Dashnow v. Myers

155 A.2d 859, 121 Vt. 273, 1959 Vt. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 3, 1959
Docket339
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 155 A.2d 859 (Dashnow v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dashnow v. Myers, 155 A.2d 859, 121 Vt. 273, 1959 Vt. LEXIS 119 (Vt. 1959).

Opinion

Holden, J.

The jury returned a verdict for the defendant at the trial of this automobile negligence action. On motion of the plaintiff the trial court set the verdict aside as being against the weight of the evidence and ordered a new trial. This appeal challenges the propriety of that ruling.

The plaintiff, Ruth G. Dashnow, was injured while riding as a passenger in the front seat of an automobile operated by her husband. Seated at her right was Linda Trayah, a young girl of eleven. The accident occurred shortly after eleven o’clock, the night of December 21, 1957. The weather conditions were described as good and the highway clear although there was some moisture on the pavement. The Dashnow vehicle turned from West Spring Street into North Street in the city of Winooski and proceeded north toward St. Peter Street. The distance between the West Spring Street intersection and the St. Peter Street crossing on North Street is approximately 150 yards. St. Peter Street intersects North Street at right angles and these intersecting highways are level and straight for some distance from the junction. At the intersection, North Street is 29 feet wide and St. Peter Street is 28.7 feet in width.

The defendant was operating a Pontiac two-door sedan, travelling east on St. Peter Street, approaching the North Street intersection from the west. A stop sign was located 18 feet west of North Street on the south side of St. Peter Street to signal traffic approaching North Street from the west. A similar stop sign marked the crossing at the north side of St. Peter Street to signal traffic approaching North Street from the east. The approaches to the intersection are obscured by buildings located on each of its corners.

The front of the Dashnow vehicle collided with the de *276 feiidant’s Pontiac at the door on the right side. The Dashnow car left skid marks from the cross walk south of St. Peter Street, extending north to a point of impact, a distance of fifteen feet. From the point of collision, skid marks were traceable to the rear wheels of the Dashnow car, and indicated that the rear of that vehicle swung in a clockwise direction in an arc of 180°. The Dashnow car came to rest on North Street, at the northeast segment of the intersection with the front of the vehicle headed south, in a direction opposite from that in which it entered the crossing.

The vehicle operated by the defendant left no visible skid marks. It came to rest on St. Peter Street alongside a utility pole at the northeast corner of the intersection. There were no eye witnesses to the accident other than the occupants of the cars involved.

The plaintiff testified that she had never operated a motor vehicle prior to the accident. At the time her husband approached the intersection she was not paying much attention. She recalled that she observed rays from the headlights of a car on St. Peter Street that extended across North Street. She remembered the speed of her husband’s car was reduced as they moved toward the intersection. She recalled the crash and the swirling of their car after the collision. The plaintiff was thrown from the front seat by the impact. She was extricated from beneath the Dashnow car after the accident. She testified that she made no outcry before the crash, explaining, "I didn’t have time to say anything.”

The plaintiff’s husband testified that he was familiar with the intersection. He knew there were stop signs to halt traffic entering North Street from St. Peter Street. He observed the lights from the defendant’s car as it moved from the left toward North Street. Dashnow was then seventy-five or eighty feet from the intersection. He reduced his speed. The witness testified that he didn’t see the Myers vehicle itself until the defendant was twenty-five or thirty feet from the west cross walk on St. Peter Street. The Dashnow vehicle had then nearly reached the cross walk on North Street. He remembered "hitting my brakes and then the impact — .” He felt the car go into a swinging motion. He estimated his speed *277 at the time he reached the intersection at twenty to twenty-five miles an hour.

Police officer Sprano investigated the accident and assisted in the removal of the persons injured. He testified to physical facts including a description of the location and several measurements taken at the scene. He found the defendant unconscious, lying partly on the pavement with his feet inside his car. He detected the odor of alcohol on the defendant’s breath.

The defendant testified that he had come from a Christmas party at his place of employment in Essex. He admitted having had two drinks of whiskey between the hours of seven-thirty and the time of collision. He explained he had one drink before dinner and the second after finishing his meal. The defendant and companion, Jerry Charland, were returning to the place of the party after having taken two guests to their homes.

His testimony continued: "At North Street corner, I stopped and looked both ways automatically and Jerry, who was riding with me, he automatically looks and says, 'O. K. this way’, because it is a blind corner and, you know, a person riding with you will automatically look. So we proceeded and started out into the middle of the street and that is all I remember. Didn’t see any object coming at all. Didn’t see no headlights, nothing at all. That’s all I remember until I woke up in the hospital about thirty-five days later.

"Q. Now, were you unconscious all that time, were you?
A. Complete coma for about twenty days and semi-coma for fifteen.
Q. And after the thirty-five day period you made out a motor vehicle accident report?
A. Not immediately, sir, because I was still in the hospital. I didn’t even remember where I lived until just two weeks before I came out of the hospital. Couldn’t remember the location of my home or anything. I didn’t say anything to my wife about this when I didn’t remember. I couldn’t remember how many children I had or anything.”

Later, on direct examination, the defendant was permitted to read from his motor vehicle accident: report, without objec *278 tion. In the report it was' stated that the defendant stopped for the stop sign, looked both ways on North Street and, seeing no one approaching from either direction, proceeded across North Street. When half-way through the intersection he was struck on his right side by the Dashnow vehicle. The defendant gave his speed at the time of impact at five to seven miles an hour.

At the conclusion of all the evidence both parties moved for directed verdicts. Their respective motions were denied. Following the return of the verdict in favor of the defendant, the plaintiff filed a motion that the verdict be set aside on numerous grounds. The grounds stated included the contention that the verdict was not supported by the evidence, and the claim that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. The first aspect of the plaintiff’s motion was overruled. The trial court acted favorably on the second ground.

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Bluebook (online)
155 A.2d 859, 121 Vt. 273, 1959 Vt. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dashnow-v-myers-vt-1959.