Commercial Carriers, Inc. v. Small

126 S.W.2d 143, 277 Ky. 189, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 638
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 28, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 126 S.W.2d 143 (Commercial Carriers, Inc. v. Small) 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
Commercial Carriers, Inc. v. Small, 126 S.W.2d 143, 277 Ky. 189, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 638 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

The appeal is from a $3,000 judgment for the loss of consortium and services of the plaintiff’s wife who was injured in an automobile accident alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the appellant, Commercial Carriers, Incorporated, and Thomas Hendricks, its driver.

The accident occurred at a bridge or culvert about 6 miles south of Elizabethtown, about noon July 15, 1936. Mrs. Anna Kinbrough Small, wife of the appellee, Ralph B. Small, Sr., residents of Macon, Georgia, was riding in a Dodge automobile driven by their son, Ralph B. Small, Jr. An automobile transport truck and trailer, driven by Hendricks, was going north. The black-top macadam is 17 to 18 feet wide on either side of a' 25-foot bridge over a creek. It is 16 feet wide between the curbs, or copings, which appear to be only a few inches high. The road is straight for some 200 feet on either side of the bridge and it is in plain view for about 500 feet from, the south and 400 feet from the north, so that machines coming in opposite directions are visible for perhaps 900 feet, one from the other. The approach toward the south is practically level, but from the north, the way the truck was traveling, there is a grade of perhaps five per cent. The truck was seven. *192 feet wide and the trailer eight feet. Together they were 30 feet long. The automobile was 5 feet, 4 inches wide.

Young Small testified that when he got about 100 feet from the bridge ‘the truck was possibly 175 feet beyond it. He was traveling 30 or 40 miles an hour and the truck was going possibly 50 miles an hour. Said he:

“I noticed that the trailer of the truck was swaying from side to side, which, of course, in that case you couldn’t tell what was going to happen, so I began to slow up and pull over as far as I could to the right, and I came almost to a standstill just a few feet north of the bridge.”

The truck speeded up and “swung to the center of the road and crossed the bridge before I got there; and as it crossed it cut sharply to the right.” His automobile was then 8 or 10 feet off the bridge. When the truck cut sharply to the right the trailer swung out to the left and “hit the left front of our car and took the wheel off completely and bent the fender back and bent in the doors, and the force of it knocked my feet off of the pedals, which were on the clutch and the brake, slowing It down, and when that happened the car was put back in gear and it rolled forward and hit the coping of the bridge and went over the bridge and turned completely upside down in this water — it is about six feet to the water and the water was five or six feet deep at that time.”

There was a long mark left on the road by the axle as the machine went forward. Its location and that of a post on the edge of the road, which was hit by the machine when struck by the trailer, or possibly before, support Small’s evidence that he was well beyond the right of the center of the road; indeed, as far as he could get. Mrs. Small was thrown into the back of the car and was submerged in the water with the baggage and seats upon her. She was severely injured. Young Small was not badly hurt.

Hendricks, the driver of the truck, testified that he was running 25 or 30 miles an hour, as he approached the bridge. After making the turn in the road he saw the other car coming and checked his speed. The other ear was “as far again from the bridge” as he was. When he was “right near the bridge” he saw the other car was coming through; it was going 35 to. 40 miles an *193 hour. He flashed his lights continually from the time he was within 200 feet of the bridge until he saw that the other car was not going to stop. There is no evidence that he sounded his horn. He had gotten 6 or 8 feet out of the bridge when Small’s car struck the fender of the trailer. The defendant’s evidence is to the effect that the trailer was so fastened to the truck that it would not sway to one side. Hendricks testified that his wheels were 2 or 3 inches from the right side of the bridge. He: drove up the road about 150 yards before stopping. He didn’t think much damage had been done and went that, far ahead because he knew there was another truck following him- and he wished to avoid blocking traffic. He related that when the automobile struck the trailer it went forward and hung on the guard rail a few minutes and then toppled off into the creek. The driver of a truck following stated it appeared the “tail end of his trailer caught the front end of the car” and both machines seemed to be as close to the edge of the culvert as they could get.

Of course, the question raised on the appeal, that the defendant should have been given a peremptory instruction, must be decided upon the consideration of the plaintiff’s evidence. The jury chose to accept that instead of the testimony of the driver. They doubtless '' thought that he had not been in position to see what happened at the moment of the collision, for he was up in the cab of the truck, 15 or 20 feet ahead, trying to keep his gigantic outfit in the road. The jury may have believed his continuous flashing of his lights — at high noon in the middle of July and not seen by Small — was an effort to order the approaching driver to get out of his way, whether he was required to do so or not, for Hendricks doubtless felt his overwhelming power. There are other circumstances which may also have been considered as discrediting Hendrick’s testimony.

While the general standard of diligence of a driver of an automobile is always said to be ordinary care, one driving a large machine 8 feet wide — nearly 3 feet wider than the usual passenger car — must take that fact into-consideration as he endeavors to exercise ordinary care in its operation. This trailer was the maximum width permitted by the statute, that is, 96 inches. 2739g-84, Kentucky Statutes. The appellant relies upon PopeCawood Lumber & Supply Company v. Cleet, 236 Ky. 366, 33 S. W. (2d) 360, and insists that the truck had *194 the right of way over the bridge since it was closer to the bridge when the driver saw the other car approaching. The facts in the Cleet Case are materialy different. The collision occurred on a one-way bridge. This did not. The bridge at which this accident occurred was practically as wide as the road and two cars of ordinary size could easily pass. Beyond this, the accident was primarily caused by the switching of the trailer against the car when the truck was swerved to the right.

It does not seem to us the court erred in refusing to give either a peremptory instruction for the defendant, or the offered specific instruction in substance that, the truck having entered the bridge first, it was the duty of the driver of the passenger car for the plaintiff not to enter thereon nor the immediate approach thereto unless the same was of sufficient width to afford reasonable clearance for the passage of both cars in safety.

Mrs. Small had sued the appellant for damages for her personal injuries. While the jury was considering her case, the jury in this suit was impanelled and excused until the next morning. A verdict for $2,500 was returned in favor of Mrs. Small.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W.2d 143, 277 Ky. 189, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-carriers-inc-v-small-kyctapphigh-1939.