Burnett v. Ahlers

483 S.W.2d 153, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 181
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 26, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 483 S.W.2d 153 (Burnett v. Ahlers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burnett v. Ahlers, 483 S.W.2d 153, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 181 (Ky. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

EDWARD P. HILL, Jr., Judge.

A jury returned a verdict for Doris Chandler against both drivers involved in a two-car collision. She was a passenger in one of the cars. The appellant, Minnie A. Burnett, one of the drivers, argues among other things that there was no evidence of probative value tending to prove negligence on her part and she was, therefore, entitled to a directed verdict. We agree.

On January 27, 1967, the appellant was driving her husband’s automobile west on Famous Way, a two-lane street in Jefferson County. Pauline Renfrow was a front-seat passenger and Doris Chandler was a rear-seat passenger in Mrs. Burnett’s car. They were on their way to pick up another passenger and thence to work at P. Lorillard Corporation. A light snow was falling.

Appellee Barbara Ahlers, age 20, was driving her father’s car east on Famous Way with her brother as a passenger.

The accident occurred just west of the intersection of Famous Way and Judge Boulevard. Famous Way is the dominant highway. Stop signs are provided for traffic entering Famous Way. A short distance west of the intersection, Famous Way curves south.

Before getting to the evidence on the question of fault, it should be shown in this opinion how the issues arose. Appellant, Minnie A. Burnett, first filed civil action against Barbara Ahlers and her father, Robert Ahlers, and the Kentucky Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company (hereafter Ky. Farm Bureau) in which Minnie’s husband, Emory R. Burnett, joined claiming damages to his car and loss of its use. Minnie sued for pain and suffering, lost earnings, and for her medical expenses. Ky. Farm Bureau, Minnie’s insurance carrier, was joined on the theory it was liable to Minnie under its uninsured motorist provision.

The second civil action was filed by Doris Chandler and her husband, Joseph Chandler, against the Burnetts, the Ahlers, and Ky. Farm Bureau.

The two actions were consolidated. The trial resulted in a verdict for Emory R. Burnett against the Ahlers for the damages to his car and for Doris Chandler in the sum of $2,300 against Minnie A. Burnett and the Ahlers.

After this appeal was perfected, Ky. Farm Bureau paid Doris Chandler the amount of her judgment, and she has moved this court to dismiss the appeal as to her. This motion is now overruled. See Bratton v. Speaks, Ky., 286 S.W.2d 526.

Four witnesses testified for appellant Minnie A. Burnett on the question of fault. [155]*155They were Pauline Renfrow, Doris Chandler, Richard Prewitt, and appellant Minnie A. Burnett.

The only witness to testify on behalf of appellee Barbara Ahlers was Barbara herself. Although her brother was in the car driven by Barbara at the time of the collision and was in court at the time of the trial, he did not testify.

Of the eleven “questions” presented, we shall discuss only one except to briefly refer to some evidence as to previous accidents and injuries of appellant Minnie A. Burnett. The dispositive question to which we now turn is whether there was any probative evidence produced on the trial which tended to charge appellant, Mrs. Burnett, with negligence; or stated another way, whether appellant, Mrs. Burnett, was entitled to a directed verdict on her claim against Barbara Ahlers and as to the claim of Doris Chandler.

We shall now review the evidence as it relates to the question of fault on the part of Mrs. Burnett.

The sum and substance of the testimony of Mrs. Burnett was that as she approached the intersection of Famous Way and Judge Boulevard, she observed a stopped car headed east on Famous Way with its signal lights indicating a desire of the driver to make a left turn onto Judge Boulevard; that she passed the stopped car without incident and while on her side of the road; that there was a sharp curve on Famous Way west of its intersection with Judge Boulevard and that “around the curve came a car on my side of the road, directly on my side of the road as it rounded the curve, and immediately the car passed back over sharply on its side and back again as if it was out of control. I immediately steered my automobile to the right * * * but I didn’t get out of the way. She hit me in the side.” The appellant, Mrs. Burnett, further testified that she was in her right-hand lane, traveling about 25 miles per hour.

The testimony of Pauline Renfrow substantiated that of Mrs. Burnett. Pauline stated that at no time did the Burnett car get over in its left lane of traffic; that it was traveling at a reasonable rate of speed; that she observed the Ahlers car “just seconds before” the collision; that she “became aware that Mrs. Burnett’s car was being braked and pulling to the right and looked up to see what was going on and saw the Ahlers’ car coming toward” the Burnett car; that at this time the Ah-lers car was “in the middle of the street or in the righthand lane”; that at the time of the contact of the two vehicles, the Burnett car was partly off the road on her right.

Mrs. Renfrow also testified that as the Burnett car approached the intersection, she saw a car traveling east on Famous Way slowing down with its left blinker lights functioning indicating its desire to make a left-hand turn onto Judge Boulevard. This testimony is mentioned here to substantiate the testimony of Richard Prewitt whose deposition asserts that he was the driver of the car slowing down to make a left turn. The appellee Barbara Ahlers gives a completely different version as will be shown later in this opinion.

The third person to give evidence favorable to Mrs. Burnett was Doris Chandler, the back-seat passenger in the Burnett automobile. It should be noted in connection with weighing Mrs. Chandler’s evidence that she was claiming damages from both Mrs. Burnett and the Ahlers. Doris stated that after they had passed the intersection, she “looked up and saw the car coming toward us, and I thought she was going to hit us head on and I screamed”; that she could “feel the (Burnett) car kind of swerve”; that she thought at the time of impact the Burnett car was “off the pavement.” She also stated that the Burnett car passed another car which was preparing to make a left turn onto Judge Boulevard.

The fourth and last person to give evidence concerning the accident was Richard [156]*156Prewitt, a member of the U. S. Navy. He testified that at that time he knew appellee Barbara Ahlers; that at the time of the collision, he had stopped to let the Burnett car pass so he could make a left turn onto Judge Boulevard; that while he was “sitting there, the car passed * * * me and then I heard tires squealing * * * and then I heard the thud and I turned around and seen that the Chevy (Burnett car) had veered off to the right and landed off the road”; that the Ford (Ahlers car) “just about” hit him; that when he looked in his rear-view mirror, the Ahlers car was partly on the north side of Famous Way, which was in the Burnett lane of traffic; that his car was standing stopped after the collision.

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483 S.W.2d 153, 1972 Ky. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnett-v-ahlers-kyctapp-1972.