American Automobile Insurance v. Clark

252 P. 215, 122 Kan. 445, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 419
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 8, 1927
DocketNo. 27,060
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 252 P. 215 (American Automobile Insurance v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Automobile Insurance v. Clark, 252 P. 215, 122 Kan. 445, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 419 (kan 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action by the plaintiff insurance company against defendant by whose negligence it had to pay a policy [446]*446of insurance covering a collision of automobiles. Plaintiff’s claim was based upon its subrogation to the rights of the insured.

The material facts were these: One A. L. Richardson had a Studebaker automobile which needed some overhauling and he took it to defendant’s garage and machine shop1 for repair. One of defendant’s employees took the car out of the workshop to test it and drove it at high speed along a street and road leading westward out of the city of Hutchinson. It collided with a Ford car at a street intersection, and the Studebaker was badly wrecked. Its owner, Richardson, held a policy of insurance protecting his car from collisions, which policy had been issued by the plaintiff insurance company.

The insurance company sent a representative to Hutchinson, who called upon the defendant and obtained from him an estimate of the cost of repairing the automobile, which sum defendant, after consulting with his expert mechanics, placed at $796. The insurance company then paid that amount to Richardson on the policy, one of the terms of which provided:

“Upon payment of any loss, damage, claim or expense under this policy, the company shall be subrogated, to the extent of such payment, to all rights of recovery of assured against others for such loss, damage, claim or expense, and the company shall be entitled, if it so desires, to institute, conduct and prosecute, in the name of the assured or in its own name, any claim of the assured for indemnity, damages or otherwise against any third party. The assured shall render all possible cooperation and execute all papers requested by the company to enable the company to secure all rights to which it may be entitled under this policy.”

Meantime Richardson and defendant effected a settlement of Richardson’s claim for damages caused by the negligence of defendant’s employee. By the terms of that settlement defendant gave Richardson a new car worth $2,415 for the damaged' car and $1,146 in cash. In consequence of this settlement, which defendant claimed to have made without notice or knowledge of plaintiff’s claim or right through subrogation, he denied liability.

Hence this lawsuit. The pleadings developed the foregoing facts and other more or less pertinent incidents; and a trial by jury pursuant thereto resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant.

Plaintiff appeals, and the first error urged on our attention is based upon “certain remarks and comments” of the trial judge in the presence of the jury, “which indicated his opinion that the plaintiff should not recover and which were prejudicial to the plaintiff.” In support of this specification of error, plaintiff directs our attention [447]*447to cited pages of the abstract which show that the judge took part in the examination of a witness to develop the facts touching the range of vision of the drivers of the automobiles as they approached the point of collision. Again, while counsel for appellant sought to elicit from a witness his estimate of the speed at which the Studebalcer car was being driven from the sound, the record reads:

“[Counsel foe Plaintiff] : It was the impression you got — ”
By the Court: Impressions don’t go. . . .
“Q. Was it shortly after the car passed you, the roar stopped; is that the way you wish us to understand it?
“By the Dependant: We object to that as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial and leading.
“By the Court: Yes; it wouldn’t help us any in the case to know when the roar stopped. He mightihave shut off the muffler or something. . . .
“Q. Then the car passed you two and one-half blocks before it had this collision at Van Burén and Second?
“By the Court: He didn’t say that. He said it is two and a half blocks to the railroad track.
“A. No, sir; I beg your pardon.
“By the Court: How far is it to the railroad track? A. Well, it must be about a block and a half. Just a little over a block and a half. . . .
“Q. Did you notice his actions at all?
“By the Defendant: We object to that for the reason that it is too remote.
“By the Court : Sustained, exception allowed.
“Q. You say you didn’t observe what the driver was doing when he passed you? A. He was going pretty fast.
“By the Defendant: We object to the question. We object to that question, and the question and the objection was sustained.
“By the Court: Yes; the objection has been sustained twice to that question. Exception allowed. What a man is doing in driving a car two blocks away wouldn’t cut any figure as to what he was doing when the accident happened. Exception allowed. . . .
[Counsel for Plaintiff] : “We wish to show by this witness what the
driver of the car was doing at the time he passed him, which was two and one-half blocks from the intersection where the accident occurred.
“By the Court: Unless it was something that was presumed would be continued the whole time, you couldn’t get it in. I don’t know what you are trying to prove. He said he didn’t observe what he was doing.
“By the Witness : I was mistaken if I said I didn’t observe what he was doing. I didn’t testify I didn’t observe what he was doing.”

When defendant was on the witness stand his counsel sought to develop the fact that defendant’s employee who wrecked the insured car was a careful driver. The record reads:

“Q. Had he ever on any previous occasion ever been in any kind of accident or had any kind of a collision during the time that he was adjusting other cars prior to this time?
[448]*448[Counsel for Plaintiff] : “We object to that as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial.
“By the Court: Sustained. That is presumed. They don’t claim he ever did. The presumption is this is his first accident and that he was a careful man and everything.
[Counsel for Defendant] : “I was just trying to show due care on the part of Mr. Clark.
“By the Court: The presumption is he exercised due care. They don’t claim he wasn’t a careful man; they don’t claim he was a negligent man in any way. Exception allowed.”

It is appellant’s contention that these excerpts from the record disclose an unfavorable attitude on the part of the trial judge whereby plaintiff’s rights were prejudiced in the action. Appellant concedes that the trial court “acted absolutely conscientiously in this matter,” but “simply had the idea to start on that the plaintiff should not recover, and stuck diligently and consistently to this from the examination of the first witness to the giving of the last instruction.”

There are obvious limits to the scope of an appellate review.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P. 215, 122 Kan. 445, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-automobile-insurance-v-clark-kan-1927.