Bready v. Tipton

1965 OK 158, 407 P.2d 194
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 12, 1965
Docket40803
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1965 OK 158 (Bready v. Tipton) 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
Bready v. Tipton, 1965 OK 158, 407 P.2d 194 (Okla. 1965).

Opinions

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

Defendant in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, instituted this action in 1962, against plaintiffs in error, hereinafter referred to by name or as “defendants”, to recover damages in the total sum of $195,520.00, on account of certain alleged injuries his 10-year-old ward, Joe Hampton, received on July 30, 1960, when he, and the bicycle he was riding, were struck by an automobile owned and driven by the defendant, Clyde H. Grindstaff, alleged agent of the defendants doing business as O. G. Kelley & Company, on U. S. Highway No. 70, approximately 4 miles west of Durant, Oklahoma, while said driver was on a trip from Elizabethton, Tennessee, to Globe, Arizona.

Plaintiff’s petition alleged that the proximate cause of the collision was negligence of the defendants in the following respects :

“(a) in failing to keep a proper lookout.
“(b) In failing to exercise proper precaution for any child upon a roadway as required by Title 47, O.S.1959, Section 125.14.
“(c) In failing to have the automobile under such control as would enable the same to be stopped within the assured clear distance ahead as required by Title 47, O.S.1959, section 121.3(a).
“(d) In failing to sound a horn as required by Title 47, O.S.1959, Section 148(z).
“(e) In failing to yield the right-of-way as required by law.
“(f) In driving at a speed in excess of 65 miles per hour in violation of Title 47, O.S.1959, section 121.3(d).
“(g) In driving at a speed not careful or prudent under the conditions then and there existing in violation of Title 47, O.S.1959, section 121.3(a). * *”

The defendant Grindstaff’s answer contained a general denial and specific allegations that the Hampton boy’s injuries were proximately caused by his own “negligence and/or contributory negligence” in the following particulars:

“a. Plaintiff’s ward turned his bicycle from a direct course and moved to the left upon the roadway when such movement could not be made with safety.
“b. Plaintiff’s ward turned his bicycle into path of defendant’s car without giving an appropriate signal to indicate liis intention to turn at least 100 feet before turning.
“c. Plaintiff’s ward was riding his bicycle upon the roadway at a place where a usable path adjacent to the roadway was provided.
“d. The bicycle on which plaintiffs ward was riding was not equipped as required by law.
“e. Plaintiff’s ward rode the bicycle directly into the left front fender of defendant’s car with reckless disregard to his own safety.
“f. Plaintiff’s ward disregarded the sounding of defendant’s horn at a distance more than 200 feet from the point of collision.
“g. Plaintiff’s ward failed to yield the right of way to defendant, crossed over the center line onto north side of the highway and collided with defendant’s car in the defendant’s line of traffic. * * * ”

In their verified answer, the defendants doing business as Kelley & Company denied that Grindstaff was their agent or employee at the time of the accident, and [197]*197alleged, among other things, that Joe Hampton’s injuries were proximately caused by his own negligence, in particulars similar to those alleged in Grindstaff’s answer.

At the trial, in June, 1963, after it appeared from plaintiff’s evidence that immediately previous to the collision, Grindstaff’s auto was traveling west in the north traffic lane of the Highway, and that when he first saw Joe Hampton riding his bicycle, in an easterly direction down the south side of the Highway, more than SO to 70 yards away, he braked the speed of his auto from about 50 or 55, to 40 or 45, miles per hour, but just before the collision, the bicycle changed its direction by turning toward the north to cross the highway in front of the oncoming car, the court sustained defendants’ demurrers to plaintiff’s evidence as to plaintiff’s allegation that Grindstaff failed to yield the right-of-way and was driving in excess of 65 miles per hour at the time of the accident, but overruled these demurrers in all other respects.

After defendants had introduced their evidence, they asked that their pleadings be amended to conform to the evidence tending to show that the accident was unavoidable, and their separate motions for directed verdicts were overruled. Upon submission of the case to the jury under instructions, which covered, among others, the subjects of unavoidable accident and contributory negligence, a general verdict was returned in plaintiff’s favor for damages in the amount of $118,666.00. After the overruling of defendants’ separate motions for a remittitur, and for a new trial, they perfected the present appeal.

Defendants’ first arguments for reversal of the trial court’s judgment are directed at attempting to demonstrate error in his overruling of their motions for a directed verdict. They very positively, and quite persuasively, urge that the evidence shows Grindstaff was guilty of no negligence, or breach of duty, toward Joe Hampton, but, on the contrary, shows that the collision was proximately caused by the negligence and/or contributory negligence of Hampton himself, in changing, or reversing, the direction of his bicycle and propelling it into the path of Grindstaff’s onrushing automobile at a time when it was too late for collision between the automobile and the bicycle to be avoided by Grindstaff. They call our attention to the hereinbefore mentioned fact that the trial court, after hearing plaintiff’s evidence, sustained their demurrer to it in respect to two of his allegations of negligence, viz: “(e)” and “(f)”, supra; and, by referring to the distance, down the road and ahead of his car, that Grindstaff testified he first saw the Hampton boy, they argue, in effect, that, on the basis of the evidence, this is not a case where a motorist has failed to keep a proper lookout, but one in which a bicyclist has failed to do so. They say: “The boy could have seen the defendant’s car as soon as the defendant could see the boy, to-wit, at least 210 feet away.” The question, however, for the purpose of determining error in the trial court’s ruling on defendants’ motions for a directed verdict was not: Coiild the boy have seen the car coming toward him (if he had been looking in that direction), but: Did the boy see the car, and, if not, can such failure be legally attributed to negligence on the part of Grindstaff? There is no evidence that the boy, Joe Hampton, saw Grindstaff’s auto coming toward him until he had pedaled his bicycle across the center line of the paved highway in front of the oncoming car, just an instant before the collision occurred, when he then turned his bicycle back towards the road’s south lane, but (as he testified) “ * * * didn’t make it.” We think it was for the jury to determine whether it was Grind-staff’s duty, under all of the circumstances and after seeing the Hampton boy riding his bicycle along the south side of the highway (in plenty of time to have done so), to have sounded his auto’s horn and/or to have brought the auto under such control that the collision would not have occurred, and whether his failure of duty (in either, or all, of the respects upon which he stood charged at the close of the evidence) proxi

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1965 OK 158, 407 P.2d 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bready-v-tipton-okla-1965.