Atwell v. City of Middletown

16 Conn. Supp. 395, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 120
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 22, 1949
DocketFile No. 999
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Conn. Supp. 395 (Atwell v. City of Middletown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atwell v. City of Middletown, 16 Conn. Supp. 395, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 120 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

FITZGERALD, J.

On the late afternoon of May 14, 1949, a Cadillac sedan owned by the plaintiff and operated by one Stueck came into collision with a Buick sedan owned by the defendant city of Middletown and operated by the defendant Dunn, its fire chief. The collision occurred within the limits of the intersection of Matthews and Hill Streets in the city of Bristol. In this action the plaintiff is seeking to recover damages of both defendants for the almost total destruction of his car. Other actions by the occupants of the cars for personal injuries are either pending in the Superior Court or about to be instituted. An additional action in which the defendant city is seeking to recover damages for the similar destruction of its car is pending in this court. The trial of this action, therefore, is serving the purpose of determining the proximate cause of the collision. It may also affect certain phases of the question of liability common to all of the actions growing out of the collision. In passing it is noted at this time that the defendants’ car bore an inscription in letterings related to the fire department of the city of Middletown and the office of chief.

The collision in litigation has a social background which enters into certain aspects of the problem presented. It appears that the plaintiff’s grandson, Stanley Atwell, Jr., was to be married in a church in Bristol at 2 o’clock on the Saturday afternoon in question and that a reception was to follow at a country club on the outskirts of that city; that the plaintiff suggested to his grandson that he use the car on that day as a matter of convenience; and that the grandson accepted the suggestion and permitted Stueck, his friend and best man at the wedding, to operate it in his presence. The younger Atwell was not a member of his grandfather’s household in Middletown and had no authority to use the car unless he obtained special [397]*397permission to do so. At the trial the defendants conceded that the doctrine of the family automobile has no application to the case and that their specially pleaded negligence of Stueck, if such be found, is not chargeable to the plaintiff.

It also appears that the defendant Dunn, chief of the fire department of the defendant city, and Mrs. Dunn were invited guests to the wedding ceremony and to the reception following the wedding. The disastrous collision occurred after the re' ception and while the Dunns were returning to Middletown and the bride and groom together with Stueck and his fiancee were en route to Terryville in the plaintiff’s car to pick up the groom’s car to be used by the newly married couple on their wedding trip.

Prior to the collision the plaintiff’s car, with Stueck operating, was proceeding east on Matthews Street and the defendants’ car south on Hill Street. Had both cars arrived at the inter' section at approximately the same time, the plaintiff’s car would have been to the right of che defendant’s car. Matthews Street, immediately west of the intersection, is twenty'two feet wide. Hill street, immediately north of the intersection, is twenty'nine feet wide. The southwest corner has a considerable curve which, in conjunction with the fact that the continuation of Matthews Street east of the intersection is not in a direct line with that portion of the highway west thereof, makes the deter' mination of the center of the intersection somewhat difficult. It appears that the southerly line of Matthews Street east of the intersection is about fifteen feet north of the southerly line of that highway west of the intersection. In any event the ground area located off of the northwest comer is a broad expanse of unoccupied land and operators approaching the intersection as were these operators would be afforded a generous view of traffic approaching the intersection from the directions of the cars here involved. This view was available to each operator regarding the other for at least 250 feet before the intersection. At the time in question no stop sign or other traffic control was in existence.

Neither the operator of the plaintiff’s car nor any of the occupants therein saw the defendants’ car before the collision. They were not familiar with the road and did not realize that there was an intersection of highways. So also the defendant Dunn did not see the plaintiff’s car before the collision. He did know, however, of the intersection. Mrs. Dunn became [398]*398aware of the presence of the plaintiff’s car approaching on her right just before the impact. While her testimony was to the effect that the car in which she was a passenger had nearly passed through the intersection when she became aware of the presence of the other car, this testimony is of little value. It is found that the front of the defendants’ car ran into the forward left side of the plaintiff’s car. It is further found that the impact occurred substantially in the southwest quadrant of the intersection. What remained of both cars came to rest beyond the southeast corner, with the right side of the plaintiff’s car crushed against a tree. The collision occurred about 5 o’clock in the afternoon, daylight saving time. While it was raining at the time, it cannot be found that this was a contributing factor in causing the collision.

The only conclusion that can be validly reached in view of the foregoing recital is that both operators were materially negligent in various respects. It is not necessary to consider specifically the statutory nrovision of the right of way at intersections (General Statutes § 2489) and its place in the case. The foregoing conclusion is based on findings of common-law negligence: failure to keep a proper lookout; absence of warning; want of proper control.

The evidence would support a finding of violation of the speeding statute (§ 2407) by both operators. The photographs in evidence of what remains of the cars reveal that the impact between the 4300-pound Cadillac and the 38'00-pound Buick was terrific. Mrs. Dunn was hurled out' of the car in which she was a passenger for a distance of seventy-five feet; two-passengers were hurled out of the other car, and a third therein had to be extricated from the wreckage by the use of crow bars. That no one was killed is indeed a miracle. One of the passengers in the plaintiff’s car, to cite but a single instance, was hospitalized for seventy-one days.

As already stated, the negligence of Stueck in any event cannot be charged to the plaintiff as Stueck was not operating' as his agent or employee. The remaining question in the caséis whether the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against both defendants or only against the defendant Dunn as operator. The-complaint alleges that at the time of the collision Dunn was operating “as Chief of the Fire Department of said City of Middletown, and as agent, servant and employee of said City of Middletown, authorized to operate said automobile at said time- and place.”

[399]*399At the commencement of the trial the court called the attention of counsel to the question of governmental immunity on the part of the defendant city and the absence of any interposed defense in connection therewith, citing Lambert v. New Haven, 129 Conn. 647, 649, to which Adams v. New Haven, 131 Conn. 552, 556, could have been added. It is the feeling of the presiding judge that the trial court is under a duty to give effect to this defense in a negligence action against a govern' mental defendant even if it is not raised by the pleadings and even if such defendant refuses to raise it when attention is called to its absence. See Young v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Conn. Supp. 395, 1949 Conn. Super. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atwell-v-city-of-middletown-pactcompl-1949.