Brown v. Kansas Electric Utilities Co.

203 P. 907, 110 Kan. 283, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 7, 1922
DocketNo. 23,444
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 203 P. 907 (Brown v. Kansas Electric Utilities Co.) 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
Brown v. Kansas Electric Utilities Co., 203 P. 907, 110 Kan. 283, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 32 (kan 1922).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

This action was brought by W. J. Brown to recover from the Kansas Electric Utilities Company damages which resulted from a collision of plaintiff’s automobile with a.street car of the defendant. It was alleged that as plaintiff’s wife was driving his automobile down Congress street approaching Sixth street, on which there are street-car tracks, she did something that killed the engine and she was unable to start it at once. A street car was then approaching the crossing at a speed of thirty or forty miles an hour in violation of an ordinance prescribing a speed of twelve miles per hour, and the motorman recklessly ran the car against the automobile wrecking it and injuring the occupants. It was charged that [284]*284the defendant was negligent in failing to provide proper equipment for controlling and stopping its car and also in the manner of handling the car, especially in running it at an excessive speed, and further, in failing to keep a proper lookout for vehicles on the crossing. It is alleged that if he had done so he could have seen the plight of plaintiff and stopped the car before colliding with the automobile.

The defense set up was that the collision and injuries resulted from the want of care of the plaintiff and his wife. The verdict of the jury was in favor of the plaintiff, and with it special findings of fact were returned upon which a judgment for plaintiff was rendered for $335.15. The defendant asked for judgment on the special findings and, this motion being refused, it brings the special findings here without the evidence and insists that they were such as to compel a judgment for defendant. The following are the special findings:

“1. Do you find the defendant guilty of any negligence? If so, state what act or acts constituted said negligence.
“Yes, exceeding speed limit.
“2. After the automobile had stopped on the tracks, did either the plaintiff or the wife of the plaintiff make any attempt to start the automobile and get it off the tracks before the collision? If so, state which of the two parties named made such an attempt and state what he or she did.
“Yes, Brown, made effort to work gears.
“3. After the motorman discovered the peril of the plaintiff did he do all in his power to avoid the accident?
“Yes.
“4. If you answer the previous question in the negative, state what the motorman might have done .that he did not do to avoid the accident after discovering the peril of the plaintiff.
“Nothing.
“5. Was there anything to prevent the plaintiff or his wife-from seeing the approaching street car after the automobile had reached a point one-half block north of the street car tracks?
“Street car not in sight; no obstruction.
“6. Was the motorman sounding his gong as he approached the intersection of Sixth Avenue and Congress Street?
“Yes.
“7. Did either plaintiff or his wife see the street car approaching the intersection of Sixth Avenue and Congress street before the accident?
“Yes, plaintiff.
“8. Did plaintiff indicate to his wife in any way that the street car was approaching? If so, state how.
“No.
“9. Was there anything to prevent plaintiff’s wife from stopping the automobile before it reached the street car tracks, or of turning the automobile to [285]*285the right or to the left on Sixth Avenue before she reached the street car tracks? If so, state what it was.
“No.
“10. Was plaintiff’s wife an inexperienced driver?
“Yes.
_ “11. If you answer the preceding question in the affirmative, state whether the fact that plaintiff’s wife was not an experienced driver, was one of- the contributing causes of the accident?
“Yes.
“12. Did plaintiff, at the time he requested his wife to take the wheel, know that she was an inexperienced driver?
“Yes.
“13. Did the accident happen at the intersection of two of the main thoroughfares of the city and at a time and place where vehicles of different kinds, including street cars, were likely to be frequently passing?
“Yes.
“14. If you find that plaintiff knew, at the time, he requested his wife to drive, that she was not an experienced driver, state if he acted as an ordinarily prudent and careful man would act in requesting her to drive at the time and place which he did.
“No.
“15. Do you allow plaintiff anything'for the alleged injuries to his person? If so, how much?
“Fifteen cents for iodine.
“16. Is there anything of value remaining from plaintiff’s car which still belongs to him?
“No.
“17. If you answer question ten, that defendant’s wife was an inexperienced driver, and answer question eleven that her inexperience contributed to the injury, state whether such inexperience contributed further than placing the auto on the track and killing the engine?
“No.
“18. How far was the street car from the automobile when the auto first, stopped on the tracks?
“210 feet.
“'IQ1. Was there anything between the street car and the automobile that obscured the view, or prevented the drivers of either from seeing the other?
“No.
“20. At what rate of speed was the street car moving when the auto first stopped on the track?
“Twenty-five miles.
“21. If the motorman had applied the brakes or reversed the power at the time the auto first stopped on the -track could he have stopped the car and prevented the injury?
“Yes.

The findings disclosed that both parties were guilty of negligence, the plaintiff in permitting his wife, an inexperienced driver, to drive [286]*286the car on crowded thoroughfares; and by reason of her inexperience it became stalled on the street-car track. The defendant was negligent in operating the car at an excessive speed and in failing to apply the brakes and stop the car when the motorman saw or could have seen the automobile upon the track.

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 907, 110 Kan. 283, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-kansas-electric-utilities-co-kan-1922.