Bennett v. Hall

290 P.2d 241, 132 Colo. 419, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 334
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 24, 1955
Docket17448
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 290 P.2d 241 (Bennett 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
Bennett v. Hall, 290 P.2d 241, 132 Colo. 419, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 334 (Colo. 1955).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clark

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff in error, as plaintiff in the trial court, sought judgment against defendants by way of damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him through the negligent operation of defendants’ automobile, resulting in a collision with the automobile which plaintiff was driving.

After plaintiff had rested his case, counsel for defendants moved for dismissal of his complaint for the reason and upon the ground that from the evidence it appeared that plaintiff was guilty of negligence which was either the sole cause or the contributing cause of the collision resulting in plaintiff’s injuries. Following argument, the trial court granted defendants’ motion, in effect saying that, as a matter of law, plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and entered judgment of dismissal accordingly. Plaintiff, coming to this Court by writ of error, contends that the judgment should be reversed for the following reasons:

(1) That no inference that plaintiff was negligent can reasonably be drawn from the evidence; and

(2) Assuming that there was evidence from which it could be inferred that plaintiff was negligent, the trial court should have submitted that question to the jury for decision.

The facts of the case are comparatively simple and without conflict, or without substantial variation in the testimony of plaintiff and the two witnesses who appeared in his behalf. Plaintiff, George Vince, and Albert Dallas, all employes of Gordon Stores, on the afternoon or evening of April 22, 1952, were returning to Denver from a conference of store officials held at Alamosa. *421 They were using a company automobile which plaintiff was driving, Vince was seated beside him in the front seat while Dallas ocupied the back seat. It was broad daylight, the day was clear, the road dry and at the place of the collision hereinafter mentioned, there was nothing whatsoever to obstruct or interfere with the view of the driver or others in the car. No claim is made that the collision occurred as a result of anything other than the negligence of one or the other of the parties involved.

In leaving Alamosa plaintiff proceeded northerly on State Highway 17, a paved road twenty feet wide with four-foot shoulders on either side and generally posted as a through highway. Plaintiff was driving at a speed of approximately fifty miles per hour.

As plaintiff and his companions were approaching the intersection of a road leading off to the right to the town of Hooper, the Hall car was observed to be approaching the highway from the west, or to plaintiff’s left. It was moving very slowly, probably not to exceed ten miles per hour, over a rough dirt road leading on to the highway. There seems to be some controversy as to whether this dirt road was a private or public way but whether one or the other does not affect the result in this case. In any event, no stop sign was posted at the point of intersection of said road with the highway. Plaintiff himself testified that he first observed the Hall car when he was about 500 “maybe 600,” feet, from the point where said dirt road intersects the highway, and that at that time the Hall car was four or five car lengths from the edge of the pavement, which he later interpreted in feet to mean forty to forty-five feet. The witness said that from that moment on “I didn’t take my eyes off of it but watched it as it approached the highway.” At a distance of about 300 feet “I asked the fellows who were with me what this fellow was going to do” and admitted that he was concerned with whether Hall was going to stop. At that point he slackened his speed by taking his foot off of the accelerator and may possibly have applied *422 the brake lightly, reducing the speed to forty or forty-five miles per hour. He was watching the Hall car to see if it would stop, but when about 125 feet away he observed that the Hall car was not going to stop but was moving onto the highway and was crossing right in front of him, he then applied the brakes as quickly and as firmly as he could, turning his car to the right, but was unable to stop it in time to keep it from striking the Hall car. The point of impact occurred approximately at the edge of the oiled pavement on the easterly side of the highway, the left front end of the car plaintiff was driving colliding with the Hall car at a point midway between the front door and front bumper, or approximately in the center of the right front wheel. Plaintiff’s car left 36 feet of skid marks on the pavement.

The witness Vince testified that he thought plaintiff saw the Hall car approaching shortly before he did, and he judges the distance from the point where he saw that car to have been about 350 feet, the Hall car then being 30 or 40 feet from the highway. He watched it until he saw it reach the edge of the highway and then remembers nothing further. He also testified that plaintiff removed his foot from the accelerator and slowed their car somewhat and testified about plaintiff’s remarks as to “what is this fellow going to do.” The witness Dallas says when he first saw the Hall car it was a quarter of a block from the highway moving very slowly, but later was unable to state in feet what he meant by a quarter of a block. He also testified that he watched the Hall car until it approached the edge of the pavement, but from then on, he could see it no longer; that at that time he calculated the car in which he was riding to be possibly one hundred feet away, and that at about seventy feet from the intersection the driver applied the brakes.

There is no question at all that the driver of defendants’ car was guilty of negligence, first in not stopping at the edge of highway No. 17 regardless of the fact that there was no stop sign there, and also, undoubtedly, be *423 cause he failed to look to his right to observe whether there was approaching traffic, because had he done so, he certainly would have seen plaintiffs car approaching. Assuming the negligence of the driver of defendants’ car, was the trial court in error in determining as a matter of law that such was not the sole proximate cause of the collision, but that the plaintiff had contributed to the occurrence of the collision to the extent that he was barred from recovery under the circumstances? We need not concern ourselves further with what the defendant did, but direct our attention to a consideration of the plaintiff’s action in order to determine whether he contributed to the collision which resulted in his own injury.

Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, can it be determined from this record, as a matter of law, that failure on the part of plaintiff to use due and proper care, under the circumstances, contributed to the collision? The facts as hereinabove stated are simple, without conflict or substantial variation. Respective counsel in argument highlight certain bits of testimony beyond their true perspective, but we base our comments on the evidence upon what appears in the record. The language of Mr. Justice Knauss in Werner v. Schrader, 127 Colo. 523, 529, 258 P. (2d) 766, is entirely appropriate here: “Disputed facts as applied to this case, mean disputes in the evidence, not in the briefs.”

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Bluebook (online)
290 P.2d 241, 132 Colo. 419, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-hall-colo-1955.