272 S.W. 718 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
Reversing.
On September 13, 1922, appellee left Morehead for Farmers in an automobile traveling the Midland Trail. About midways of the journey, this automobile was stopped for the purpose of making some adjustments upon it, and to that end it was parked close to the side of the road immediately behind two other machines likewise so parked, one behind the other. Opposite these machines and somewhat towards Morehead from the hindmost, was a group of men engaged in conversation. While waiting for the repairs on his machine, appellee joined these men and stayed with them until a horse, led by one of them, became frightened and started to back down the road. Appellee then left the group to return to his machine. At this juncture, appellant, driving an Overland automobile, also from Morehead to Farmers, came over the brow of a hill on the road about 300 yards distant from the parked machines and started to coast down to where these automobiles were. As she breasted the top of the hill, appellant sounded her horn, although some of appellee's witnesses did not hear it. Appellee, who was walking towards his machine on the side of the road opposite to where it was parked, admits that he saw appellant's automobile approaching him when it was some 300 yards away, and again when it was only 100 yards away, after which, although he walked a few feet further and then started to cross the road in its path, he never took the time or trouble to see where it was. He says that the reason he did not look again towards appellant's machine was because he thought, although he did not know, that her car had stopped. *317 There was nothing in the facts to justify this belief on his part, for the machine never stopped and it was obvious to appellee from the two observations which he did make that appellant's automobile was getting closer and closer to where he was. As appellee crossed the road to his machine, appellant's automobile, then but a few feet away from him, collided with him, but appellant stopped her car before the wheels passed over his body. All witnesses testified that appellant was going slow and the space within which she stopped her automobile shows that she had it under control. The court gave the jury the usual instructions concerning the duty of the appellant to keep a lookout ahead, to sound her horn, to have the car under reasonable control, and to exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring the appellee, and also the usual contributory negligence instruction. On these instructions, and the customary ones covering the measure of damages and definitions of negligence and ordinary care, the jury found a verdict in favor of appellee in the sum of $500.00, from which appellant appeals.
Under the closely analogous case of Louisville Railway Co. v. Basler,
However, despite appellee's contributory negligence, the court committed no error in overruling appellant's motion for a peremptory instruction because there was a scintilla of evidence that the appellant might under the "last clear chance" doctrine have avoided the accident. This scintilla arises out of the testimony of two witnesses who were riding with appellant, to the effect that some 15 to 30 feet from the point of collision one of these witnesses yelled, "Look out, you are going to hit a man," and the further evidence that appellant could then have sounded her horn in time for appellee *318
to jump back out of her path, or appellant could within that space have stopped her car and so avoided the accident. Although this is true, yet this case was not submitted to the jury on the "last clear chance" doctrine, but on the instructions above noted. On the case as thus submitted, the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence, because the court told the jury that if appellee's negligence contributed to the accident, as we have seen it did as a matter of law, they should find a verdict for the appellant. This the jury did not do. No matter how erroneous the instructions may be, it is still the duty of the jury to follow them. Lynch v. Snead Architectural Iron Works,
Judgment reversed.