Gertrude TOZIER, Appellant,
v.
Hаrold JARVIS, Monarch Financial Enterprises, Inc., Fireman's Fund Insurance Company, Bruce Tozier, and Dixie Insurance Company, Appellees.
Bruce TOZIER, Appellant,
v.
Gertrude TOZIER, Harold Jarvis, Monarch Financial Enterprises, Inc., Fireman's Fund Insurance Company, et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Joel V. Lumer, Miami, Kathleen Phillips, Coral Gables, and Arnold D. Hessen, of Kaplan, Sicking, Hessen, Sugarman, Rosenthal, Susskind, Bloom & DeCastro, P.A., Miami, for Bruce Tozier.
William S. Isenberg, Fort Lauderdale, for Gertrude Tozier.
Gregg J. Pomeroy of Pomeroy, Betts & Pomeroy, Fort Lauderdale, and Nancy Little Hoffmann of Hoffmann & Burris, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for Jarvis, Monarch, and Fireman's Fund.
*885 BARKETT, Judge.
The plaintiffs below, Bruce and Gertrude Tozier, challenge the denial of their motion for a directed verdict on the issue of liability against appellees. We agree that a directed verdict should have been granted. Accordingly, we reverse.
Bruce Tozier and his mother, Gertrude Tozier, sued Harold Jarvis, Monarch Finаncial Enterprises, and Fireman's Fund Insurance Company as a result of an automobile collision. The Toziers were in a passenger car when it was struck from behind by a loaded cement truck operated by Harold Jarvis. The Toziers both testified that they were travеling west on Oakland Park Boulevard in the right curb lane, with Bruce Tozier driving, en route to have lunch at a restaurant. This testimony was unrebutted. When the Tozier vehicle reached the entrance way to the restaurant, Bruce Tozier slowed and stopped prior to turning into thе entrance. At trial, Bruce Tozier testified that he stopped because an exiting car was blocking the entrance to the restaurant and he was waiting for it to pass. At his deposition he had said he stopped because he wanted to make a slow, gentle turn because of the nervousness of his elderly mother.
Harold Jarvis, the defendant driver, testified that he was driving the ten wheel concrete mixer that hit the Toziers' vehicle. Jarvis testified that he had exited I-95 onto Oakland Park Boulevard, remaining in the right curb lane and traveling wеst. He stopped at a light approximately 600 feet from the collision. Jarvis began accelerating after his stop, and testified that he saw no vehicles in the lane before him. He took his eyes from the road to check his rear view mirror for a period of two to six seconds because he wanted to change lanes. Jarvis said he had accelerated to a speed of approximately 25 miles per hour when he returned to a view of the lane in front of him and saw the Tozier vehicle for the first time. Jarvis testified that the Tozier vehicle was totally stopped at an angle, with two-thirds of the car in the curb lane in front of him, and one-third of the car in the driveway of the restaurant. Jarvis indicated that he had remained in the right curb lane from the time he exited I-95. He indicated thаt there was no time to take any evasive action from the time he first saw the car until he struck it. The only "explanation" provided by Jarvis for not seeing the Tozier vehicle was the speculation that the Tozier vehicle must have backed out of the restaurant driveway into the roadway. Jarvis could not testify, however, that he saw the vehicle in motion in any direction.
The only other testimony as to liability was an independent witness who was following the truck on a motorcycle. That witness testified that prior to the collision the truck was traveling at approximately 40 miles per hour in the middle lane, but that it changed to the right curb lane approximately 10 seconds before the collision.
The issue before us is whether there exists an unrebutted presumption of negligence which dictates a dirеcted verdict on liability in favor of the Toziers.
In Florida, a presumption of negligence attaches to the driver of the rear vehicle in a rear-end collision. This presumption was first recognized in McNulty v. Cusack,
In Bellere v. Madsen,
We have stated that the presumption announced in McNulty, and subsequently followed, is rebuttable. It is constructed *886 by the law to give particular effect to a certain group of fаcts in the absence of further evidence. The presumption provides a prima facie case which shifts to the defendant the burden to go forward with the evidence to contradict or rebut the fact presumed. When the defendant produces evidenсe which fairly and reasonably tends to show that the real fact is not as presumed, then the impact of the presumption is dissipated. Whether the ultimate fact has been established must then be decided by the jury from all of the evidence before it without the aid of thе presumption. At this point the entire matter should be deposited with the trier of the facts to reconcile the conflicts and evaluate the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the evidence.
