City of Phoenix v. Mubarek Ali Khan

229 P.2d 949, 72 Ariz. 1, 1951 Ariz. LEXIS 179
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1951
Docket5271
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 229 P.2d 949 (City of Phoenix v. Mubarek Ali Khan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Phoenix v. Mubarek Ali Khan, 229 P.2d 949, 72 Ariz. 1, 1951 Ariz. LEXIS 179 (Ark. 1951).

Opinion

PHELPS, Justice.

This, is an appeal from a judgment of the superior court of Maricopa County in favor of plaintiff-appellee and against defendants-appellants, from an order denying defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and from an order denying defendants’ motion for a new trial. The parties will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff and defendants.

The facts are that on October 31, 1948, at about 6:15 p. 'm. plaintiff boarded a westbound bus at 15th Avenue and West Van Burén Street operated by defendant City of Phoenix and driven by defendant C. J. Clark. The bus was loaded to the extent that a number of passengers, including plaintiff, were compelled to stand in the aisle. After plaintiff paid his fare he took a position in the aisle immediately back of the driver holding on to an upright metal bar with his right hand.

West Van Burén Street is a four-lane highway until it reaches 23rd Avenue. At that point the paved portion of the road is narrowed to a three-lane pavement which constitutes the traveled portion of the road. As the bus approached 23rd Avenue *4 it was traveling on the lane just north of the center of the road and by going approximately straight ahead would travel upon the north lane of the three-lane pavement west of 23rd Avenue. Just as the bus crossed 23rd Avenue the driver observed that a car which had been traveling west on the north lane of the four-lane highway ran on to the unpaved portion of the road which just west of 23rd Avenue was full of holes. Upon observing the situation the bus immediately pulled over to the center or passing lane of traffic so that the car to his right could get on the north lane of traffic which it did. The car proceeded along the north lane 20 to 30 feet ahead of the bus as it continued on the center or passing lane. Ahead of the car to whom the bus driver had surrendered the right to the north lane there was another car also using the north lane.

24th Avenue runs south from Van Burén Street but does not extend north thereof. As the bus and the two cars on the north traffic lane approached 24th Avenue and West Van Burén Street the driver of the bus saw the leading car on the north lane suddenly and without warning turn on to the center lane of traffic and stop at a point where 24th Avenue intersects on the south with West Van Burén Street. When stopped this car was headed in a southwesterly direction completely blocking the center lane and a portion of the north lane. It was evident that the driver of the car intended to go south on 24th Avenue. The bus was 80 to 90 feet báck of the car when he saw the driver turn over on to the center lane of traffic and stop. The bus driver testified that eastbound traffic was heavy but it appeared to him that the car would be able to cross over on to South 24th Avenue without interference from the approaching eastbound traffic. It developed, however, that the driver of the car did not undertake to immediately cross to 24th Avenue.

The bus driver further testified that as soon as he saw the car pull over on to his lane of traffic he took his foot off of the accelerator and began to fill the brakelines with air; that, at this time, he was traveling not over 25 nor less than 20 miles per hour; that he traveled 25 to 30 feet while he was filling the brakelines with air and drove 10 to 12 feet after the bralcelines were' filled before he actually applied the brakes; that he brought the bus to a stop 3 or 4 feet back of the car blocking his lane of traffic and that he probably swerved slightly to the left in bringing the bus to a stop because of the. closeness of the second car in the north lane of traffic. The second car had been compelled to stop, or did stop, because of the partial blocking of the north lane of traffic by the car which had attempted to turn south into 24th Avenue.

The evidence disclosed that a motor vehicle driven at 25 miles per hour may be stopped within a distance of from 40 to 46 feet after application of the brakes and *5 that it will travel approximately 27 feet during the reaction period of the average driver, that is the time elapsing between the will to act and the act itself. Thus a motor vehicle traveling 25 miles per hour may be brought to a stop approximately 65 to 73 feet from the point where the driver first decides to bring the vehicle to a stop. There is a slight conflict in the testimony offered by the plaintiff and the defendant relative to the distance within which such stop may be made but the variation is slight ranging from 6 to 10 feet.

According to all the evidence the bus stopped suddenly with a slight jerk; that it was different from the ordinary stop of a bus; that it threw plaintiff around (either to the right or left) and against the coin box or against a bar or metal railing back of the driver. Either plaintiff’s hip or his back came in contact with one of these metal objects. Plaintiff claims his head also struck a metal bar back of the driver when he fell. A witness in front of whom he was standing stated positively, however, that his head did not strike anything. Other witnesses said they didn’t see it strike anything.

Whether it did or not was a question of fact for the jury and is in nowise material to a disposition of this case.

After the accident the bus driver had plaintiff placed on a bus coming into Phoenix, with instructions that he be taken to the supervisor’s office. Upon arriving at that office he was conveyed to St. Monica’s Hospital where he remained for 11 days, during a part of which period he was considered by physicians in attendance to be in a critical condition.

Defendants have presented 12 assignments of error for our consideration.

Assignment of error No. 1 is based primarily upon the court’s refusal to instruct a verdict for the defendant. We are of the opinion that the court correctly denied defendant’s motion for an instructed verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict for the reason that the evidence, taken in whatever light it may be viewed, is of such character that reasonable men may draw different inferences from it and reach different conclusions as to whether or not the bus driver exercised that degree of care the law required of him under the circumstances. The question of negligence was therefore properly submitted to the jury.

Assignment of error No. 2 is directed at the refusal of the court to permit the witness James W. Salmon to answer the following question: “Did the bus driver do anything unnecessary under the circumstances then and there existing, in the manner in which he stopped the bus, as you saw it when you looked out the windshield?” The substance of the question asked was whether or not defendant Clark was negligent in bringing the bus to a stop at the time and place of the accident. This testimony was offered as opinion evidence based upon his expert knowledge as *6 an experienced truck and bus driver. Even if it were conceded that expert testimony might be admissible under certain circumstances, in this case, however, the witness was not sufficiently qualified by counsel to testify as an expert. The sum total ■of his testimony was that he had driven a bus for the Navy and for a small bus company at McAllister. Whether he was employed for a day, a week or a year does not appear.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P.2d 949, 72 Ariz. 1, 1951 Ariz. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-phoenix-v-mubarek-ali-khan-ariz-1951.