SPACKMAN v. CARSON.
No. 7318.
Supreme Court of Utah
Decided April 5, 1950.
216 P. 2d 640
Bullen & Bell, Logan, Thatcher & Young, Ogden, for appellant.
L. E. Nelson, Logan, George C. Heinrich, Logan, for respondent.
WOLFE, Justice.
The respondent, plaintiff below, commenced this action to recover damages allegedly incurred when the motorcycle he was operating collided with a truck being driven by the appellant, defendant below. The defendant denied any negligence on his part and alleged that the proximate cause of the plaintiff‘s damages was the latter‘s own negligence in failing to keep a proper lookout. The sole assignment of error is that the court below erred in denying the defendant‘s motion for a directed verdict which was made on the ground that there was no evidence that the defendant was negligent and that the evidence showed without dispute that the plaintiff was negligent as a matter of law.
The collision occurred on October 25, 1947, at about 3:45 p. m. on U. S. Highway 91, in front of the defendant‘s home which is about one and two-tenths miles south of Richmond, Cache County, Utah. The highway at that point is straight and level and runs in a general north and
The plaintiff testified that he was traveling north at about forty-five miles per hour in the middle of the east lane; that he observed the defendant‘s truck standing motionless when he was about 200 feet south of the truck; that he next observed the truck when he was about thirty feet away from it at which time the defendant had driven the truck out into the east lane of the pavement; that the truck was traveling north at about ten m. p. h. and on an angle of about forty-five degrees with the highway. The plaintiff further testified that as soon as he saw the truck moving onto the highway in front of him he applied his brakes and turned the motorcycle to the left in an effort to avoid a collision; that at thе time of the impact the front end of the truck had reached a point about on the center line of the pavement; that the motorcycle collided with the truck at the rear end of the left front fender and in front of the left door of the cab; and that he and his motorcycle both hurled over the hood of the truck and landed fifteen to twenty feet away. The defendant immediately turned his truck off into the east barrow pit and stopped about six or eight feet north of where the plaintiff was lying.
The defendant‘s version of the accident differs in a few details. He testified that he came out of his house and got into his truck which he had parked behind his automobile in front of his house; that before he got into the truck he looked down the highwаy to the south; that his vision was unobstructed for one-half mile and no vehicles were in sight; that he started the engine, backed up twelve to
The defendant contends, in support of his sole assignment of error that the court below erred in refusing to direct a verdict for him, that the plaintiff‘s own testimony establishes without dispute that the plaintiff failed to keep a proper lookout ahead of him and that this failure was the proximate cause of the accident. The defendant points out that the plaintiff testified that he first observed the defendаnt‘s truck when he was about 200 feet south of it, but that he did not observe it again until he was about thirty feet away, at which time it was too late to avoid a collision. Thus, the defendant asserts, the plaintiff was not watching when the truck backed up, when the stop-light was illuminated, nor when the defendant signaled.
Admittedly, this is a close case. It must stand strictly on its own facts. The closeness comes in whеther we can say as a matter of law that the driver of a motor vehicle traveling at the speed of forty-five m. p. h. who notes another motor vehicle standing off the paved portion of the highway in front of a dwelling two hundred
We are well aware of the legal duty of the driver of a vehicle to keep a lookout ahead and aware of the relationship that exists between speed and alertness—the greater the speed, the more constant the necessity for alertness аnd observation. But keeping a lookout ahead does not mean that the gaze must be glued incessantly on every object ahead. Such intenseness, aside from the strain, might actually detract from the necessity of overall observation. The content of the duty to drive with reasonable care varies with the condition and circumstances. If one is driving among moving vеhicles where the situations are rapidly changing, the content of the duty to regulate speed and keep alert to the changing movements
It must be kept in mind that where a party moves from a stationary position, he is somewhat in the same category as a person changing his direction in a line of traffic. That is, a person making a turn out of one line across another line of traffic is the one who first knows that he intends to change his direction from that in which it would otherwise be presumed that he intended to continue. Any person traveling in the line of traffic which the direction changer intends to cross can only be apprised of the latter‘s intention to change direction on signal or upon seeing him start to make the change. It is not as if there were a telephonic system between the brain of the direction changer and those who are to be affected. Therefore, the man who makes the change of direction owes the duty of looking before he makеs it and of signaling clearly and timely and of making the change sufficiently slowly so as to give time for other drivers who may be affected by it to be alerted and to react to that signal.
