13 A.2d 180 | Vt. | 1940
This accident happened at the intersection of two highways in the town of Enosburg. The defendant was driving his automobile easterly along a cross road, and the plaintiff's truck driven by his servant was proceeding northerly along the main road. On trial the verdict was for the plaintiff and the issues presented to us arise on defendant's exception to the denial of a motion to set aside the verdict, on the ground that the evidence conclusively showed that the plaintiff's driver was contributorily negligent. The fact that the defendant was negligent is admitted.
The alleged contributory negligence consists in the disregard of the duties imposed by the following sections of chapter 211 of the Public Laws, section 5140, as amended by No.
The claim that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law was not put forward until after the verdict. The defendant made no motion for a directed verdict, nor a request for a binding instruction, upon this or any other ground. The presiding judge, in his charge, quoted the sections above mentioned, and instructed the jury that the breach of safety statutes raised a rebuttable rather than a conclusive presumption of negligence which might be overcome by the attending circumstances. He also submitted the issue of proximate cause, and left to the jury the question of the plaintiff's contributory negligence upon the evidence. This statement was to the satisfaction of the defendant for he took no exception to it, and so it became the law of the case. Perkins v. VermontHydro-Electric Corp.,
Thus it appears that the trial proceeded upon the theory that the evidence concerning the violation of the statutes was conflicting, and that such violation and its effect as a proximate cause of the accident were issues of fact for the jury to determine. By his failure to except to the charge as given and his exception to the failure to charge, which was in effect a request because it pointed out an omission which the court at once supplied, the defendant practically conceded that the evidence made a jury question.
In Fitzgerald v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
In Emerson v. Universal Products Co., 6 W.W. Harr., Del. 543, 179 A. 383, 385, the rule is stated thus: "When, however, at the conclusion of the case neither party has raised any question as to the sufficiency of the testimony and both parties concede that there was sufficient evidence to require the submission of the case to the jury and each takes the chance of concluding the other upon the facts as found by the jury and there be no valid exception to the charge then the parties cannot retrace their steps and raise legal objections to matters theretofore admitted by them. To permit this would be to allow one merely to gamble with the effect of the jury's verdict with no possibility of danger while by timely objections any deficiencies might have been obviated by proof or amendment." Other authorities to the same effect are Ryan v. Hickey,
In a word, then, it comes to this: a party who has conducted the trial of his case upon the theory that the evidence against him has made an issue for the jury, and has permitted it to be submitted to the jury upon that theory, without objection, cannot, at least as a matter of right, avail himself, by a motion to set aside an adverse verdict, of a claim that such verdict was without evidentiary support and should as a matter of law have been in his favor.
Whether the trial court might in its discretion have considered and granted the motion, the lack of supporting evidence having been made to appear, although no question as to this had previously been raised, (see Lonergan v. American Railway ExpressCo.,
However, the defendant has lost nothing by the foregoing disposition of his motion, for an examination of the record shows that it could not properly have been granted. It is unnecessary to enter upon a discussion of the vexed question of what circumstances will cause the breach of a statutory duty to be *165
determinative of the existence of negligence. See Shea v.Pilette,
The plaintiff's truck, including its load of seven head of cattle, weighed some eight or nine tons. It was proceeding up a steep grade, at the top of which the intersecting road came in. At a bridge at the bottom of the grade its speed was between 30 and 35 miles an hour. The driver estimated the speed as being the same at the intersection; a witness in the defendant's car put it as "possibly about 35." But the driver also testified that the speed appreciably decreased as he went up the hill and that it would have been necessary to shift into lower gear at the further side of the intersection. The distance from the bridge to the point of collision was between 175 and 200 feet. The truck was in the travelled track of the road at the intersection, but this track, owing to certain inequalities in the surface of the road on the right, veered to the left at this point, so that the truck wheels were astride of the center of the highway.
The defendant's argument is that if the speed had been kept within the statutory limit, or if the truck had been to the right of the center of the highway, the accident would not have taken place. But this is by no means certain. The evidence tended to show that the defendant's car approached the intersection slowly, did not stop at the stop sign and then shot out into the main highway, striking the truck at a right angle at the door on the left side of the cab. Taking the evidence most favorably for the plaintiff, it could not be said that it showed conclusively that the speed of the truck was greater than the statute permitted *166
at the point of collision, or that the speed of 30 to 35 miles an hour at which the truck was driven as it proceeded up the grade, or the fact that it was not entirely on the right hand side of the highway at the intersection constituted, as matter of law, a proximate cause of the accident. The jury might reasonably have reached the conclusion that the truck would have passed the defendant's car safely, and that there would have been no accident if the latter had not driven his car against it. Sulham
v. Bernasconi,
The effect of the statute requiring intersecting highways to be entered slowly and with due care does not require separate attention, since the only claims of negligence are those above mentioned.
The plaintiff has filed a motion to dismiss the defendant's exceptions but it is unnecessary to consider it.
Judgment affirmed.