79 S.W.2d 232 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1935
Reversing.
The appellant's intestate, Charles H. Trainor, an elderly man, either walked into or was struck by the right front fender of an automobile 'being driven by the appellee, Mrs. Genevieve Keller, and was knocked down. He suffered the fracture of his skull which resulted in his death. In this suit for damages by his administrator, the verdict was for the defendant.
The accident happened in Paducah on the south side of Broadway, just east of Eleventh street. Reference *841 is also made to a railroad crossing somewhere near by. All of the evidence presented by the plaintiff is indefinite, and because the witnesses referred to local conditions, which are not familiar to us, and also to a map before them, and not before us, the exact situation is difficult to comprehend from the record. There were two automobiles parked parallel with the sidewalk. It appears that the closest was perhaps 30 feet from the east edge of Eleventh street. The defendant's automobile was traveling east on the south side of Broadway. One witness testified that Trainor waited at the corner intending to cross and board a bus on the opposite corner, and that he stopped within 3 feet of the curb, thereby placing him at the regular crossing for pedestrians. He says that he was standing in front of the parked automobiles, and as Mrs. Keller was passing them she pulled into the curb a little and struck him. As we understand, however, the witness was where he could hardly have seen what did happen. Other witnesses put Trainor in front or behind one or both of the parked cars, and say that he was struck as he started to cross the street. All agree that Mrs. Keller was driving very slowly and stopped almost instantly. She testified:
"After I passed the crossing I continued to drive slowly and went four or five doors down Broadway and there was a man standing between two cars. He was standing right at the edge of the cars, — of the car that was to the east. He was standing there motionless, just as still as I ever saw anybody stand, waiting for cars to pass by. I noticed him until I was almost up to him, because he was standing at the edge of the curb, and I turned a little to the left in order that I might continue to travel on down Broadway more in the center of the street. Just then my niece, Genevieve Quinlan, turned around like this (indicating to the jury) and said, 'Oh, you have struck him.' "
Her niece, who was on the right-hand side and consequently nearer to the deceased, testified that at the moment she had been facing the other way and just as she turned her head she caught a glimpse of an object and at that instant Mr. Trainor came into the car or in front of it. She had not seen him before.
Instruction No. 1 defined the several duties of the *842
defendant under the circumstances, but did not state that it was her duty to sound the horn if necessary as a warning of her approach. Section 2739g-28, Statutes. The plaintiff offered an instruction embodying that duty, which was refused. Sometimes the circumstances of a case were such that the court should say as a matter of law that the horn should have been sounded; sometimes that it was not necessary. Often the evidence is so equivocal as to require submission of the question to the jury. Lieberman v. McLaughlin,
While a driver of an automobile is not required to anticipate that a pedestrian seen in a place of safety will leave it and get in the danger zone until some demonstration or movement on his part reasonably indicates that fact (Peak v. Arnett,
Instruction No. 2 defined the duties of the decedent, the violation of which constituted contributory negligence. It stated that duty to be:
"To keep a lookout ahead for vehicles using the street at the time and place mentioned in the evidence, and to exercise ordinary care generally to prevent striking or being struck by vehicles using the street at said time and place."
The duty of a pedestrian is only to exercise the care generally exercised by a person of ordinary prudence under the circumstances; that is, ordinary care. The jury is the judge of what that was under the circumstances. Wilder v. Cadle, supra. If the conditions were such that the jury believed that before starting across the deceased, in the exercise of reasonable care for his safety, should have looked up or down the street, then that duty would be embraced in the term "ordinary care."
In Weidner v. Otter,
The term "ordinary care" was defined in the usual manner by instruction No. 4, and this was stated to be "as applied to both the defendant and the decedent Trainor." Vigorous objection is made to this instruction as having placed upon both parties the same degree of care, whereas, it is argued, there is a heavier duty and responsibility resting upon the driver of an automobile than upon a pedestrian. The difference arises from the application of the term and not from the duty itself. "Ordinary care" is a relative term. The care, caution, and diligence required of every one is that commensurate with the danger — with the capacity to injure or the possibility or being injured. The duty or care is always measured by the circumstances; that is, both the condition and the activity in which one is situated and engaged at the time, for the greater the hazard the greater the care required; but always it is called ordinary care. McWilliams v. Kentucky Heating Company,
Because of the errors in the other instructions, the judgment is reversed.