Andrus v. Hall

27 P.2d 495, 93 Colo. 526, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 471
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 13, 1933
DocketNo. 12,916.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 495 (Andrus v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrus v. Hall, 27 P.2d 495, 93 Colo. 526, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 471 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiee in error is hereinafter referred to as Andrus, his son Richard Andrus as Richard, defendant in err'or as Mrs. Hall and her deceased husband Gyeer A. Hall as Hall.

Mrs. Hall sued Andrus for $5,000 damages for the death of Hall which resulted from an automobile collision on October 31, 1930, between the cars driven by the latter and Richard. On a verdict for Mrs. Hall for $3,500 judgment was entered. To review that judgment Andrus prosecutes this writ.

The 30 assignments of error are argued under the three following propositions: (1) Recovery is barred by Hall’s negligence; (2) reversible error'was committed in the admission and rejection of evidence; (3) reversible error was committed in the giving and refusing of instructions.

Richard, a youth of 17, using his father’s car with the *528 latter’s permission, and accompanied by tbe daughter of a neighbor, was driving west on the Valmont road toward Boulder. Hall, in his own car, was driving north on the Pleasant View road toward Longmont. At the intersection of these roads the cars collided and Hall was hurled from his machine and fatally injured. He never regained consciousness and died the second day following at the age of 62.

1. The only living witnesses of the catastrophe were Richard and his companion, and plaintiff was obliged to make her case from this palpably unfriendly testimony. Prom it the jury was fully justified in believing: That less than one mile from this intersection Richard was traveling at 60 miles an hour; that he did not slow down until 400 feet therefrom; that he entered the intersection at approximately 40 miles an hour; that as he approached it he looked to the right but not to the left; that when he first saw Hall the latter was within the intersection, practically in front of him, and not over 20 feet aiway; that Richard did not try to escape the collision by turning to the left, but by the application of his brakes; that he struck the Hall car at the right rear wheel with such force as to practically crush the entire front of his own vehicle; that as both drivers approached the intersection the view of each in the direction of the other was intermittently obstructed by trees and other objects; that 300 yards from the intersection Hall was traveling at the rate of 25 miles an hour; that since his approach thereto was up-grade and there wras no evidence that he was traveling at a greater rate of speed when he entered the intersection, or that he otherwise violated any statute or rule of the road, that he was not negligent; that the collision occurred north of the medial line of the Valmont road; that this intersection was considered dangerous; that south of the intersection the traffic is light, but east, west and north thereof it is heavy; that the incline on the north is short and steep and the vision limited; and that all of these facts were known *529 to Richard who frequently traveled that road. It will be noted that if Richard was traveling at 60 miles an hour when he was 400 feet from the intersection he was, at that rate, approximately but four and one-half seconds away from it; and that if he was traveling at approximately 40 miles per hour when he saw Hall 20 feet from the point of collision he had approximately but one-third of a second to apply his brakes or alter his course before the impact. The following statutes were in effect at the time of the accident:

“Vehicles * * * shall be under control at all times, viz.: must be able to stop * * * in all eases when crossing intersecting’highways. ” C. L. 1921, p. 498, §1270 (b).

“The operator of a vehicle shall yield the right of way at the intersection of their paths to a vehicle approaching from the right unless such vehicle approaching from the right is further from the point of the intersection of their paths than such first named vehicle.” Id. (g).

“No vehicle shall be propelled along or upon any public highway at a speed exceeding thirty-five miles per hour.” S. L. 1925, p. 294, c. 110, §1.

From the foregoing we think that the gross negligence of Richard and the absence of negligence of Hall are indisputable, irrespective of the exception contained in paragraph (g) of section 1270, C. L. 1921, supra, which we hereinafter note. If Hall looked toward the road traveled by Richard, as we presume he did, and if he saw the latter approaching, as we also presume, his vision, because of the obstacles above noted, was necessarily fleeting and intermittent, and any reasonable estimate of Richard’s speed impossible. At any such time, while Hall still had an opportunity to yield the right of way, Richard must have been approximately twice as far from the intersection as he, and no reason appeared why the crossing was not safe. Richard was violating the law, both as to speed and failure to have his car under control at a crossing’, and that crossing one which he well knew to be dangerous. A driver cannot *530 be required to yield the right of way when his inability to know and act is chargeable to the lawless conduct of him who claims it. Boyd v. Close, 82 Colo. 150, 257 Pac. 1079.

2. The trial began Monday, May 11, and was concluded May 13. On Tuesday, May 12, Andrus was called as a witness in his own behalf and the first question propounded on cross-examination was, “When did you first meet your attorney in this case?” This was objected to, the objection overruled and an exception saved. The answer was, “Last Sunday- afternoon.” It is said that counsel for Mrs. Hall had asked the jurors on their voir dire, if any of them were officers, agents or employees of a certain insurance company (said portion of the proceedings is not abstracted and no question is here raised with relation to it), and that the above quoted question was asked for the purpose of suggesting to the jurors that an insurance company was the real party in interest and had employed counsel, because Andrus had not even seen them until the afternoon of the day preceding the beginning of the trial. But nothing of the kind is disclosed by either question or answer. It was immediately followed by an inquiry concerning a certain alleged statement of Andrus to his attorneys, or-to another interested in the case. Whether Andrus had made such a statement we do not know. He merely denied recollection thereof, but it later developed that such a statement had been made by Richard, and was then in the hands of his father’s counsel, which statement conflicted, in a materia] particular, with Richard’s testimony. The inquiry was therefore proper. When Mrs. Hall’s attorneys later brought out from Richard that he had signed such a statement opposing counsel was asked to produce it and one of them, first intimating that it was in possession of the former, said, “If we have it we will produce it. I was not aware we had it. ” Richard’s cross-examination then proceeded as follows: “Q. Who did you give it to? A. I gave it to an insurance man. *531 Q. Who was that? A. I don’t recall his name:' (Objection — overruled.) Q. Is he in the court room? A. No, sir. Q. Do you know his name? A. I don’t recall it. Q. Do you know where he resides, or' his address? A. No, I don’t.

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27 P.2d 495, 93 Colo. 526, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrus-v-hall-colo-1933.