Dreyer v. Zero Refrigeration Lines, Inc.

437 P.2d 355, 92 Idaho 83, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 250
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1968
Docket10032
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 437 P.2d 355 (Dreyer v. Zero Refrigeration Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dreyer v. Zero Refrigeration Lines, Inc., 437 P.2d 355, 92 Idaho 83, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 250 (Idaho 1968).

Opinion

McQUADE, Justice.

This is a personal injury action arising out of an automobile accident. The only question presented, in our view of this appeal, is whether the record contains sufficient evidence to require upholding a jury verdict that some negligence of respondent J. D. Thompson was a proximate cause of injuries sustained by appellant Sylvia S. Dreyer in that accident.

On special interrogatories, the jury found negligence by the driver of the automobile in which Sylvia S. had been riding was a proximate cause of her injuries. This driver was Leslie Dreyer, adopted son of appellants Sylvia S. and Harry E. Dreyer. From this jury determination, and verdict and judgment entered thereon, there has been no appeal. 1 Leslie’s negligence, however, was not imputed to his mother.

*84 The jury further found negligent operation of a truck by respondent Thompson had also been a proximate cause of appellant Sylvia S. Dreyer’s injuries, and found total damages at $4,000.00, which coincidentally was the amount sought for out-of-pocket medical and kindred expenses to date of trial (also asked in the complaint were $75,000.00 for pain and suffering and $10,-000.00 for anticipated future medical expenses).

Respondents moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict 2 entered on this finding. The district court granted this motion on the “sole ground” of appellants’ failure “to establish that [respondent] J. D. Thompson was negligent or that any negligence of his was a proximate cause of the collision [in which Mrs. Dreyer suffered her injuries].”

After scrutinizing the record, favoring appellants with every benefit of reasonable doubt concering facts and inferences drawn from those facts, 3 we have decided the district judge was not in error and so we affirm.

The collision occurred about daybreak, shortly after 6:00 a. m., February 7, 1962, on Highway 25 approximately four and one-half miles west of Wendell, Idaho. Respondent Thompson was driving a cab-over-engine Kenworth tractor pulling a thirty-eight foot trailer with a total load of about 70,000 pounds. The tractor-trailer belonged to respondent B. C. P. Corporation; respondent Thompson was driving as agent for his employer, respondent Zero Refrigeration Lines, Inc. Leslie Dreyer, seventeen-year-old adopted son of appellants Sylvia S. and Harry E. Dreyer, was driving a 1954 Ford sedan, with his mother, Sylvia S., sitting beside him in the right-front seat. As a result of the collision, Sylvia S. was injured and Leslie died soon afterwards.

The road was straight in the vicinity of the accident. The roadway surface was icy-slick. The tractor-trailer was proceeding easterly and the Ford westerly. The Ford’s right-front fender collided with the right side of the tractor cab, ten to twelve feet from the tractor’s front bumper.

The highway point of collision was located somewhere in respondent Thompson’s lane, but the exact placement was a matter of controversy. From road marks and debris, including gouge marks where the Ford’s undercarriage had been forced into the roadway, investigating officers fixed the place of collision at eleven feet and six inches into respondent Thompson’s lane of traffic. Relying solely on a spot of fluid in the roadway which he considered had leaked from one of the vehicles, appellant Harry E. Dreyer placed the collision about a foot and one-half into respondent Thompson’s lane of traffic. Harry E. testified:

“ * * * So far as the impact, there is no telling exactly where it was on the highway except about eighten inches in the truck’s lane, but there is no scratches or anything. The only thing was the water in the radiator and battery.”

The tractor-trailer’s automatic braking mechanism locked on impact, and the tractor-trailer skidded to a point 167 to 261 feet coming to rest in a jack-knifed position (cab almost at right angle from trailer) completely in the other (westerly bound) lane.

Concerning speed, appellant Sylvia S. Dreyer testified the Ford was proceeding at twenty-five m. p. h. about the time of the accident. Due to amnesia, however, she could not remember the circumstances immediate to the accident itself.

Respondent Thompson testified his tractor-trailer was driving thirty to thirty-five m. p. h. just before the accident. However, appellant Harry E. Dreyer, who was driving another vehicle ahead of the Ford, testified:

“I suppose I had noticed it [the tractor-trailer] at least a half mile down the road. I saw the lights coming. I could tell by *85 the lay of the ground that he was traveling quite fast and when he went by me there was a swish, a gust of wind. I suppose they were driving about fifty miles an hour.
******
“Q And you fix that [tractor-trailer’s speed] at what?
“A Right at 50 miles an hour, I guess.” Nevertheless, appellant Sylvia S. Dreyer testified:
“A Yes, were were meeting cars and trucks along there as we traveled.
“Q Was their speed at about the same as yours ?
“A Yes, sir.”

Appellant Harry E. Dreyer also testified the tractor-trailer suddenly had switched on its bright lights (or a spotlight) about thirty feet before it passed Harry’s vehicle. This temporarily blinded him, Harry said. Respondent Thompson testified the truck had no spotlight and its lights were then on dim.

Concerning the actual collision, there were no eye witnesses except the persons physically involved. Of these, only respondent Thompson could testify, for Leslie Dreyer died soon afterwards and appellant Sylvia S. Dreyer had amnesia. However, it should be mentioned that appellant Harry E. Dreyer testified the tractor-trailer was proceeding straight in its lane of traffic when it passed Harry’s vehicle.

Respondent Thompson described the collision as follows: he first observed the Ford starting to come into his lane of traffic when the vehicles were approximately two hundred to two hundred and twenty-five yards apart; Thompson “checked” the tractor-trailer’s speed “some” by slowing its motor immediately upon seeing the Ford “drift into” Thompson’s lane of traffic; the tractor-trailer did not skid, but merely slowed; then, Thompson testified:

“A Well, he came into my lane. I gave way to the right, but there was a bridge there, and when he came on over further I could see there was no way to avoid him. I attempted to turn to my left, but it was slight. There was a slight angle, but I thought he had went on, the way he was sliding, but he struck the rear portion of my truck — not the trailer, but the tractor.”

On cross-examination of respondent Thompson appellants tried to show he did not have proper control of the tractor-trailer just prior to the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
437 P.2d 355, 92 Idaho 83, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreyer-v-zero-refrigeration-lines-inc-idaho-1968.