Boyett v. Airline Lumber Company

1954 OK 321, 277 P.2d 676, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 717
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 16, 1954
Docket36136, 36137
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1954 OK 321 (Boyett v. Airline Lumber Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyett v. Airline Lumber Company, 1954 OK 321, 277 P.2d 676, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 717 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

HALLEY, Chief Justice.

Paul D. Boyett, Sr. and his minor son, Paul Dewayne Boyett, Jr., by his father and next friend, each filed a suit against the Airline Lumber Company, a copart-nership, and Herbert M. Love, its employee, for damages to them resulting from personal injuries suffered - by the minor, Paul Dewayne Boyett, Jr., when he ran into or collided with a Ford truck owned by the copartnership and driven by Herbert M. Love, an employee.

By agreement the two cases were consolidated for trial before a jury. The jury returned a verdict for the defendants in each case and added to the usual form of verdict the following:

“Find driver not guilty & Arr Lumber Co.” •

The plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment and include in one brief their argument for reversal of both cases.

Plaintiffs contend that the court erred in giving certain instructions and in refusing to give certain instructions requested by plaintiffs, resulting in depriving plaintiffs of a fair trial and an erroneous verdict for defendants.

The defendants pled contributory negligence in both cases, and there is disagreement as to proper instructions when a child four and one-half years of age is charged with contributory negligence. Before the jury was instructed, the defendants secured permission of the court to strike from their answer allegations of contributory negligence on the part of Paul D. Boyett, Sr., in his case. He had sought to recover for medical expenses and loss of services of his son during minority.

The accident involved occurred on south Goff Street in Oklahoma City about 4:30 p. m. on April 1, 1952. Goff Street runs north and south. The pavement is about 26 feet in width. This street is not intersected for several blocks but at each end it is crossed by a street running east and west. About a block north of the point of the accident the rear entrance to the yard of Airline Lumber Company is located. The Boyett home is located on the west side of Goff Street about a block south of the lumber yard and the accident occurred near the Boyett home. The. evidence is conflicting as to whether Paul Dewayne Boyett, Jr., approached the truck from the east or west side of Goff Street. He was lying near the center of the street after being struck and knocked down by the truck.

An ice cream wagon or car had entered Goff Street from the south prior to the entry of defendants’ truck and both were headed north. The first customer for ice cream was on the west side of the street and the ice cream wagon pulled over on the west side and stopped. The Ford truck approached from the south and the driver saw a bunch of excited children on both sides of Goff Street. The Ford truck driver, Love, brought his truck to a complete stop and stood still for a few minutes to allow children to cross to the ice cream wagon.

The truck driver, Love, testified that Paul Dewayne Boyett, Jr., was then standing on the curb on the east side of the street jumping up and down and eating an apple but giving no indication of intention to enter or cross the street.

Love testified that he did not sound his horn or give any other warning, but stopped to allow any who desired to cross the street to do so ahead of him. Upon starting his *679 truck in low gear, he started north at a speed estimated at from seven to ten miles per hour. He stated that he never saw the child start or run toward his truck and did not see the truck strike the boy. Upon hearing the impact of the child with the truck, he stepped on the brake, jumped out of the truck and ran back to where the child was lying about the middle of the street and found evidence that the child had been struck by the front corner of the truckbed.

There is no dispute as to the injuries suffered by the child. He suffered head injuries that interfere with his thinking and it was agreed that he had a life expectancy of 60 years. The amount of medical expense was also fixed by agreement. Only three' witnesses testified that they actually saw the accident, Herbert M. Love, the truck driver, Charles Penny, the ice cream man, and John B. Dial, Jr., a neighbor boy between nine and ten years of age.

The defendant, Love, testified that as he drove his truck north on Goff Street, he saw the ice cream wagon parked on the west side of the street and that there were many children on both sides of the street; that before he got opposite the ice cream wagon, he stopped his truck and waited for all the children to cross the street if they so desired. He said that the Boyett child was about three feet inside the curb on the east side of Goff Street jumping up and down and eating an apple showing no signs of intention to enter or cross the street; that he did not sound his horn or give any other signal but after waiting a few moments started his truck in low gear and was proceeding north on the right hand side of the street at a low rate of speed when he heard a child scream. He slammed on his brakes, choking out the motor, jumped out and found the Boyett child lying in about the center of the street apparently choking on the apple he was eating. Love removed the apple from the mouth and waited for the child’s mother to arrive. He stated that he did not see the child enter the street and did not see it struck by the truck but did find evidence of the collision on the truck.

John B. Dial, Jr., testified that he first saw the .Boyett boy as he stood behind the screen of his front door across the street; that witness lived on the east side of the street facing the Boyett home; that he saw the Boyett child start to run across the street from the west side, saw him strike the front of the truck, spin around and strike the bed and then fall near the center of the street. This testimony is. in conflict with that of the defendant, Love, who testified that the child was on the east side of the street when he saw him and started his truck toward the north.

Mr. Penny, the ice cream man did not see the actual impact but saw the Boy-ett child as he fell to the street after striking the truck from where Penny was parked on the west side of the street.- This witness estimated the speed of the truck at the time at seven or eight miles per hour. He said that many children were on each side of the street. He saw the truck driver, Love, stop suddenly and run báck to where the child was lying near the center of the street. There is ample evidence to support the findings of the jury to the effect that its verdict for the defendants was based upon a lack of negligence on the part of defendants, provided the instructions of the court are not misleading, prejudicial or otherwise erroneous as a matter of law. Plaintiffs’ first proposition is as follows:

“The court’s Instruction No. 14, supra, to the effect that the father could not recover in his individual case unless the minor son recovered in his case is erroneous and prejudicial ‘ (1) because the affirmative defense of “contributory negligence of the child’’ was not plead by defendants, and (2) because the doctrine of imputed negligence as between parent and child is rejected in Oklahoma by statute and by judicial pronouncements.”

Instruction No. 14 complained of is as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 321, 277 P.2d 676, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyett-v-airline-lumber-company-okla-1954.