Claud W. Nesbit v. W. O. Everette

243 F.2d 59, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2893
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 1957
Docket16123
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 243 F.2d 59 (Claud W. Nesbit v. W. O. Everette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claud W. Nesbit v. W. O. Everette, 243 F.2d 59, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2893 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict for defendant, in a suit by the appellant to recover for injuries suffered by him and for the death of his wife in an automobile accident. Aside from a challenge to the verdict as against the weight of the evidence the principal complaints are of several alleged errors involving the court’s instructions to the jury.

In another decision in this case, 227 F. 2d 157, this Court held that the district court had erred in an earlier trial in granting defendant’s motion for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiff’s case, since whether the evidence showed that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence should have been left to the jury. The pertinent facts are stated in that opinion from the viewpoint most favorable to the plaintiff.

In brief, it appears that just before the accident defendant’s trailer truck was experiencing motor trouble and the driver started to pull off the road onto the wide shoulder; however, while four or five feet of the trailer were still extending into the road the tractor became unable to pull the load any further and the driver then stopped the motor, aroused his dozing helper, and both got out to warn traffic. Defendant’s witness, the helper, asserts that the accident happened before any warning signals could be put out on the road, though it is not clear whether the truck carried those required by law. Plaintiff testified that he was proceeding at his usual rate of speed for clear night driving, at 45-50 miles per hour, when he was disturbed by the lights of an oncoming car; he signalled for low lights by momentarily changing his own, whereupon the approaching lights were flashed on still brighter; temporarily blinded, he started to answer his wife’s question about a man at the side of the road, and immediately thereafter he collided with the back of the trailer before he had seen it for more than a fraction of a second. To the moment of impact he had not reduced his speed.

At the outset we must reject appellant’s contention that the jury’s verdict was “against the manifest weight of the evidence” and “against the relevant principles of law.” It is clear that in considering such a challenge both the trial and the appellate court must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party, here the *61 defendant. Considered in that manner the jury’s verdict can be supported on several possible grounds: (1) as a determination that defendant’s driver was not culpably negligent if his truck had indeed just broken down before he could pull entirely off the highway and if the collision occurred before he and his assistant could put out the required warning lights; (2) as a finding that plaintiff was contributorily negligent in not reducing his speed when first disturbed and then blinded by the lights of the approaching car or perhaps in driving at an excessive rate of speed as asserted by one of appellee’s witnesses.

Appellant’s remaining challenges relate to various asserted errors in the court’s charge to the jury or in failing to include instructions requested by him.

Appellant complains that the trial judge erred in over-emphasizing the factor of contributory negligence in the charge, by referring to it about twenty-five times and by repetitiously restating the rule that plaintiff could not recover if the jury found him guilty of such negligence, and that the Florida Supreme Court in a recent case has held that the prejudicial effect of such a repetition may entitle plaintiff to a new trial. Butz v. Rineheart, 88 So.2d 125. However, it appears from the record that appellant did not object to this feature of the charge before the jury retired to consider its verdict, as required by Rule 51, Fed.Rules Civ.Proc., 28 U.S.C.A., and thus he may not now assign this point as error. Cf. Shanahan v. Southern Pac. Co., 9 Cir., 188 F.2d 564, 568. Moreover, a reading of the entire charge convinces us that there was no misleading emphasis to the substantial detriment of the plaintiff, though perhaps the extra admonition following the reading of a statutory passage to the jury might have been omitted 1 ; in some of the enumerated instances the court, as a matter of fact, only referred to contributory negligence to emphasize that the defendant had the burden of proof with respect to it. Even had a timely objection been made and refused by the trial court, we would be unable to base a reversal on this point in view of the provisions of Rule 61 and of 28 U.S.C.A. § 2111, which bids us to disregard harmless errors.

Appellant also urges that the district court erred by charging that plaintiff could not recover by reason of his contributory negligence if his neglect “approximately and substantially” or “in any appreciable degree” contributed to the accident, since the interchangeable use of these and similar phrases by the court did not make it clear to the jury that for contributory negligence to be a bar it must be a proximate cause of the accident. Again it appears that no objection was made to this feature of the charge and again a reading of the entire charge shows that the court several times carefully indicated that only such of plaintiff’s negligence should be considered by the jury as proximately contributed to the causation of the accident, and only in the more incidental references are the terms now objected to used; we do not believe that these could have misled the jury.

Appellant urges that the district court erred in its charge relative to the “range of vision, rule” and the Florida 350 foot headlight requirement in that the instructions so commingled and confused the two principles of law that the jury was led to believe that the rules were synonymous or complementary and that they together obligated plaintiff to see anything within 350 feet *62 from where he was at any time, day or night — and thus plaintiff would be guilty of contributory negligence even if he failed to see a perfectly concealed or camouflaged object. Though this objection is now set forth in the brief at great length no timely mention of it was made to the trial court; a careful reading of the charge and of the objection to it does not persuade us that the jury could reasonably have been confused by the two rules on the basis of this charge — particularly since the court was dealing with matters basically familiar to most of them. The other labored complaints under this head are equally lacking in substance in view of the court’s charge that the burden of proof on contributory negligence was on the defendant and of the charge on sudden emergencies. 2 The court also adequately set forth the statutory requirements controlling both the operation of the truck and of the car.

Appellant also complains of the charge on “sudden emergencies” set forth above, in that it allegedly does not adequately set forth plaintiff’s contention that at the time he was blinded “he did not have time to do anything” before the instant of the crash. We do not see how this instruction was at all misleading or hurtful to plaintiff; as a matter of fact at the conclusion of the charge only the defendant made any objection to this instruction.

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243 F.2d 59, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claud-w-nesbit-v-w-o-everette-ca5-1957.