When a person moves onto a highway from a stationary position, he owes the same duty. In this case, the defendant
The defendant refers us to Conklin v. Walsh, 113 Utah 276, 193 P. 2d 437, in support of his contention. There the defendant‘s vehicle was being driven east on an arterial highway, sixty feet wide, at a speed between thirty and forty-five miles per hour. When the driver was about 165 feet from an approaching intersection, he observed on his left or on the north the plaintiff‘s vehicle approaching the
The defendant‘s contention that there is no evidence from which the jury could find that he was negligent in the operation of his truck must also fail. If the plaintiff‘s testimony was believed by the jury, they could have found and evidently did find that the defendant moved his truck onto the pavement before such movement could be made with reasonable safety in violation of
“No person shall start a vehicle which is stopped, standing, or parked unless and until such movement can be made with reasonable safety.”
The defendant admitted that he did not turn his head and look down the highway immediately before he entered
The defendant‘s motion for a directed verdict was properly refused and hence the judgment below is affirmed. Costs to the respondent.
PRATT, C. J., and WADE and McDONOUGH, JJ., concur.
LATIMER, Justice.
I dissent.
This case presents slightly different principles than are involved in intersection collisions and I have doubts that the doctrine of re-appraisement as announced in those cases is applicable in this instance. The doctrine would appear to be more appropriate when a driver is required to focus his attention on traffic moving along intersecting highways and where it is reasonably necessary for a driver to observe in different directions. In my opinion this accident occurred because both parties failed to maintain a proper lookout. The defendant‘s negligence consisted of moving from the shoulder of the highway on to the main travelled portion without looking tо the south to see whether the movement could be made in safety. The plaintiff‘s negligence consisted of failing to keep any look-out straight ahead to determine whether the road was free and clear of traffic moving to the north.
According to the plaintiff‘s version of the accident, he was travelling north on U. S. Highway 91; there was no intersection to confusе him; no traffic immediately ahead of him to distract his attention; no traffic approaching within a reasonable distance from the opposite direction and no possibility of vehicles advancing along crossroads. The highway was straight and wide. The weather was
I realize that this was a fast moving situation because of plaintiff‘s speed, that time did not permit a studied course of action and that sometimes a parked car is driven on to the main travelled portion of the roadway with such suddenness that the party proceeding lawfully down the highway can not stop or turn out in time to avoid a collision. Plaintiff in this case does not contend that he observed the movement and that it was so sudden he was unable to stop. He contends that because the truck appeared to be parked he can be excused for not observing it while he was travelling a distance estimated by him to be approximately one hundred seventy feet and until it was too late to avoid a collisiоn. Regardless of the accuracy of plaintiff‘s estimate of distance the truck was driven at a slow rate of speed from a parked position on the shoulder to a point almost in the center of the highway without being observed by plaintiff
To illustrate my point, Mr. Justice Wolfе in his opinion gives the plaintiff a quarter of a block to appraise and reappraise the situation. Without any interference by other traffic and without any reason to justify his failure to see I pose the following question to test plaintiff‘s due care: Where was he looking during the time the truck moved from its stationary position until it was out on the highway? He had only one direction in which he need be looking, that is, straight ahead; and if he were maintaining any look-out in that direction he could not have missed seeing the truck moving onto the highway in time to have avoided the collision.
For the foregoing reason I conclude that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence as a matter of law and that the trial court should have directed a verdict.
