Checker Yellow Cab Co. v. Shiflett

351 P.2d 660, 1960 Wyo. LEXIS 57
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1960
Docket2931, 2932
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 351 P.2d 660 (Checker Yellow Cab Co. v. Shiflett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Checker Yellow Cab Co. v. Shiflett, 351 P.2d 660, 1960 Wyo. LEXIS 57 (Wyo. 1960).

Opinion

Mr. Justice HARNSBERGER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The circumstances which precipitated this action are as follows: At about 9:00 a. m. on July 24, 1958, a truck, at a speed of between 5 and 10 miles per hour, was proceeding on its right side of a street, when a cab, traveling in the same direction at a speed somewhere between 20 and 40 miles per hour, attempted to pass it. Before the cab had completed the passing, the truck suddenly turned to the left with the purpose of entering a driveway on the opposite side of the street. The front end of the truck struck the right-side rear door of the cab, which then careened to its left side of the street and crashed into a car there parked at the curb.

The plaintiff cab company sued both the truck driver and the truck owner to recover damages for the injury to its cab, but by stipulation the action proceeded solely against the truck owner.

As the parked car was also injured, its owner was permitted to intervene and sought damages from both the truck owner and the cab owner. Trial was to the court without jury, and the plaintiff cab company was given judgment against the defendant truck owner for a total of $581.53, and the intervener was awarded judgment against both the plaintiff and the defendant for the sum of $532.10. The cab owner appeals from intervener’s judgment and the truck owner appeals from the cab owner’s judgment, but does not appeal from the inter-vener’s judgment against it.

For convenience, the plaintiff cab company will be referred to as the cab, the defendant truck owner as the truck, and the intervener as the car.

The cab driver testified he would have completed the passing of the truck before the intersection was reached had the cab not been struck by the truck, and the evidence *662 unmistakably shows that" the collision between the truck and cab occurred at a point no less than 9 feet from the closest point of the intersection of the street- upon which the vehicles were traveling and the cross street to which they were approaching. However, the truck driver testified he started his left turn to enter the driveway at a point half way between the alley and the street. This would be 62½ feet from the cross street and even farther away than 9 feet from the intersection. A city policeman said the truck was 10 feet longer than an ordinary pickup truck. A city ordinance received in evidence prohibited the making of a left turn to enter a driveway. There was testimony that the truck flashed its light signals indicating a left turn would be made and that the truck’s front and rear signal lights were in working condition both before and after the accident, and the truck driver testified he commenced that signaling when he started the left turn to enter the driveway. The cab driver said there was “never no signal given” and he did not see any signal and did not sound his horn. Another city ordinance received in evidence says that in overtaking and passing “the required signal” should be given. Still another ordinance received in evidence fixes the speed limit at the scene of the accident at 25 miles per hour and at 15 miles per hour at the nearest intersection. Other evidence showed the traveled street was a through street and there was no other traffic which would have any bearing upon either collision.

The contention of the truck in appealing from the cab’s judgment against it is that the cab’s contributory negligence was established by reason of the intervener’s having obtained a judgment against the cab. In support of this theory, the truck represents: (1) that the cab unlawfully attempted to pass the truck at an intersection ; (2) that the cab negligently failed to give warning of its intention to pass the truck; (3) that the cab negligently failed to observe the warning given by the light signaling of the truck; and (4) that the cab’s unlawful speed necessarily contributed to the first collision.

The truck-appellant presents no authorities to support his claim that the passing at an intersection is unlawful, and so far as the record is concerned, there is no ordinance in the city of Cheyenne which prevents this. Despite the truck’s insistence that the cab was attempting to pass the truck within an intersection, all the evidence is exactly to the contrary. This refutes the truck’s premise that the cab was passing the truck at an intersection and makes inapplicable all authorities dealing with intersection cases. Furthermore, it seems obvious and a reasonable inference that because of the respective speeds at which the two vehicles were traveling the passing would have been completed before the truck ever entered the intersection, even if the point of collision was but 9 feet from the intersection instead of being in the neighborhood of some 62½ feet as is indicated by the testimony of the truck driver. The contention that the first collision or the attempted passing occurred within an intersection is overruled.

The truck’s next contention is that the cab contributed to the collision of the truck and cab by negligently failing to give warning of its intention to pass. In advancing this argument the truck seems to rely upon the following city ordinance received in evidence :

“18-937. Caution and Signaling. No driver shall turn, stop, change driving lanes, back, or overtake and pass another vehicle, without first giving the required signal and making certain that he can execute such movement with safety.” Ordinances of the City of Cheyenne, Wyoming, 1950.

To our knowledge, there is no other or further ordinance which describes or defines what signal is required. Certainly no such ordinance whs received in evidence and we will not speculate as to just what kind of signal was referred to by the ordinance. In consequence of this indefiniteness we may not properly say the cab vio *663 lated any ordinance in this respect. In oral argument it was suggested that the cab should have sounded its horn, but opposing counsel stated, without being ' challenged, that it was improper to sound a horn within the city. In any event, governing ordinance or not, the effect of the horn-sounding failure is rather well discussed by this court in Christensen v. McCann, 41 Wyo. 101, 109, 282 P. 1061, 1063:

“It is said that plaintiff did not sound his horn as he approached the intersection, as required by section 3, c. 158, Laws of 1925 [repealed Laws of 1939, ch. 126, § 86]. Aside from the question of whether the requirement mentioned was intended to apply only to the highways of this state, outside of cities and towns, it appears that Mrs. McCann testified that she looked to the left as she approached the intersection. She also testified concerning the rate of speed of plaintiff’s truck, which would appear to indicate that she saw it. This testimony was sufficient to permit the trial court to reach the conclusion that the failure to give the required signal was not the proximate cause of the accident. That in effect was the result of the general finding below against Mrs. McCann on the question of negligence. The rule seems to be that the violation of a duty imposed by statute upon an automobile driver does not of itself impose liability for an injury caused by his car, but it must appear also that the violation of the legal duty was a proximate cause of the injury. Berry’s Law of Automobiles (5th Ed.) § 216, and extended list of cited cases; 42 C.J.

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Bluebook (online)
351 P.2d 660, 1960 Wyo. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/checker-yellow-cab-co-v-shiflett-wyo-1960.