Bixby v. Ayers

298 N.W. 533, 139 Neb. 652, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 121
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1941
DocketNo. 30861
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 298 N.W. 533 (Bixby v. Ayers) 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
Bixby v. Ayers, 298 N.W. 533, 139 Neb. 652, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 121 (Neb. 1941).

Opinions

Eberly, J.

This is an action at law under our Lord Campbell’s Act, in which Maymie F. Ayers and Loyd Ayers, wife and husband, are named as defendants, to recover damages for the suffering and death of Albert Hansen who died from injuries received in an accident which occurred on June 22, 1939, on state highway No. 3 south, at a point about one-half mile east of the village of Hardy, Nebraska. The automobile involved was owned by defendant Maymie F. Ayres, and at the time of the accident was being driven as a family car by. defendant Loyd Ayers, he being hereinafter referred to as the defendant.

The petition alleges, in substance, that the defendant at the time and place stated, while traveling westward, carelessly and negligently drove his automobile “into, against, upon and over the said Albert Hansen and the bicycle” upon which the deceased was then riding westward along the north and right side of such highway, thereby inflicting injuries which caused his death. This pleading charged negligence of defendant in the following particulars, viz.: (1) Defendant’s automobile was driven at a dangerous and [654]*654reckless rate of speed without regard to the condition of the highway or the safety of others upon the same; (2) failure of defendant to keep proper lookout; (3) failure of defendant to turn to the left and south side of the highway in order to pass said Albert Hansen; (4) failure of defendant to apply his brakes so as to stop his said car or reduce its speed so that he could control the same in approaching and passing the deceased. To this pleading defendants, by answer, denied generally the allegations thereof, and joined issue by specially pleading the facts as subsequently testified to by the defendant, including the allegation that the plaintiffs’ decedent from a position on the left side of the highway, taken by him after knowledge of defendant’s approach and due warning thereof, as defendant’s automobile was overtaking and passing him, suddenly turned his bicycle to the right and negligently suddenly drove the same in front of defendant’s automobile without giving any warning of his intention so to do, and so closfe to defendant’s automobile as to afford defendant no opportunity to avoid the accident by stopping his car. Further, that this act of plaintiffs’ decedent constituted gross negligence, was the sole and proximate cause of the accident which ensued, and that defendants were without blame. ’ Plaintiffs joined issue by a reply, in substance a general denial. The cause was tried to a jury duly impaneled and sworn, and at the close of all the evidence the trial court sustained a motion on behalf of the defendants for an instructed verdict in their favor. From the order of the trial court overruling their motion for a new trial, plaintiffs appeal.

The following constitutes a résumé of the evidence introduced by plaintiffs.

Addis Jensen, a witness called by them, testifies that on June 22, 1939, “about 3 o’clock or a little after,” he was assisting in the operation of a binder, harvesting wheat one-half mile north of the highway on which the accident in suit occurred. As the binder was going south he saw an automobile on this highway, traveling westward, sweep over a hill on the highway to the eastward, then down over a [655]*655bridge and then up very nearly a half mile of gradual incline, at an estimated speed of 60 to 70 miles an hour. It came to a sudden stop about half way up the hill. The day was bright and clear and the sun was shining. The gravel on this highway was dry. This witness never noted the presence on this highway of Albert Hansen, the deceased, or his bicycle; does not testify to the passing or stopping of other cars at the scene of the accident, and in fact is wholly unconscious of the fact that an accident has occurred. Between 7 and 8 o’clock in the evening of the day of the accident, having been advised of the happening of the same, this witness “went down where he had seen that carthere he saw tracks made by the sliding wheels of an automobile situated on the north side of the road about 90 to 100 feet in length. The right track was about four feet from the ridge of gravel on the north side of the road at its east end and about three feet therefrom at the west end. This witness mentions no other tracks or marks save the two tracks made by the sliding wheels of the automobile.

Leslie Jensby, a witness of plaintiffs, testifies that he was on the afternoon of June 22, 1939, “running the tractor with a go-dig behind it.” He was then about 120 rods north from state highway No. 3. A little after 3 o’clock he saw the Ayers car come over the hill south of his field at a rate of speed estimated by the witness to be “about 60 or 65 miles an hour.” It went down the hill and over the bridge and on, and there was no slow up of the speed until the car was suddenly stopped. This witness-wholly failed to note the presence of the deceased and his bicycle on this day at or near the time of the accident, and we are likewise wholly in darkness as to the means by which he identified the car he refers to as the “Ayers car.”

Elmer Perry, plaintiffs’ witness, testified that he had occasion to pass the scene of the accident, going east, a little after 3 o’clock p. m. on June 22,-1939. He noticed the skid marks and what afterwards he discovered to be a bicycle lay north of the road. He continued in the truck on to the bridge where he turned around and came back to [656]*656where another car had stopped and there he saw the other man and the bicycle and certain tracks. He says the bicycle “was lying kind of in the edge of the weeds there; they had taken it and put it out there (on the north side of the road) I imagine. * * * The only tracks you could see was where the tires had been sliding, and they had slid, Oh, possibly 80 to 100 feet, that is, as to my judgment. * * * The tracks was just about as straight as you could get ’em; they was a little bit maybe angled, but they wasn’t wavy.” The north track of the skidding car was about three or four feet from the north side of the highway. “Q. Did you see any other marks on the road besides these tire marks, skid marks ? A. Where — I could see where it looked like the bicycle had been struck. (This answer was stricken by the court as not responsive.) Q. Tell what you saw there, Elmer. What marks were there in the road ? A. Well, there was a kind of — right from the north track there was for a small distance there was a brushed place in the gravel where it looked like something had just raked the gravel just a little. Q. Did that run up the road? A. Yes; it did. Q. How far ? A. Oh, I would say 15 to 20 feet. Q. Where, with reference to the length of these tracks was this track, where was it with reference to the — A. (Interrupting) Well, on the north track, the mark that I noticed was possibly, Oh, that far, six, eight, ten inches from the inside of the track there. * * * Q. Where, from the place where this inside mark in between the other two tire marks started, where did the bicycle lie, to the west or east? A. To the west. Q. And about how far? A. Well, to where the mark ended, why it — from the start to the end of the mark, why it was about 15 to 20 feet, and then from the start of the mark on to where the bicycle was I would imagine it was a little further than that. The bicycle had already been picked up and moved over.”

Guy E. Scott, the undertaker at Hardy who prepared the body of Albert Hansen for burial, as plaintiffs’ witness, testified as follows: “Q. Will you just tell the jury, in connection with your work in the preparation of his body, [657]

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Bluebook (online)
298 N.W. 533, 139 Neb. 652, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bixby-v-ayers-neb-1941.