Borman v. State Highway Commission

32 P.2d 457, 139 Kan. 540, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 107
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 5, 1934
DocketNo. 31,648
StatusPublished

This text of 32 P.2d 457 (Borman v. State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borman v. State Highway Commission, 32 P.2d 457, 139 Kan. 540, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 107 (kan 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.:

This is an action for damages for the wrongful death of Ella Powers, alleged to have been caused by the defective railing of a bridge on a state highway. The answer, among other things, alleged contributing negligence of the decedent. The jury returned a general verdict for plaintiff and answered special questions. Defendant moved for judgment in its favor on the answers to the special questions and the undisputed evidence, notwithstanding the general verdict. Plaintiff moved to set aside the answers to certain special questions as not being within the issues, and that some of them were not supported by the evidence. The trial court sustained plaintiff’s motion, overruled defendant’s motion, and rendered judgment for plaintiff on the general verdict. Defendant has appealed.

A general statement of the facts may be made as follows: State highway No. 14 from Lincoln south to Ellsworth crosses Spring creek several miles south of Lincoln over a stone arch bridge built about 1907. The span of the arch is twenty feet. The bridge is sixteen feet wide, and along each side of the top is a low stone coping, or wall, about nine inches high, on the inside of which cedar posts, about four inches in diameter, had been set in the dirt which covered the [541]*541stone of the bridge, and planks had been nailed on the posts to form a railing. These planks were of oak, originally three inches thick, and had been used as flooring on some other bridge where use had worn them to a thickness of an inch and a half to two inches in places and where they had rotted somewhat at the nail holes, or near the ends, but were otherwise sound. As placed on the posts the ends lapped one upon another at some places. The roadway across the bridge was of dirt, shallower near the center over the arch than toward the ends of the bridge. The highway patrolman grading the road graded across this bridge twice a week, using a four-horse-drawn road grader, and had so graded it the day of the casualty. The surface of the roadway was smooth and was wide enough between the railings that a farmer moving farm machinery pulled a twelve-foot hayrake behind his truck across it, but there was not much clearance on each side and he had to use care. Approaching the bridge from the south there was a curve in the road to the left and then onto the bridge. The road was properly marked with the state highway signs, “slow,” “winding road,” “narrow bridge.” From the. turn, about fifteen feet south of bridge, the road was straight onto and across the bridge.

Ella Powers, a widow, with her six children, ranging from about eight to twenty years of age, resided upon and operated a farm south of Lincoln, but north of Spring creek. On the day of the casualty, June 20, 1931, she took her two children, Mabel, about eleven, and Ethel, thirteen years, three months and twelve days of age, in her car and drove to Ellsworth. The car was a 1926 Model T Ford touring car. The gas feed was controlled by a lever on the steering wheel, which should be pulled down to increase the gas consumption of the engine and the power and speed of the car, or pulled up to shut the gas off, decreasing the power or speed. The hand brake, sometimes spoken of as the emergency brake, was operated by a lever at the left side of the car, left of the end of the front seat, where one sitting in the driver’s position behind the wheel could readily reach it with the left hand, but it could not be easily reached and operated by one sitting in any other position in the car. The position of the lever was forward when the car was being operated normally in high gear on the road. By pulling this lever back the high-gear clutch was disengaged and the brakes applied. Near the floor of the car, to the left of the center and in front of a driver seated behind the steering wheel of the car, were three foot pedals [542]*542used in operating the car. The left one of these operated the clutch. The car had two forward gears, low and high. A spring held this pedal up engaging the high-gear clutch, unless the pedal were pushed down by the foot, or released by the emergency brake. If the pedal were pushed half way down with the foot it disengaged the clutch, and the car was then in neutral, and if it were pushed all the way down it engaged the low-gear clutch. There was no way to fasten the pedal in position to hold it either in low gear or in neutral. Those positions of the clutch were controlled by the driver’s foot pressure, or lack of it. The center pedal was for the operation of the car in reverse gear by pushing it down and holding it down with the foot. To keep the reverse gear and the high or low gear from being in operation at the same time it was necessary to hold the left pedal at a central position with the foot so that neither of the forward gears would be connected, or to pull back the emergency brake lever enough to throw those gears into neutral, but not enough to engage the emergency brake. The pedal nearest the center of the car and to the right of the one sitting in the driver’s position was for a brake which could be applied by pressing that pedal down with the foot. This could be done while the car was in gear, but would be more effective if it were in neutral. These devices for operating the car were so placed as to be within reach and readily accessible to one seated directly behind the steering wheel, which was the normal position of the driver or operator of the automobile. Some of these could be reached and operated by one seated in the front seat to the right of the driver, but it was difficult, if not impossible, to operate the emergency brake lever or the clutch pedal from that position.

On the day of the casualty, having completed their errands at Ellsworth, Ella Powers, with her children, started home about five o’clock in the afternoon. She drove until they got out of town, then she stopped the car, had Ethel get in the driver’s seat to drive, and she took her seat in the middle of the front seat of the car, with Mabel to her right. The mother and an older sister previously had given Ethel some instruction about driving a car, but she had never driven alone. In this position Ethel drove the car until they approached the bridge above described. When they came to the “Slow” sign Mrs. Powers pushed the gas lever up and told Ethel she should always do that and let the car slow its speed at a “Slow” sign. Mrs. Powers then put her left arm on the back of the seat [543]*543behind Ethel and took hold of the steering wheel with her right hand. Ethel continued with her hands on the steering wheel. In this position they continued, Mrs. Powers assisting Ethel in steering and driving the car around the curve and on the approach to the bridge, traveling at a speed of perhaps twelve to fifteen miles per hour. They negotiated these curves without difficulty and had driven onto the bridge. When about the center of the bridge itself, directly over the center of the arch, or a little past it, the left front fender or wheel caught on a post or a plank of the railing on the left side of the bridge. Mrs. Powers exclaimed: “Oh, Ethel.” The car pulled sharply to the left, pushed the railing over, knocked one of the stones from the coping, or wall, at the top of the bridge, and fell about fifteen feet to the bed of the creek, which contained no water at that time. • Mrs. Powers was killed by this fall; perhaps her neck was broken. Ethel had an arm broken and her mouth severely cut and bruised. Mabel was practically uninjured. She ran to a house near by, where help was obtained.

The special questions and answers returned thereto by the jury are as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 P.2d 457, 139 Kan. 540, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borman-v-state-highway-commission-kan-1934.