Chism v. Lampach

352 S.W.2d 191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 15, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 352 S.W.2d 191 (Chism v. Lampach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chism v. Lampach, 352 S.W.2d 191 (Ky. 1961).

Opinion

*192 STANLEY, Commissioner.

The appeal is from a judgment for the appellee for $12,500.

The plaintiff, now appellee, Mrs. Flora Lampach, who weighed about two hundred pounds, got off a bus on the Eighteenth Street Road, or Dixie Highway, in Jefferson County, at the intersection of Mary Catherine Drive and walked west-wardly 150 feet or more on the north side of the Drive on the edge of the paved surface. There was no sidewalk. According to her evidence, she was struck in the back by an automobile driven by the defendant, Chism. She had heard no horn or other noise of the automobile coming up behind her and remembered only that she was struck a hard blow in the back. Another witness testified that the car was traveling about 30 mph, and after the impact it skidded left 25 or 30 feet to the center of the road or street and stopped. The woman’s body was knocked two or three feet off and from the edge of the paving. The accident occurred about eight o’clock in the morning on a clear day in June, 1958.

According to the defendant, who was nineteen years of age, when he turned into the Drive at Eighteenth Street he saw the woman walking with her back to him, and she was in view all the time. He sounded a “beep” on his horn when he was about fifty feet from her but did not apply his brakes. He testified that as the front of his automobile was passing her “she made a quick movement towards my car.” He then applied his brakes and swerved to the left. The defendant admitted he had said in a pretrial deposition that he had started around the woman when 3}4 feet from her and then she made “a leftward motion, or towards the south” and after the front of the car had passed "she walked into the back of the right front fender.” A dent in the top of the right fender just in front of the door post he claimed was made by the impact. Incredible though it be, he insisted no part of the front of the car struck the woman.

A surgeon who treated the plaintiff at the hospital expressed the opinion, upon the equivalent of hypothetical questions, that the fracture of her pelvis and other injuries were probably caused by “a blow from the front or the rear” and not from her side.

Nearby witnesses heard no horn sound. Some had seen the dent in the top of the fender and others had not. There were some other scratches or marks on or about the right headlight.

The foregoing is the gist of the evidence insofar as the question of responsibility is concerned.

The defendant contends he was entitled to a directed verdict.

On the question of the defendant’s primary or antecedent negligence, the jury could hardly believe he was not negligent — very negligent. He had seen the woman directly in his path when he was 150 to 200 feet away. He admitted that he kept straight ahead and did nothing to alarm or avoid her except to toot his horn when fifty feet from her. Others testified he did not even do that.

In walking along the right side of the road with her back to the traffic, the plaintiff violated the statute. KRS 189.570 (6). In doing so the plaintiff failed to observe the standard of ordinary care for her own safety which by implication is what is prescribed by the statute. Applegate v. Johnson, 306 Ky. 358, 208 S.W.2d 77; Saddler v. Parham, Ky., 249 S.W.2d 945; Bettis’ Ex’x v. Rickett, Ky., 310 S.W.2d 775; Ross v. Jones, Ky., 316 S.W.2d 845. The statute permits a motorist to assume that pedestrians will not be walking on or along the right side of the highway, Applegate v. Johnson, supra, 306 Ky. 358, 208 S.W.2d 77, but it does not relieve a motorist of his common law duty of exercising due care to avoid striking them. Certainly, a pedestrian in such position does not license a motorist to run over him or her. The factor of contribution as a proximate cause enters *193 into the question where the motorist sees the pedestrian in ample time and under conditions that he may in the exercise of ordinary care avoid injuring him. We have recognized that in some instances the position of a pedestrian walking on the highway may he the probable or natural cause of his being struck by an automobile. Applegate v. Johnson, 306 Ky. 358, 208 S.W.2d 77; Saddler v. Parham, Ky., 249 S.W.2d 945; Swift & Co. v. Thompson’s Adm’r, 308 Ky. 529, 214 S.W.2d 758; Miracle v. Flannery’s Adm’r, Ky, 259 S.W.2d 689; State Contracting & Stone Co. v. Fulkerson, Ky, 288 S.W.2d 43.

The present case is distinguishable from previous decisions. In our other cases of this class the accident occurred at night when the visibility of the motorist was obscure. The action of the defendant in this case was inexcusable.

The court instructed the jury on the der fendant’s primary negligence in regard to control, lookout, speed and timely warning, and the plaintiff’s contributory negligence in regard to exercising ordinary care, to walking on the left side of the street and not to “turn to the left and walk into the side of the right front fender” of the defendant’s car. We are not so sure that standing alone the circumstance of the plaintiff being on the edge of the street after having walked on the right side should bar recovery, as the appellant contends, because of the factor of a proximate contribution to the accident. The instructions permitted the jury to excuse the defendant, and we do not regard them as prejudicial.

The court may well have submitted the case only under what is variously called the doctrine of “last clear chance” or “discovered peril” or the “humanitarian doctrine”. This is an elementary law of torts. Except for the improbable claim that after the front of the automobile had passed the plaintiff she “walked into the back of the right fender” and made a dent on the top of it, there was nothing to furnish ah escape under this doctrine.

Motions for peremptory instructions were properly overruled. There is no error in the form of the given instructions.

When the case was called for trial, the defendant had not come into court, and his attorney did not know his whereabouts. It was soon learned that the defendant had been involved in an automobile accident on his way to court. After some delay he appeared, and the trial proceeded over the defendant’s objection.

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Bluebook (online)
352 S.W.2d 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chism-v-lampach-kyctapphigh-1961.