Drewett v. United Electric Railways Co.

188 A. 877, 57 R.I. 169, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 13, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 188 A. 877 (Drewett v. United Electric Railways Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drewett v. United Electric Railways Co., 188 A. 877, 57 R.I. 169, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 77 (R.I. 1937).

Opinion

*170 Moss, J.

This is an action to recover for personal injuries received by the plaintiff in a collision in the City of Providence between a trolley car operated by the defendant corporation as a common carrier, and in which he was riding as a passenger, and a truck operated by a third person, the collision being alleged in his declaration to have been caused by negligent operation of the car. At *171 the conclusion of a jury trial in the Superior Court, a verdict was returned for the plaintiff in the sum of $7,500.

■ The defendant moved for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, both as to liability and as to the amount of damages. On this motion the trial court sustained the verdict as to liability, but held that it was excessive by the amount of $1,000. It therefore denied the motion, if the plaintiff would file a remittitur of that amount, but granted it, if he would not. Both parties excepted to the decision; no remittitur was filed and the case is now before this court on their respective bills of exceptions and a transcript of the proceedings at the trial.

His exception to this decision is the only one brought before us by the plaintiff. Besides its exception to this decision, the defendant is also relying in this court on an exception to the denial of a motion for the direction of a verdict in its favor; exceptions to rulings by the trial justice in permitting the plaintiff to introduce in evidence certain sections of the ordinances of the City of Providence regulating the operation of street cars; an exception to the denial of the defendant’s motion that the case be taken from the jury and passed, because the jury had been permitted to listen to the arguments of counsel as to the admission of these sections'of the ordinances; and exceptions to certain rulings as to the admission of testimony.

Just a short time before the collision occurred, the trolley car was moving southward on the westerly track on South Main street, and approaching, though still at a considerable distance, the corner of James street, on the south side of which the truck was approaching South Main street from the west. As the truck entered the latter street, moving at a speed of about five miles per hour, the motorman of the car perceived it. The driver of the truck testified, in substance, that, when the front of it was about five feet west of the west rail of the car track, he saw the car coming from the north and about 275 to 300 feet away, *172 and that, believing that he had time enough to cross the track in safety, he swung the truck to the left, so as to turn up South Main street, making as wide a türn as he deemed practicable, in view of the fact that an automobile was approaching the corner from the south on the east side of the street. When the rear of the truck had a little more than barely cleared the east rail of the car track, the left front corner of the car collided with the left side of the truck with considerable violence. The shock of the collision caused the plaintiff’s injuries.

The operator of the car testified that he first saw the truck as it was coming into South Main street, 100 to 150 feet ahead of the car, which was then moving at an estimated speed of fifteen miles an hour; that he then sounded his foot-gong and checked the speed of the car; and that as soon as he had any notice that the operator of the truck was going to try to cross the track ahead of the car, he himself did his best to bring the car to a stop before it collided with the truck; but that he was unable to stop it in time. There was, however, conflicting testimony as to whether or not he began to check the speed of the car before the lapse of a considerable interval after the truck had got upon the track and was proceeding to cross it.

In view of the testimony we are of the opinion that there was sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the operator of the car, in operating it at an excessive rate of speed after he had notice of the danger of a collision with the truck, to justify the trial justice in refusing to hold that the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict in its favor should be granted on the ground of want of evidence of negligence on its part.

The defendant contends that the evidence proved conclusively that the driver of the truck was guilty of negligence in its operation; that this negligence was the sole proximate cause of the collision, the negligence of the operator of its car, if there was any such negligence, which it denies, being only a condition, or at most a remote cause, *173 of the collision-. In support of the latter part of this contention, it cites a number of cases in Rhode Island and elsewhere, beginning with Mahogany v. Ward, 16 R. I. 479, in each of which if was held that any legal causal connection between negligence by the defendant and the plaintiff’s injury was broken by intervening negligence by a third person, which was the proximate cause of such injury.

But in each of those cases, before the third person’s negligent act occurred, the defendant’s negligence had ceased, leaving a condition which might occasion injury to one in the situation of the plaintiff, if a third person acted negligently, but not otherwise; and later a third person did commit a negligent act, which directly caused the plaintiff’s injury. In the instant case, however, there was in our judgment sufficient evidence for the plaintiff from which the jury could find negligence by the defendant continuing to the time when the collision had become inevitable. If there was such negligence by the defendant, it could not be held that intervening negligence by the driver of the truck broke the legal causal connection between the defendant’s negligence and the plaintiff’s injury, even though the truck driver may have been guilty of such negligence as to make him also liable to the plaintiff in a separate action.

Therefore, we cannot hold that the trial justice’s refusal to direct a verdict for the defendant was erroneous. Nor can we say, after weighing all the evidence on the question of the defendant’s liability, that the plaintiff so clearly failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that negligence by the defendant was a proximate cause of the collision as to justify us in holding it to be error by the trial justice not to grant the defendant a new trial on that ground. As to the rulings excepted to by the defendant concerning the admission of testimony by witnesses, we cannot find that any of them was erroneous and prejudicial to the defendant.

As to its motion that the case be taken from the jury *174 and passed, it is our opinion that this motion should have been granted.

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Related

State v. Robertson
232 A.2d 781 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 A. 877, 57 R.I. 169, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drewett-v-united-electric-railways-co-ri-1937.