E. L. Martin & Co. v. Hurt's Adm'r

62 S.W.2d 465, 250 Ky. 235, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 664
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 9, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 S.W.2d 465 (E. L. Martin & Co. v. Hurt's Adm'r) 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
E. L. Martin & Co. v. Hurt's Adm'r, 62 S.W.2d 465, 250 Ky. 235, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 664 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Between 5:30 and 6 p. m. on May 13, 1931, a one-seated Plymouth sedan automobile driven by Paul Hurt, while traveling south on state highway No. 27, collided with a three-ton empty truck owned by appellant and defendant below, E. L. Martin & Co., traveling-north on the same highway at a point about 5 miles south from Nicholasville, Ky. Hurt sustained injuries, from the effects of which he soon died, and appellant and plaintiff below was appointed and qualified as adi-ministrator of his estate and brought this action in the Jessamine circuit court against the owner of the truck, *236 •and tlie driver thereof, to recover damages to the estate of Paul Hurt for his alleged negligently produced death by defendants. The answer of defendants denied the negligence and interposed the defense of contributory negligence, which plaintiff denied, and upon trial of the case the jury, under the instructions given it by the ■court, returned a verdict against defendants in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $4,375. Defendants’ motion for a new trial was overruled, and they prosecute this appeal.

Appellants’ counsel in the very earnest brief they •file on behalf of their clients argue but three grounds for reversal, and which are: (1) That the verdict of the jury is not sustained by the evidence and is flagrantly against its weight; (2) error of the court in permitting evidence to be introduced by plaintiff in rebuttal over defendants’ objections and exceptions, proving that the deceased was not intoxicated at the time of the ■accident, and (3) error in submitting to the jury in instruction 1 certain duties of the driver of the truck when there was no evidence that they were violated by him. They will be disposed of in the order named.

1. In disposing of ground 1 it becomes necessary to make a brief statement of the facts. The point of the accident was about 1,100 feet south of the entrance to Port Nelson Federal Cemetery along which the highway runs, and it occurred between two curves forming a figure similar to the letter “S” made by the highway at that place. The right hand of the decedent in traveling south the way he was going is referred to in the evidence as the “west” side of the highway; while the right side of the driver of the truck in traveling north as he was going is referred to in the record as the “east” side of the highway, and along which at the immediate point of the accident were barrier posts about 10 feet •apart and connected with a chain as a protection against •a slight embankment on that side at that point. The ■collision was at a point in the highway between the first and second of the barrier posts traveling north, and the front of the truck after the accident, according to all of the witnesses, was between those two posts; its right front wheel having scraped the first one in reaching that point. The body of it was at an angle of some twenty or twenty-five degrees from that side of the highway, with its left or western hind wheel not far *237 from the center of the macadam portion of the highway, the witnesses for the plaintiff stating that it was. all the way from a few inches to 2 feet west of the center of the highway, while those testifying for the defendants place it slightly east of the center of the highway. It is apparently conceded that the relative location of the truck, as so described and as seen by the witnesses, was the precise one in which it was left after the accident. The automobile in which decedent was riding had its front near the barrier post with its body almost at right angles across the highway, and it bore indisputable evidence of the fact that its collision with the truck was at the right end of its front fender, while-the point of the collision with the truck was against its-fender and between its right end and the center of the truck. The indisputable physical facts as testified to-by the witnesses, were that for some distance north, from the point of the accident decedent’s automobile was traveling on his right-hand or west side of the highway to the distance of some 30 feet north from the-point of the collision, and that at the immediate time-of the collision its tracks were almost at right angles, across the highway, the tracks showing a swerve to the east.

There was also evidence of truck tracks, and which the witnesses swore were made by the colliding truck while traveling on the west side of the highway before reaching the point of collision and then verging towards, its east side, thus bringing it in front of decedent’s automobile while he was also endeavoring to reach the same side of the highway. However, it must be admitted that such testimony as it related to the location and the movements of the truck and course of its' tracks immediately preceding the collision, is considerably weakened by the fact that other trucks had passed in both directions and some of them had parked and stopped at that point, immediately after the accident happened; so that the tracks attributed to the guilty truck were not clearly shown to have been made by it. But, notwithstanding the weakness of that testimony, the undisputed physical facts that we have narrated tend to establish the conclusion that the truck, just before the collision, was traveling on the left side of the highway contrary to the provisions of our statute relating thereto, and which constituted an encroachment upon *238 •and a ■ usurpation of that part of the highway that ¡should be kept clear for travelefs over it going south as deceased, was moving. There was evidence that the ..deceased was traveling at a speed of anywhere between •30 and 35 miles per hour, and was descending about a '6 per cent, grade in the highway; while the truck was traveling at from 10 to 15 miles an hour and ascending the same grade. There was also evidence that at a point about a mile north of the place of collision the ■decedent was seen going in the direction of the fatal spot, and his machine was' then swerving from one side of the highway to the other, but a witness who testified for plaintiff and who passed decedent but a short distance from the collision testified to no such movements at that time. The latter witness also passed the truck within a very.short time after passing the automobile, ■and he stated that the truck when he passed it was on 'the west side of the highway or the left side of its ■driver, and that he (witness) passed it on its east side, as he was compelled to do, because of the wrongful location of the truck on his (witness) side of the highway, witness traveling south at the time.

The same witness also, testified that he looked back ■after passing the truck and saw the collision. He stated that the decedent, in an effort to avoid colliding with the truck, turned to his left (or east), and that the ■driver of the truck, apparently realizing that he was on the wrong side of the highway, turned to his right also to the east side of the highway, and that about the time the front of his truck reached that side the collision happened. The testimony of that witness, if true, .proves a clear case of actionable negligence on the part of the ■driver of the truck, but we must admit that the circumstances bearing upon the credibility of that witness are such as to largely discredit his statements. According to him, he witnessed the fatal crash, which was more or less severe, though he did not stop but continued on his journey.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.W.2d 465, 250 Ky. 235, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-l-martin-co-v-hurts-admr-kyctapphigh-1933.