Adams Ex Rel. Adams v. Welliver

51 N.W.2d 739, 155 Neb. 331, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 69
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1952
Docket33064
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 51 N.W.2d 739 (Adams Ex Rel. Adams v. Welliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams Ex Rel. Adams v. Welliver, 51 N.W.2d 739, 155 Neb. 331, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 69 (Neb. 1952).

Opinion

Messmore, J.

' This action for damages was brought in the district court for Dawson County by Lloyd Adams, father and next friend of Pat Adams a minor, against Vernon Welliver, defendant, to recover for personal injuries sustained by the minor when he came in contact with the defendant’s automobile at an intersection crossing in the city of Lexington. The cause was .tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff filed a motion for new trial which was overruled. Plaintiff appeals.

For convenience we. will refer to the minor Pat Adams as Pat, or the plaintiff; to the defendant, Vernon Welliver, as defendant; and to other persons, as occasion requires, by their proper names.

The pleadings of the parties necessary to be considered in this appeal may be summarized as follows. The amended petition of the plaintiff charges negligence on *333 the part of the defendant in the following respects: In operating his automobile at a high and excessive rate of speed, in excess of 25 miles an hour, and negligently failing to have the same under control; in failing to maintain a proper lookout for other persons on the highway at the time and place in question; in failing to operate his automobile so as to prevent the same from running into, upon, and against the body of the plaintiff; and of negligently failing to sound his horn or warn the plaintiff of his intention to turn west at the intersection of Washington and Fifth Streets which the plaintiff was crossing from the south to the north.

■ The answer of the defendant was a general denial, and affirmatively alleged that the sole and proximate cause of the injuries sustained by the plaintiff was due to the negligence of the plaintiff in running and placing himself in front of the defendant’s moving automobile at a point on Fifth Street 45 feet west of the cross walk of the intersection, where pedestrians. are not expected to be crossing.

The plaintiff’s reply to the affirmative allegations of the defendant’s answer was a general denial.

The record discloses that Pat Adams, a minor 9 years of age, and his brother Darrell Adams, 13 years of age, were given some spending money by their father, Lloyd Adams, on Saturday evening, June 24, 1950, and viere granted permission by their parents to go up town in Lexington to spend it. The evening was warm and pleasant. There was a large crowd in the city and the diagonal parking spaces on both the north and south sides of Fifth Street were filled with parked automobiles, as apparently was the case on Washington Street also. In this situation the driveable distance between parked cars north and south on Fifth Street is 28 feet.

The boys decided to visit some friends who lived west on Fifth Street in the city. They visited for a few minutes, then they proceeded east on the sidewalk on the *334 south side of Fifth Street to the intersection of Washington and Fifth Streets.

■ Washington Street, referred to as the main street of the city, runs north and south and is paved. Fifth Street runs east and west and consists of bare brick paving. On the southwest corner of the intersection is McKee’s Jewelry Store. Directly across the street north is the City Bakery. The distance from curb to curb, north and south on Fifth Street, is 56 feet. The cross walk across the west side of the intersection and the sidewalk on the west side of Washington Street is 11 feet 8 inches wide.

When the boys arrived at the corner near McKee’s Jewelry Store they stopped and waited for a car that blocked their way to pull out. This car went east on Fifth Street, then south on Washington Street. The boys then started north across the intersection with Pat a short distance in front of Darrell in the intersection cross walk. Pat saw a car, which later developed to be the defendant’s car, which had proceeded south on Washington Street and was turning the corner west onto Fifth Street, going fast. He started to run in a northwesterly direction, saw the lights of the defendant’s car coming around the corner, and did not have time to stop and let the defendant’s car pass in front of him. His brother Darrell stepped back a step or two and remained on the cross , walk. He was uninjured. Pat had run five qr. six steps when the right front wheel of the defendant’s car came into contact with him. He was on the right front side of the defendant’s car which knocked him down and ran over his legs.

Pat’s testimony, in most respects, is corroborated by Darrell. Darrell testified that he stepped back and defendant’s car passed in front of him, that he said nothing to Pat at the time, and neither did Pat say anything to him. Pat then started to run. He did not corroborate Pat’s testimony that Pat was not running very fast, but testified that he was running fast.

*335 A witness standing at the northwest corner of the intersection near the City Bakery testified that she was going to cross the intersection to the south but stopped to permit defendant’s car to get around the corner from Washington Street to proceed west on Fifth Street. She saw the Adams boys standing in the middle of the street where they had stopped to let a car pass in front of them. This car had pulled out from the parking space on the south side of Fifth Street. After this car had passed the boys, Pat started to run in a northwesterly direction, and Darrell stepped back. The defendant’s car was turning the corner of the intersection west on Fifth Street at a speed of 30 miles an hour. Pat was not running too fast. He was “zipping” along, and he was not on the cross walk but had deviated from it. This witness did not see the accident, but testified if Pat had continued straight ahead he would not have been hit by the defendant’s car, and that he was a little more than halfway across the intersection when he deviated from the cross walk in a northwesterly direction.

A police officer testified that the accident happened about 9:30 p. m. He arrived at the scene of the accident 10 or 15 minutes thereafter and proceeded to investigate and take certain measurements. By measurement he determined it was 43% feet from the west curb on Washington Street to where Pat was lying when he arrived. It was 31% feet from where Pat was lying on the pavement west from the west boundary of the cross walk across Fifth Street. He prepared a sketch which showed that Pat was lying behind the third parked automobile on the north side of Fifth Street west of the intersection. Fifth Street is 57' feet 10 inches wide from curb to curb, north and south. There is a stop sign on Fifth Street, requiring automobiles to stop before entering Washington Street. The overall width of the parking spaces north and south on Fifth Street is 16 feet 10 inches. There were no skid marks or brake *336 marks, nor any signs that the defendant’s automobile •had come in contact with any object. When this witness found Pat, the defendant’s car was directly parallel with the supporting pole of the stairs that lead to the second floor of the City Bakery, and was directly behind the third parked car on the north side of Fifth Street west of the intersection.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.W.2d 739, 155 Neb. 331, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-ex-rel-adams-v-welliver-neb-1952.