Clements v. Peyton

398 S.W.2d 477, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 1, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 398 S.W.2d 477 (Clements v. Peyton) 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
Clements v. Peyton, 398 S.W.2d 477, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 46 (Ky. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

DAVIS, Commissioner.

Appellant’s decedent, Lee Clements, was fatally injured when struck by appellee’s automobile. A jury returned a verdict for appellee; appellant attacks the ensuing judgment by contending that the court erroneously excluded competent evidence, the verdict is contrary to the evidence, and certain instructions erroneously were refused and others erroneously given.

The fatal accident occurred shortly after 10:0Q p. m. on April 29,1963, during a heavy and blinding rainstorm. The decedent was walking across Taylor Boulevard in Louisville when he was struck by appellee’s car. The site of the accident was near the intersection of Taylor Boulevard with Central Avenue. Much of the controversy rages around the question whether the decedent was a pedestrian in the crosswalk at the intersection, or whether he was attempting [479]*479to cross Taylor Boulevard between intersections and away from the marked crosswalk.

Appellee was the only eyewitness whose testimony was heard at the trial. He said that he was proceeding southwardly on Taylor Boulevard at a speed of 2S-30 m. p. h. His vision was so impaired by the rain that he was unable to see ahead for more than twenty feet. Taylor Boulevard is a four-lane, two-way street; appellee was driving in the inside or left traffic lane for vehicles traveling southwardly. Appellee first saw decedent when the latter was twenty feet in front of appellee’s car; at that time decedent was walking from the east toward the west side of Taylor Boulevard, and had stepped from a “median” in the street into the traffic lane of appellee. It was appel-lee’s estimate that decedent was “about two feet off the median” into appellee’s line of travel when appellee first saw decedent. Appellee’s car had an over-all front width of six feet eight inches; an indentation was made in the front of the car by the impact of decedent’s body against it. The indentation was four feet, eleven inches from the left side of the automobile front.

Appellee testified that he applied his brakes immediately after seeing decedent, and his car had slowed somewhat at the moment of impact. It was appellee’s estimate that decedent’s body lay on the car’s fender about two seconds after which the body “slid off the fender” to the point where it came to rest. Appellee “skidded about fifty feet” before his car stopped. His headlights were on low beam and would disclose a substantial object one hundred feet ahead, under normal atmospheric conditions.

The point of collision, according to ap-pellee, was substantially opposite the front door of the South End Cafe, which is a business place located on the east side of Taylor Boulevard. Decedent had just left the South End Cafe, where he was a “handy-man” and where he had been on duty since about 8:00 a, m. on the day of the accident. The point of impact, as fixed by appellee, was about seventy-five feet south of the crosswalk at Taylor and Central. The decedent’s body was found at a point nearly one hundred feet from the same crosswalk.

It was shown that decedent’s place of residence was south of Central Avenue, so that the most direct route from South End Cafe to his. residence would not have been via the crosswalk at Taylor and Central located north of South End Cafe.

At the time of this accident there was an electric traffic light signal regulating the flow of vehicular and pedestrian traffic at the intersection of Taylor and Central; according to appellee, thL signal was green for his passage through the intersection, and the accident did not occur until he had cleared the intersection by some seventy-five feet.

The first assignment of error relates to exclusion of two items of evidence offered by appellant. We shall treat these separately. Appellant offered the witness Norma Jean Smith, a waitress in the South End Cafe. By her it was shown that decedent had left the cafe immediately before the accident occurred. The witness “heard a noise like a wreck” just after decedent left the cafe. When she undertook to testify as to the site of the noise the court sustained appellee’s objection to the evidence. By avowal she then testified that the noise “sounded like it come from the corner of Taylor and Central.” She estimated that she was standing inside the cafe at a point about twenty-five feet from the open front door. The front door of the cafe is not flush with the sidewalk on Taylor, but is located some forty-four feet east of the street curb to accommodate parked automobiles. The witness was engaged in conversation with two patrons of the cafe when she heard the noise; between her position and the door was a wooden lattice partition. The witness did not elaborate as to the nature of the sound she heard — -whether of [480]*480brakes howling, or the thud of an impact, or of glass breaking.

We hold that it was not prejudicial error for the trial court to exclude the tendered evidence. Appellant relies on Daniels v. Commonwealth, 302 Ky. 672, 195 S.W.2d 265; Hornsby v. Commonwealth, 305 Ky. 747, 205 S.W.2d 338; and Freeland v. Todd, Ky., 379 S.W.2d 723, to support his contention that the evidence was competent, but we are of the view that those decisions are not dispositive of the point at hand. In Daniels this court allowed evidence that the sound of a “high powered rifle” shot had come from up the river. But there was no effort there to pinpoint the origin of the sound — merely a general direction from which it had emanated. In Hornsby two witnesses, standing about twenty or twenty-five feet from a certain house, testified they heard two shots fired inside that house. This was held competent, and rightly so. The latter case would more nearly approach the one at bar had these witnesses undertaken to specify from which room or whieh floor of the house these sounds had originated. Moreover, the opportunity for the witnesses to form an accurate and trustworthy opinion in the Hornsby case was far greater than in the case before us. In Freeland the testimony about the sound of a collision was not offered nor received for the purpose of demonstrating where the collision occurred; neither is there any indication that objection to the evidence was made in that case. Neither do we observe anything in the text authorities cited by appellant impelling a different view. See 20 Am.Jur., Evidence, § 888; 32 C.J.S. Evidence § 546(5). In short, we do not subscribe to the position that the rule permitting a witness to express an opinion as to the direction from which a sound appeared to come is sufficently broad to allow the evidence for the purpose of fixing a relatively precise location of the sound’s origin — and particularly under the physical circumstances of the present case. We think the evidence was admissible, but it was not sufficent to place decedent in the crosswalk, nor to overcome the evidence tending to prove that decedent was not in the crosswalk. For this reason, the exclusion of the evidence was not prejudicial. CR 61.01.

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398 S.W.2d 477, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clements-v-peyton-kyctapp-1965.