Daniel A. Collins and Alma Collins v. Guy Neal

219 F.2d 238, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 2904
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1955
Docket11120
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 219 F.2d 238 (Daniel A. Collins and Alma Collins v. Guy Neal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel A. Collins and Alma Collins v. Guy Neal, 219 F.2d 238, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 2904 (7th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

SWAIM, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment for damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiffs, Daniel A. Collins and Alma Collins, his wife, as a result of a collision between the automobile in which the plaintiffs were riding, and which was being driven by Daniel Collins, and a farm tractor driven by the defendant Guy Neal. The complaint alleged as negligence (a) that the defendant negligently, carelessly and improperly operated and drove the tractor, and (b) that the defendant operated the tractor on the highway after sunset and before sunrise without having it equipped with and exhibiting a lighted lamp which would throw a red light visible for at least 500 feet to the rear, contrary to the provisions of the statute of the State of Illinois. S.H.A.Ill. ch. 95%, § 204. The defendant appeals on the sole ground that there was not sufficient evidence to support the verdict.

The collision occurred on April 28, 1952, at 9:15 P. M. about six miles south of Casey, Illinois, on Illinois State Highway No. 49. Both vehicles were being driven in an easterly direction, the tractor being in front of the automobile.

The highway at that point was paved with blacktop, the paved portion being 18 feet wide. It was a very dark night, and at the time of the accident the pavement was dry. The highway at the scene of the accident was described as being straight and on a gradual downgrade for about 900 to 1100 feet from the west towards the east. Collins said he had driven about half way down this slope when he met a truck approaching from the east. While passing this truck Collins dimmed his lights and after he had passed the truck a distance of about 100 feet he started to step on the button to flick his lights back to bright and then, for the first time, he discovered the tractor in the highway ahead of him. He said he first noticed the crossbar on the rear of the tractor and estimated that it was then only 25 feet ahead of him. Both Collins and his wife testified that although they were looking straight ahead down the highway, they saw no lights on the tractor. Mrs. Collins estimated the distance from the tractor when she first saw it as being about 35 feet. She said when she first saw it she thought *240 it was “a blockade:in the road with no lights."

Marie Laffan, a fifteen year old niece of Mr. Collins, was asleep in the back seat of the automobile at the time of the collision. After the collision she said she did not see any lights on the tractor.

A few witnesses, most of whom were neighbors and friends of the defendant, testified that they had seen the tractor passing along the highway prior to the collision and that there was a white “plowing light” attached to the left rear fender of the tractor at such an angle that it cast a spot of light down on the pavement to the rear of the tractor. One of these witnesses, Sid E. Johnson, said that shortly before the collision he was driving east along this highway and passed the defendant and his tractor; that he saw the light on the rear of the tractor when he was about a quarter of a mile from it; and that when he was about 200 yards away he was able to determine that the light was attached to a tractor.

A Mrs. Regan said that the rear light on the tractor was visible to her from a distance of 900 feet. This witness also said that from this same distance she could see that the light was on an Oliver tractor. The tractor was painted a dark green and had no bright or polished surface which would reflect light. Mr. Regan, her husband, said that he first saw the rear light on the tractor about 8:30 P. M. when the defendant was still plowing in a field near the Regan’s home, and that he saw the light again when the defendant was driving the tractor toward the east along the highway in front of the Regans’ home. After the collision Mr. Regan said he went to the scene of the accident. When he arrived there was a wrecker working on the tractor and the Collins’ car had already been moved to the side of the highway. When Regan arrived all of the injured had been taken away. He said that at that time one of the front lights on the tractor was burning and that he turned it off.

Another witness for the defendant, Thomas McKinzie, said that the accident happened about 250 or 30Ó feet west of his home. When he heard about it he went to the scene and on his arrival he said the right front light of the tractor was still burning and the rear light was hanging down by a wire and was flickering on and off as the wire made contact with the crossbar of the tractor. Roy Comer’s testimony as to a light on the rear of the tractor was about the same as the testimony of McKinzie. Comer estimated that the rear light was about 2% or 3 inches in diameter.

Don Shanks was the first person to reach the scene after the collision. He said that he did not notice any lights burning on the tractor. Guy Neal, the defendant, testified that the rear light and the front lights on the tractor were burning prior to the accident.

Counsel for the defendant, while “fully cognizant of the well established and recognized rules of law that if there is any evidence fairly tending to prove plaintiffs’ contentions the cause must be submitted to the jury and that in determining this issue the evidence must be taken in its best light for plaintiffs,”' insists, however, that where, as in this, case, “the evidence offered on behalf of plaintiff has been so discredited or se completely refuted by evidence, facts and circumstances in opposition thereto as to become incredible and unworthy of belief, it amounts to no evidence and presents no issue of fact for submission to a jury,” and that the court should, therefore, have directed a verdict to find the defendant not guilty or should have entered judgment notwithstanding the verdict. See Metropolitan Railroad Co. v. Moore, 121 U.S. 558, 7 S.Ct. 1334, 30 L.Ed. 1022. It was the failure of the trial court to direct such a verdict or to enter such a judgment on which the defendant's counsel bases his request that the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to enter judgment for the defendant..

To sustain his contentions counsel for the defendant first points out that in *241 addition to defendant’s own testimony that there was a light on the rear of his tractor, Sid Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Regan all testified that shortly before the accident they saw the white light burning on the rear of the tractor as it was passing along the highway. Counsel foi the defendant was particularly impressed by the testimony of Mr. Johnson. But the jury may well have wondered about Johnson’s testimony because he testified that he first saw the light on the rear of the tractor when he was about a quarter of a mile distant from it, although all agreed that the light did not shine directly to the rear but was directed down at a sharp angle so that when the tractor was being used for plowing this rear light would reveal the furrow directly to the rear of the tractor. All of the other parties testifying on this question said that the night of the accident was a very dark night — that there was no moon shining, but Johnson testified that there was “about a half moon.” On direct examination Johnson said, as we pointed out above, that when he was 600 feet behind the tractor he could see that the light was attached to a tractor.

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219 F.2d 238, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 2904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-a-collins-and-alma-collins-v-guy-neal-ca7-1955.