176 So. 2d 324 | Miss. | 1965
This is a personal injury action brought by appellant, Bobby Ray Ramage, against appellee, Billy Ray Kelly, in the Circuit Court of Calhoun County. The appeal is from a jury verdict and judgment for Kelly. The case involves determining whether the verdict is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence, and whether certain instructions granted appellee constitute reversible error.
The jury was justified in finding in favor of Kelly. Reviewing the verdict, we must consider the facts and reasonable inferences from them in the light most favorable to appellee. The automobile collision occurred just inside the east corporate limits of the Town of Vardaman. The Vanlandinghams had a home approximately 100 feet inside the town’s eastern limits, and situated on the south side of State Highway 8. Ramage and his wife drove to the Vanlandingham home around 7:00 p.m. on a clear night in December 1963, in Damage’s pickup truck. Following their usual custom, and pursuant to the suggestion of Mrs. Ramage, the two couples got into the truck with Vanlandingham driving. He did not turn the truck around, but backed it up to the south side of the road. He stopped and observed two cars going east and another one headed west. He waited for the two eastbound cars to pass, but before the westbound car driven by defendant Kelly passed, Vanlandingham proceeded to back into the highway in the north lane headed west. The truck did not have its lights on when it was backed into the highway.
Kelly, driving a Volkswagen in a westerly direction, was moving at a highway speed of 60 miles per hour
All four adults in the truck knew that Kelly’s car was approaching, yet Vanlandingham proceeded to back it into the highway. He thought he had time to complete this maneuver. The point of impact was east of the Vanlandingham driveway, thus justifying a finding that the truck had not moved forward after backing into the road in front of Kelly’s car.
The trial court instructed the jury for plaintiff that defendant was negligent as a matter of law in failing to maintain a lookout, and control of his car, so that he could stop it within the range of his headlights; and that if the jury believed such negligence by defendant proximately caused or proximately contributed to the accident, then it should find for plaintiff. In short, the court told the jury that Kelly was negligent, and submitted to it the issue of whether this was a contributing, proximate cause of the collision. Manifestly, the jury concluded that the backing out of appellant’s truck on the highway, without lights and in the face of an oncoming vehicle, was negligence and the sole proximate cause of the accident. It was justified in so finding.
Although the backing of a motor vehicle is not in and of itself negligence, yet in backing a vehicle
With this standard and these criteria in mind, we have considered the three instructions granted appellee and complained of by appellant. Those on pages 47 and 48 of the record do not precisely comply with these rules. They make no specific reference to the “immediate hazard” doctrine. However, they refer to that which a “reasonably prudent and cautious person” would do in order to enter the highway “safely and without injuring others”; and failing to yield the right of way to vehicles approaching on a highway “at a time when it
Affirmed.