who are using the public streets in the cases of Spiking v. Con. R. & P. Co., 33
Upon the whole record we are constrained to hold that the judgment should prevail. The judgment is therefore affirmed, with costs to respondent.