Clay v. Sammons

239 S.W.2d 927, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 906
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 16, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 239 S.W.2d 927 (Clay v. Sammons) 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
Clay v. Sammons, 239 S.W.2d 927, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 906 (Ky. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

STEWART, Justice.

These appeals are from judgments rendered in two actions which were. consolidated in the Johnson Circuit Court for the purpose of trial. In the first case, Irvin Clay sued Tom Sammons and Verna Sam-mons for $20,000 for permanent injuries received by him and for $600 damages to his automobile, or for a total of $20,600. In the other case, Irvin Clay, as administrator of the estate of Alafair Clay, deceased, sued Tom Sammons and Verna Sammons for $25,000 for the wrongful death of his wife, Alafair Clay. Both actions arose out of an accident involving a Chevrolet pick-up truck owned and operated by Irvin Clay and a Ford sedan automobile owned by Tom Sammons and driven by his wife, Verna Sammons, which occurred on Sunday morning, December 7, 1947, at about the hour of 11:00< a. m., on the Paintsville-Inez highway at Meally, Kentucky, approximately 3 miles east of Paintsville in Johnson County. Tom Sam-mons was made a party defendant below in both actions under the “family purpose doctrine.” At the conclusion of the trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Tom Sammons and Verna Sammons in each action.

In this appeal from the judgments adverse to him, appellant advances four grounds for a reversal of the same, to-wit:

(1) The court erred in permitting ap-pellees to introduce incompetent and irrelevant testimony in their 'behalf.

(2) The verdict of the jury was erroneous, contrary to the law, not sustained by, and flagrantly against, the evidence, and was rendered by reason of passion and prejudice.

(3) The instructions to the jury were erroneous in that they failed to state clearly and impartially the law applicable to the cases.

.(4) The arbitrary and unjustified action of the circuit court in setting aside the swearing of the jury continuing these actions at the first trial was an abuse of judicial discretion and caused prejudicial injury to appellant.

Appellant testified that, on the occasion of the accident, he, together with his wife, Alafair Clay, and his daughter, Mrs. Herma Clay. Preston, were in the cab of his 1937 .Chevrolet pick-up truck pro.cqedipg west-[929]*929wardly towards Paintsville. Ralph Castle, a hitch hiker, whom Clay had picked up at Offut, Kentucky, was riding in the bed of the truck. Glay was driving and, on reaching Meally, about 3 miles east of Paints-ville, as he approached the home of Tom and Verna Sammons, situated on the south side of the highway and on appellant’s left hand side, he first saw the Sammons’ automobile 375 feet away, with Verna Sam-mons in it, parked off the road in front of their home, headed in the same directipn that appellant was traveling. Clay says he. was on his right hand side of the highway operating his truck at a rate of. speed of between 25 and 27 miles per hour at .the time. When he came to a point within 30 or 40 feet of the place where, the Sam-mons’ car was parked, Mrs. Sammons, suddenly and without any warning signal, came on to and across the highway directly into the path of his vehicle. Appellant sounded' his horn, applied his brakes and swerved his truck sharply to his left in an effort to avoid a collision. The road ’had a black top surface and was wet and slippery from rain. His truck began to skid, causing him to lose control of it. He skidded past the sedan to the left on the "pave&erit, then back across the highway' directly in front of the Sammons’ car, and finally ran off the highway, landing on the right hand side of'a deep drain. When the movement of the truck had ceased, it was turned on its left side, headed in the opposite direction from which it had been originally traveling. As a .result of the accident, appellant sustained serious and painful injuries, including the permanent dislocation of his left shoulder. Appellant’s wife received fatal internal injuries from which she died on December 9, 1947, two days after the accident. The sedan was uninjured, as it did not make contact with the truck, but appellant’s truck was wrecked: The evidence of Herma Clay Preston, Clay’s daughter, and Ralph Castle, the hitchhiker, agreed substantially with that given by Clay himself at the trial.

Mrs. Sammons testified.thgt, just before advancing out onto the highway, she look-edj behind her through the back window of her automobile, and then, seeing no one,pulled in low gear across the road.onto the right side. Just as she did so, her attention was called to. Clay’s truck by its honking. He was approaching her fast, she said. At a point 180 feet from where she had started he cut out from behind her and went by her on the hard surface. As he passed her, he lost control- of his truck, as the road was slick, then he cut right back in front of her. She applied her. brakes, .but Clay’s, truck skidded around her. Three witnesses were introduced in behalf of appellees who,testified that appellant’s truck, was traveling from 30 to 40 miles per hour at the time of the accident; and that they saw the truck pass the sedan at a point from 135 to 150 feet from the location at which Mrs. Sammons testified her car had been parked just prior to the accident. None of these witnesses saw the Sammons’- car pull put onto the highway, but each observed the Clay truck just before- or at the instant it passed the sedan.,

' The first error complained of by appellant is'that the trial court permitted appellees to' introduce three witnesses, namely, James E. Davis, Roma Ponix and Norton Daniel, who testified as to the speed appellant’s truck was' traveling through Williamsport, Kentucky, some two and- a half miles from the’ scene of the wreck. It was error to allow evidence on the manner' of his driving beyond the immediate scene of the accident, ' contends áppellan't, citing the rule of law laid down in Cornett v. Com., 282 Ky. 322, 138 S.W.2d 492, and Stevens v. Potter, 209 Ky. 705, 273 S.W. 470. The witnesses just named testified, in substance, that they were in the act of getting into the Davis car in front of the latter’s home when Clay passed, traveling from 40- to 50 miles per hour. The truck then went around a curve out of sight.’ They immediately followed in the same direction, going up and 'down a mountain and around curves, at' a speed of from 40 to 50'miles per hour, but they did not see the Clay truck again until they arrived at the scene of the wreck.

,, Appellees, in insisting that this testimony was .competent, argue that the reckless and speedy, driving by Clay had .been placed [930]*930in issue by their pleadings and that this particular evidence was also admissible, because it contradicted appellant who testified at the trial that he had driven all the way from his home to the place of the accident at a reasonable rate of speed. In addition, appellees pled imputed negligence, contributory negligence and assumption of risk on the part of Mrs. Alafair Clay as defenses to the action of her administrator against them. These pleas were predicated] upon facts to be shown at the trial, they state, that Clay had been driving at a reckless rate of speed for some time and for several miles back of the place of accident and that he continued to so operate his car in the same manner until it wrecked, without any warning or protest from Mrs. Clay or any request from her that she be allowed to get out of the truck.

Testimony was in fact produced at the trial that Clay had been driving and had continued to drive at a dangerous rate of speed over a wet, slippery road..

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W.2d 927, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-v-sammons-kyctapp-1951.