When the matter goes to the jury in this posture it must be without the aid of the presumption, which has been reduced to the status of a permissible inference or deduction which the jury may or may not draw from the evidence before it. [Emphasis supplied.]
Id. at 28-29. Thus, in Gulle v. Boggs, it was held that in order to present the issue of negligence to the jury, the defendant must рroduce evidence which "fairly and reasonably tends to show" that the presumption is invalid. Once the presumption is overcome, it vanishes; the jury is not instructed upon it. Id. at 29; DiGregorio v. Industrial Supply Corp. of Orlando,
Florida courts have recognized three general categories of affirmative explаnations that will serve to rebut the presumption of negligence.
First, affirmative testimony regarding a mechanical failure is sufficient to rebut the presumption. In Gulle v. Boggs, the evidence deemed sufficient to overcome the presumption was the defendant's affirmative testimony that his brakes failed. The court noted that if the defendant had not introduced competent evidence to rebut the presumption a directed verdict would have been proper. See Gulle,
In the instant case, the defendant was equally frank in stating that she just didn't know the reason for her car's failure to lose its forward momentum after the deceleration and application of brakes. Of course if the defendant had testified that she was not paying attention, was looking in another direction and did not decelerate or apply her brakes or in any other manner timely endeаvor to avoid the accident, then it could well be said that, as a matter of law, her testimony was insufficient to rebut the presumption of negligence. [Emphasis supplied.]
See also Munceas v. Harris,
Second, courts have determined that positive testimony of a sudden unexpected stop or an unexpеcted switching of lanes by the car in front is sufficient evidence to rebut the presumption. In Conda v. Plain,
In Holden v. Dye,
In the instant case, such a jury question was created by defendant's testimony which if believed tended to show that he had not failed to exercise reasonable care under the circumstаnces and that, on the contrary, the plaintiff's action of pulling out into lanes of traffic being traveled by a nearby approaching vehicle was the causal factor leading to the accident.
Id. at 351. See also Lynch v. Tennyson,
The third category in which evidence has been deеmed sufficient is when a vehicle has been illegally, and therefore unexpectedly, stopped. In Frazier v. Ross,
In Ben's Seltzer, Inc. v. Markey,
In Railway Express Agency, Inc. v. Garland,
Although numerous cases have held the presumption to be rebutted by appropriate testimony, another line of cases has defined the type of evidence that is insufficient to overcome the presumption.
In Kimenker v. Greater Miami Car Rental,
In Becker v. Adkins,
In Brethauer v. Brassell,
The question squarely presented in the instant case is whether the defendant has explained his inability to avoid the cоllision. We think not. A close examination of the language used by appellate courts in deciding similar cases reveals more definitive words than just "an explanation." ...
... .
The defendant's "explanation" in the case at bar is, at best, a mere description of the nature of his distraction. It does not offer any substantial or reasonable explanation for his failure to avoid the collision. [Emphasis supplied.]
Id. at 657. See also Baughman v. Vann,
After analyzing the above cases we conclude that the facts in the instant case warrant a directed verdict for the plaintiffs on the issue of liability. Reduced to its essence, the defendant's testimony consists merely of saying, "I didn't see another car in front of me; I looked in my rear view mirror for two to six seconds; I looked back to the lane in front of me and I then saw the vehicle for the first time but it was too late to avoid the collision." Such testimony cannot be considered "substantial and reasonable." Nor can the defendant's sheer speculation that perhaps the plaintiff was backing out of the restaurant, rather than entering the restaurant, rise to the level of affirmative testimony (much less the kind of substantial testimony) necessary to rebut the presumption of negligence.
Finally, we cannot agree with Jarvis that the Toziers were illegally stopped in the roadway. When one makes an approximate 90 degreе turn into one of the many business establishments along a busy thoroughfare, it is reasonable, foreseeable, and expected that one would slow his vehicle even to a stop to make such a turn.
Accordingly, we reverse and remand for the entry of a directed verdict on liability and a trial on the issue of damages.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
HERSEY and HURLEY, JJ., concur.
