Coy v. Hoover

272 S.W.2d 449, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 1098
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 23, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 272 S.W.2d 449 (Coy v. Hoover) 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
Coy v. Hoover, 272 S.W.2d 449, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 1098 (Ky. 1954).

Opinion

WADDILL, Commissioner.

This action arises from an automobile accident which occurred on the Newtown Road,, approximately four miles north of Lexington, on the night of August 8, 1952, when an automobile being driven in a southerly direction by Paul Lyle Hood, Jr., collided head-on, near the center of the road, with an automobile being operated in a northerly direction by J. T. Coy. As a result thereof, Norma Jean Hoover, age 16, who -was a guest passenger in Hood’s car, sustained serious personal .injuries and brought this action by her next. friend, seeking damages against J. T. Coy ' and Paul Lyle Hood, Jr. Upon trial, a jury returned a verdict against both Coy and Hood, and awarded Miss Hoover the sum of $10,000. From a judgment entered thereon, Coy and Hood appeal, urging several grounds for reversal which will be considered during the course of the opinion.

It was shown by the evidence that in the early evening of August 8, 1952, the appellant, Paul Lyle Hood, Jr., 19 years of age, drove his automobile from Winchester to a drive-in picture show located near Georgetown. He was accompanied by James Riddell, Logan Paynter, Verda Jo Carroll, Carol Rice, and the appellee, Norma. Jean Hoover, all of teen-age, from Winchester.

Before arriving at the picture show, a stop was made at a tavern where some beer was purchased. All of these young people, except Riddell,' participated in consuming various portions of the beer. Logan Paynter testified that two stops were made for beer, and that Hood drank two or three bottles of beer on each occasion, but he is contradicted by the other young men and women in the car. They then proceeded to the picture show and viewed a double-feature, leaving there about 11:00 p.m., to return to their homes in Winchester. On their return trip Hood was driving, with Verda Jo Carroll next to him, Norma Jean Hoover was next to her, and James Riddell was seated next to the door in the front *451 seat, with Paynter and Miss Rice in the rear seat. According to the various estimates of the passengers in Hood’s car, Hood drove his automobile from 50 to 70 miles per hour. There was evidence that Miss Hoover, and other passengers in the car, had asked Hood to reduce the speed of his automobile. Although Miss Hoover testified that Hood consented to that request, it is apparent that Hood was traveling at a rapid rate of speed at the time of the accident.

According to Misses Hoover and Carroll and James Riddell, Hood was driving on his right side of the road, and when Hood’s automobile reached a straight stretch of road about four miles north of Lexington, a car approached them from the south on their side of the road, colliding into the front of Hood’s automobile. The testimony of Miss Rice and Paynter as to what occurred immediately before the accident was of a negative character as they were apparently paying little attention to the road or to Hood’s operation of his car. Hood did not testify. As all occupants of Hood’s car were rendered unconscious by the collision, we now look to other evidence concerning the accident.

J. T. Coy, age 22, testified that he left Lexington in his car shortly before 11:00 p.m. accompanied by Charlie Overly. Coy stated that when he reached a straight section of road about four miles out of Lexington, he saw the lights of an automobile approaching him at a distance of about 600 feet; that he continued driving his car on the right side of the road at about 30 miles per hour, and when the automobiles were 60 to 70 feet apart, he realized that the approaching automobile was on the wrong side of the road and was traveling at a speed he estimated to be 55 miles per hour. Coy said that in an attempt to escape being struck by the Hood automobile, he cut his car to the left, but was met almost head-on by the Hood car. His evidence is supported by the testimony of his companion, Overly, who admitted he had one beer, but said that Coy had not been drinking and was sober. However, two county patrolmen who arrived at the scene of the accident- shortly after the collision say otherwise. Patrolman Gene Haynes testified that he talked with Coy and in his opinion Coy was under the influence of liquor. The other officer, Carl Powell, stated that he smelled liquor or beer on Coy.

The photographs, filed as exhibits, and physical facts tend to establish that the automobiles met head-on near the center of the road. Conceding that the evidence as to the marks and tracks on the west side of the road was indicative that the automobiles collided on Coy’s side of the road, yet appellee’s evidence put thé matter in issue, so we conclude that the question of responsibility for the accident was for the jury to determine, even though the weight of the evidence on this particular point was for the appellant, Coy.

There was evidence showing that Miss Hoover had met Hood<at Boonesboro Beach on the afternoon of August 8th, and that she knew that Hood had consumed several beers. Miss Hoover admitted this, and further that she, rode- to Winchester later that afternoon- with Hood and during that trip Hood had driven his car at times at very rapid rates of speed.

The appellant, Coy, first -contends that there was not sufficient evidence of his negligence to submit,the case against him to the jury, and, therefore, the court erred in failing to direct, a-verdict in his favor. This contention is wholly without merit, because several witnesses testified that Coy was operating, his automobile on the ,wrong side of the road. When this testimony is considered in the light of the testimony of the two county patrolmen, which was to the effect that Coy was intoxicated, and the testimony of appellee’s witnesses who stated that Hood’s car was being driven on its right side of the road, the issue as to who was at fault was clearly one for the jury to determine. On the. question of Coy’s negligence, we find that evidence was sufficient to take the case to the jury, and to sustain the verdict against him.

Both - Coy and Hood urge that Norma Jean Hoover was • guilty of contributory *452 negligence as a matter of law for the following reasons:

“(a) She was riding in an automobile operated by a driver known by her to be under the influence of alcohol; (b) She was riding in an automobile operated by a person whom she knew to be a fast and reckless driver; (c) She failed to properly apprise the driver of the danger of driving at such excessive rates of speed; (d) She continued riding in that vehicle after she had several opportunities to get out of it, knowing that it was being operated in a careless, reckless, and dangerous manner ; (e) and she was one of four well-developed teen-agers in the front seat so crowding the driver that he was unable to control his vehicle properly.”

By insisting upon ground (a), the appellants apparently believe that it was established beyond contradiction that Hood ■ was drúnk and that Miss Hoover knew, or by' the exercise of ordinary care should have known, that fact. However, the evidence does not warrant such a conclusion. The only witness who suggests that Hood was under the influence of alcohol was Logan Paynter. The other passengers in ■ Hood’s' automobile testified Hood was sober. Neither of the county patrolmen, nor the appellant, Coy, claim that Hood was intoxicated. The question of whether or not Hood was intoxicated was submitted to the jury under instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.W.2d 449, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 1098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coy-v-hoover-kyctapphigh-1954.