Blakely Oil, Inc. v. Wells Truckways, Ltd.

320 P.2d 464, 83 Ariz. 274, 1958 Ariz. LEXIS 250
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1958
Docket6185
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 320 P.2d 464 (Blakely Oil, Inc. v. Wells Truckways, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blakely Oil, Inc. v. Wells Truckways, Ltd., 320 P.2d 464, 83 Ariz. 274, 1958 Ariz. LEXIS 250 (Ark. 1958).

Opinion

CHARLES P. ELMER, Superior Court Judge.

This is an appeal from order of the trial court granting the motion of plaintiffs-appellees to set aside the verdict of the jury and the judgment entered thereon and granting them a new trial.

By their complaint, plaintiffs seek to recover more than $45,000 in damages allegedly suffered through the total or partial destruction of certain trucks and equipment owned by plaintiff Wells Truckways, Ltd., as a result of a collision with defendant-appellant’s tanker. The parties will be designated as they appear in the trial court.

It appears that at approximately 8:45 p. m. of September 26, 1952, two large trucks with trailers attached belonging to the plaintiff Wells Truckways, Ltd., were proceeding in a westerly direction on the Wickenburg-Blythe Highway (U.S. 60-70), one- *276 fourth to one-half mile apart, at a speed of 50-54 miles per hour. The first truck was driven by E. L. Carson, the second by Charles L. Richmond. At the same time, defendant’s employee, Thomas E. James, who lost his life in the collision, was driving tank equipment of the defendant loaded with gasoline in an easterly direction on said highway. At a point some 17 miles west of Salome, Arizona, near a settlement known as Desert Wells, the tanker struck a cow which had come upon the highway, went out of control, crossed to the other side of the highway, and collided with plaintiff’s trucks, whereupon the tanker exploded, overturning on its side across the center of the highway. The tank equipment hit plaintiff’s first truck around the left door, crashed into its trailer, whipped across and down the road and into plaintiff’s second truck, spraying gasoline over the entire scene. The road was dry, straight and comparatively level at point of impact and the conflagration could be seen for a distance of three to four miles.

The highway is unfenced at this place and is adjoined by open livestock range. It is posted with “Watch for Cattle” signs in this area and one such sign was then located on the south side of the highway, where it was passed by appellant’s tanker, just west of Desert Wells and approximately 150-200 yards from point of the accident.

The only eyewitness who testified to this accident, other than plaintiffs’ drivers, was one Carl Freeburg, a ranch foreman who lived at Desert Wells and who was standing on the north side of the highway at the time the accident occurred. He testified he stood approximately twenty feet away from defendant’s tanker as it passed by in the eastbound lane on the south side of the highway; it was traveling at a moderate rate of speed. He noticed the driver; he was awake; they exchanged greetings by nodding to each other. As this equipment passed him, he looked easterly and saw the cow on the north half of the road; she took three or four steps across the highway and was standing in the center of the south lane when struck by defendant’s equipment. The cow was plainly visible to him after the tanker passed, as its lights enabled him to see the animal; he did not actually see the tanker hit the cow because of the size of the tanker but he heard the collision.

Freeburg further testified that at no time did defendant’s driver apply his brakes; he could not say whether or not he swerved or turned because immediately after striking the cow he heard another thud and saw the tanker glance off of plaintiffs’ truck.

It is Freeburg’s testimony, although he made no measurements, that he was standing 175 to 200 feet from the point where the cow was crossing the highway; that when he first observed it, the tanker was perhaps *277 halfway between him and the cow; tanker was almost right on it. the

Mr. E. L. Carson was the driver of the equipment of plaintiffs which was in the lead at the time of this accident. He testified that he first saw the cow involved when he was some distance easterly from the accident scene, perhaps 400 feet; she was on the shoulder heading onto the highway. He flicked his clearance lights twice to warn the following driver, checked his position in the rear view mirror and started to slow down. He saw defendant’s tanker approaching from the west and began to give it close attention as the cow continued across the highway and stopped in the eastbound lane. When Carson realized defendant’s equipment was going to hit the cow, he attempted to pull entirely off the highway to the north. The cow was plainly visible to him the whole time. He observed the tanker’s headlights were on high beam when he first saw them; that they were then transferred to low beam as his rig approached.

The other Wells driver, one Charles L. Richmond, testified that the equipment driven by Carson was about a half mile ahead of him; as they got close to Desert Wells, Carson blinked his lights twice, which told him that Carson was slowing down. He observed the lead equipment was slowing down considerably, and was being headed off of the highway; he could see the brake lights and that the equipment was getting off on the shoulder. He was not close enough to judge how fast the lead equipment was going, but, observing it, he started slowing down and also pulling off the highway. When both these pieces of equipment were practically stopped and quite a ways off the roadway, it appeared to this witenss that the Carson equipment seemed to fly apart; it got real bright; then he felt an impact on his own truck.

Highway Patrolman Harold E. Moore was called to the scene of the accident immediately after its occurrence; he made various measurements and testified to various physical conditions found by him. He found a cow lying in the highway, approximately seven feet north of the south side of the pavement. He found no brake marks west of the point where the cow was lying. It was impossible, he said, to determine where the vehicles had come together; the pavement was on fire and it had cracked. The area is one where cattle are quite frequently seen alone the highway.

It appeared to this witness that the tanker traveled about 140 feet after hitting the cow to where it struck the rig operated by Carson, and another 182 feet to where it struck the equipment operated by Richmond; then approximately 90 feet more to where it turned over on the highway.

There is but one assignment of error, which is that the trial court abused its dis *278 cretion and committed reversible error in granting the motion for new trial for the reason there was no evidence of negligence on defendant’s part, and the clear preponderance of the evidence substantiated the verdict. Defendant relies on the proposition of law that it is an abuse of discretion for the trial court to set aside a verdict and grant a new trial where there is no evidence to support a contrary verdict or where the clear preponderance of the evidence is in favor of the verdict rendered and the probative force of the evidence demonstrates that the action of the trial court was wrong and unjust.

We stated in General Petroleum Corp. v. Barker, 77 Ariz. 235, 244, 269 P.2d 729, 735:

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Bluebook (online)
320 P.2d 464, 83 Ariz. 274, 1958 Ariz. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blakely-oil-inc-v-wells-truckways-ltd-ariz-1958.