Collins v. Crimp

8 P.2d 796, 91 Mont. 326, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 48
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1932
DocketNos. 6,855, 6,856.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 796 (Collins v. Crimp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Crimp, 8 P.2d 796, 91 Mont. 326, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 48 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Chester W. Collins, thirteen years old, died September 20, 1929, from injuries received when he was run over by an automobile driven by the defendant, Roy Crimp. E. L. Collins, father of Chester, instituted two actions against Crimp; the first on his own behalf, the second as administrator of his son’s estate.

Except as to the capacity in which the plaintiff sued, the cases are identical; they were tried separately, and each resulted in verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. Motions for new trials being overruled, defendant appealed from each of the judgments upon the sole ground that the evidence adduced is insufficient to sustain a verdict or judgment for plaintiff in either action.

*328 There is no conflict in the evidence, and therein appear only those minor differences bound to creep in when a number of witnesses honestly endeavor to relate what they saw and heard at the time of an accident, and to give their opinions as to speed and distances.

Viewed in the' light most favorable to the plaintiff, the testimony establishes the facts herein detailed. At 8:15 P. M. on September 20, 1929, the defendant drove east on Park Avenue, in the city of Anaconda, in a Buick automobile with brakes in good condition and headlights on. The avenue was paved and well lighted. Proceeding at approximately fifteen miles per hour, the car, crossing Ash Street, reached the east crosswalk when Chester Collins, riding a “scooter,” consisting of a two by four and an apple box mounted on roller skates, dashed out of Ash Street “like a flash of lightning.” The defendant saw him not more than a foot in front of the car; collision was inevitable and immediate; “he was knocked from practically a standing position higher than the radiator and two feet higher than the top of the car”; he was thrown more than six feet in the air; he turned in the air and fell on the right fender of the car, his head toward the driver, his knees further forward than the radiator. The boy remained on the fender for a brief space of time, during which the speed of the car did not slacken; he then slid off in front of the car, the front wheel of which passed over his chest and the rear wheel over his head; the car stopped four or five feet beyond the body.

Blood remained on the pavement where the boy fell, and on the night of the accident the coroner and other disinterested parties measured the distance from the point of collision to the blood spot. The coroner gave the distance as 45 feet from the east line of the cross-walk. Others made the distance 48 feet 5 inches by measuring from the center of the cross-walk, which is indicated as the place where the collision occurred. Two boys, who were eye-witnesses of the accident, made the distance 51 feet, while the father of the boy and others made a measurement some time later, by which they made it 61 feet. *329 The record, however, indicates that these last made a diagonal measurement which would not be accurate. As the blood spot was described as one foot east of the west line of a store building, which was on the third 25-foot lot from the corner, the distance was probably 51 feet, or possibly 54 feet, from the center of the cross-walk.

The plaintiff does not allege, nor does he contend, that the collision was in any manner due to any negligence on the part of the defendant. The complaint in the administrator’s action contains the better statement of the alleged negligence on which plaintiff relies. After detailing what took place .up to the time the boy was seen on the right fender of the car, the complaint alleges that “the defendant was * * * in a position where he could see the said Chester W. Collins in his then perilous position, or should have so seen him by the exercise of reasonable care, * * * but notwithstanding the perilous position of the said Chester W. Collins on the right fender of the said automobile, the defendant negligently * * * continued to drive * * * east * * * after driving the said automobile a distance of about forty-five feet at a speed of about fifteen miles per hour; * * * Chester W. Collins fell off of the said fender, * * * ” and the car passed over him.

From the foregoing allegations, it is clear that plaintiff relies solely upon the “last clear chance” doctrine, which takes into consideration only such negligent acts or omissions as are chargeable to the defendant from and after the time he discovers the subsequently injured person in the position of peril designated and relied upon. (Haddox v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 46 Mont. 185, 127 Pac. 152; McIntyre v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 56 Mont. 43, 180 Pac. 971; Westerdale v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 84 Mont. 1, 273 Pac. 1051.) In the McIntyre Case, it is held that defendant’s duty arises only when he actually discovers the other in his perilous position; however, the defendant does not urge that the foregoing allegations are insufficient, and they will be deemed sufficient to bring the case within the doctrine upon which plaintiff places reliance.

*330 The questions presented, .then, are as to how long the boy was on the fender of the car; whether the defendant could have stopped the ear within that time; and, if so, whether or not he was negligent in not doing so; and, if negligent, was such negligence the proximate cause of the boy’s death; in other words, had defendant stopped his car in less time than he did, would he have avoided running over the boy?

By his own admission defendant could, while traveling at the rate of 15 miles per hour, stop his car in about its own length, but that means on the application of the brakes. An expert mechanic testified that he experimented and discovered that, knowing what he was intending to do, in advance, it required one second to transfer his foot from the gas feed to the brake pedal and apply the brake; this would seem to be a reasonably speedy operation, but it must be remembered that the defendant did not have advance warning that he was to be called upon to apply the brakes. However, conceding that this operation would require but one second, under the pleadings defendant’s duty to act did not attach until the boy was on the fender.

One of the eye-witnesses, after experiments conducted with a watch, fixed the time elapsing between the time of the impact and the appearance of the boy on the fender as one and one-half to two seconds. As the boy landed on the front of the car, this would seem excessive, except for the fact that the impact would naturally throw him forward as well as upward, so that, to a certain extent, he would, on his ascent-descent, be traveling with the car.

As the only witnesses who presumed to estimate the distance the boy was thrown into the air say that he went higher, or two feet higher, than the top of the car and more than six feet up, it is clear that an appreciable period of time elapsed before he landed on the fender.

The witness Farlan said: “He was knocked from practically a standing position * * * two feet higher than the top of the ear.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 796, 91 Mont. 326, 1932 Mont. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-crimp-mont-1932.