Columbia Transp. Service, Inc. v. Hawkins

220 S.W.2d 561, 310 Ky. 244, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 894
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 10, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 220 S.W.2d 561 (Columbia Transp. Service, Inc. v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbia Transp. Service, Inc. v. Hawkins, 220 S.W.2d 561, 310 Ky. 244, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 894 (Ky. 1949).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Helm

Reversing.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Jefferson circuit court awarding appellee $23,584.50 for personal injuries.

About 9 a. m. on February 11, 1947, appellee, Golden Arnett Hawkins, 35 years of age, a bricklayer by trade, was driving east on Phillips Lane at about 25 miles per hour in a 1% ton Chevrolet truck, Phillips Lane is 18 or 20 feet wide. It was a sunshiny, clear day. In the 600 block an International truck of the Columbia Transportation Service was proceeding slowly on bis right side. Hawkins states that he blew his horn when *245 lie was about 100 feet behind it and started to pass it by driving upon his left side of the street; that when “we was right up there side by side,” the driver of appellant’s truck started to cut over; that he tried to get out of the way but could not; that the bumper of appellant’s truck caught the rear wheel of his truck and “throwed me upside down.” Hawkins states that he did not cut his truck back to the right in front .of appellant’s truck, that he was on the left side of the street as he attempted to pass, as the trucks collided and after the collision; that appellant’s truck was three or four feet to the left of the center line of the street after the accident; that his truck was “laying over on the left side of the road in the ditch. Just the front end of it was on the highway.” He says that the front bumper and fender of appellant’s International truck came into collision with the right rear wheel of his truck, that “my truck flopped up on its end and fell on its side and caught me underneath the door. * * * When the truck came down, the door come across my right leg;” that he was pinned under the truck and was unable to extricate himself from the truck without assistance. A piece of the tire of the right rear wheel of his truck was torn loose.

Appellant’s truck was delivering merchandise for Sears, Eoebuck & Co. George F. Jungbert was traveling west on Phillips Lane at the time of the accident. He says, “I saw this Sears truck coming towards me. * * * I saw the driver make a sharp turn in towards a drive, a cinder drive, while this Hawkins truck was passing, and that let the right rear wheel catch onto the bumper, and that turned him over. * * * It was the Sears truck that made the left turn and caught the Hawkins truck * * * on the right rear wheel as he was passing.”

Herbert S. Meyer was traveling along Phillips Lane behind the Hawkins truck. The Sears truck was driving slowly. He saw the Hawkins truck traveling behind the Sears truck; Hawkins sounded his horn and attempted to pass the Sears truck. The Sears driver made a left turn, causing the Hawkins truck to turn over. The Sears truck “stopped right away. The Hawkins truck stopped about seventy-five feet past the Sears truck.”

James Emmett Pendleton, a former county patrolman, was traveling through Phillips Lane in a car when *246 lie “came upon this accident.” Appellant’s truck was “setting in an angle across Phillips Lane. The front end of it was something like three or four feet over the center line, headed towards this driveway, where this truck had glanced off and went over in this ditch.”

Ernest E. Thomas states that he was in the employ of the appellant, driving its International truck delivering merchandise for Sears, Roebuck •& Co.; that he did not hear any horn sounded, that the first he knew that anyone was attempting to pass him, “I just looked up and saw those stakes by the side of me * * #, that was the first time I knew anyone was passing;” that the front end of the Hawkins truck was approximately even with him at the time he first saw it; that at the time of the accident, he was “traveling on the right-hand side of the center line.” When asked how his truck moved three or four feet over on the other side of the line, he answered, “Something hung into the front end of my truck * * * and snatched it. * * * When this collision happened, there was something hung into my bumper and front end of the fender and when it did — I don’t know how it come, but anyhow it cut my front wheels like this, and as soon as it hit, I stomped my brakes— whether it was the truck that pulled it over or not I don’t know; I stomped the brakes as soon as I could.”

Dr. Robert L. Woodard first saw appellee on February 15, 1947. X-ray pictures revealed a “comminuted compression fracture of the first lumbar vertebra.” Dr. Woodard stated that the X-ray pictures failed to reveal any broken bones in the neck and that “it was very evident that he had received a severe traumatic injury to the neck, to such an extent that I applied a brace — a cervical brace that would hold his head — his chin — up, * * * and come down on his shoulders, which he wore for several months.” For the fracture of the back, “a body jacket — -plaster jacket — was applied, extending from the collar bone down to below the abdomen— below the bladder, which held his spine in — held the back in hyper-extension.” This cast remained on him for six months and five days.

Dr. Woodard says that the injury to Hawkins is permanent, that at the time of the trial on December 9, 1947, Hawkins had not been able to' return to work *247 or to engage in his occupation as a bricklayer and that he would never be able to do that kind of work again because his condition will prevent him from stooping, lifting and bending, especially bending. He stated that Hawkins would require further medical treatment. His bill up to the time of testifying was $425. He estimated that his bill for future services would be about $75.

Appellee pled generally in his petition, asking $20,-000 for pain, suffering and permanent injuries; $1,000 for medical and hospital attention and $5,200 for loss of time.

Appellants pled contributory negligence.

Appellants in their brief assign three errors: (1) The instructions given by the court were erroneous; (2) the court erred in failing to instruct on the contributory negligence of appellee; and (3) counsel for appellee indulged in improper and prejudicial argument.

The court refused the instructions offered by appellee and by appellants and on his own motion, gave instructions 1 and 2 as follows:

“1. If you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, Golden Arnett Hawkins, at the time and place referred to in the evidence, while passing the truck of the defendant, Columbia Transportation Service, Inc., the said truck of the defendant, Columbia Transportation Service, Inc. was turned from its right side of the road to the left side thereof, and thereby came into collision with the truck of the plaintiff, Golden Arnett Hawkins, and said truck of the plaintiff was thereby caused to be overturned, and the plaintiff was thereby injured, then the law is for the plaintiff, Golden Arnett Hawkins, and you will so find.
“But unless you so believe from the evidence, or if you shall believe from the evidence as is set forth in Instruction No. 2, then the law is for the defendants, Columbia Transportation Service, Inc., and Ernest Eugene Thomas, and you will so find.
“2.

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309 S.W.2d 775 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W.2d 561, 310 Ky. 244, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbia-transp-service-inc-v-hawkins-kyctapphigh-1949.