Economou v. VALLEY GAS COMPANY

312 A.2d 581, 112 R.I. 514, 1973 R.I. LEXIS 1014
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 12, 1973
Docket1904-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 312 A.2d 581 (Economou v. VALLEY GAS COMPANY) 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
Economou v. VALLEY GAS COMPANY, 312 A.2d 581, 112 R.I. 514, 1973 R.I. LEXIS 1014 (R.I. 1973).

Opinion

*515 Paolino, J.

Barbara Economou, a minor, brought this civil action through her next friend and father, Andrew Economou, to recover for injuries suffered by her as a result of an accident on a public highway in the city of Pawtucket involving a motor vehicle owned by the defendant and operated by one of its employees. The father also sued in his own name for consequential damages.

The case was heard before a justice of the Superior Court sitting with a jury. At the close of plaintiffs’ case the trial justice denied defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. The defendant renewed the motion at the close of all the evidence and the trial justice reserved decision thereon. After the jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs, the trial justice granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. The defendant then filed a Super. R. Civ. P. 50(c) conditional motion for a new trial which the trial justice also granted. The case is before us on plaintiffs’ appeals from the judgments entered granting the motions for a directed verdict and a new trial.

The facts, as shown by the testimony and the exhibits, are, insofar as pertinent here, as follows. The accident in which Barbara was injured occurred on February 14, 1969, on East Avenue in Pawtucket, shortly after 6:10 p.m. Immediately prior to the accident defendant’s vehicle was *516 traveling north on East Avenue approximately 500 to 600 feet south of the accident scene. It was a van-type vehicle and was being operated by Normand J. Daigle, who was employed as an appliance service man by defendant. At the time of the accident, the road was dry, although snow was piled on the sides of the street, and traffic was very heavy.

As defendant’s operator proceeded northerly on East Avenue, approaching the scene of the accident, he was traveling between 15 and 20 miles per hour. There were parked vehicles to his right. He was going down a small hill and as he was passing a truck with a ladder on it he caught a glimpse of Barbara approaching the right side of his truck through the window in the right-hand front door of his vehicle. At that time she was in the process of crossing the street and was “running or jotting” into the path of traffic from in front of the ladder truck. The operator testified that he saw a “* * * flash of a child sort of on my right and the next thing I knew I heard a thud on the side of the truck * * *.”

It appears from the evidence that the point of impact was on the right side of defendant’s vehicle. This is indicated by certain marks running along the side of the vehicle where the road scum or dirt had been cleaned from the vehicle by the brushing of the vehicle against the child. The point of impact is also shown on the police diagram and by a photo showing a mark made by the police indicating the point of impact on the highway at the scene of the accident. It appears from the exhibits in evidence that this mark is in close proximity to the left front corner of the parked ladder truck.

After the accident, defendant’s operator proceeded northerly, beyond another parked car and a driveway, and drove his vehicle to the side of the road out of the line of traffic. At this point the rear of defendant’s truck was 92'6" from the point of impact, in the first available parking space on *517 that side of the highway. There was a distance of 29 feet between the two parked vehicles. The defendant’s operator then ran back to the child and moved her over towards the snow bank in order to get her out of the road. He admitted there was a street light over the point of the accident. He said he did not see any other children in the vicinity from the time he entered East Avenue until the point of impact and he denied seeing the child-warning sign which was attached to a pole on the easterly side of East Avenue, a short distance to the south of the scene of the accident.

Barbara, who was eight years old at the time of the accident and eleven years old at the time of the trial, testified in substance as follows. She and her two brothers, George and Matthew, and two other children were out sliding with their sleds behind Almac’s. They heard and saw some fire trucks go by. They left the sleds to follow the fire engine and they all crossed from the west side of the street to the sidewalk on the east side. They ran and walked on the sidewalk on the east side of the street and then stopped to cross again because the engine was going in that direction. Barbara’s brother Matthew and the two other children crossed from the easterly sidewalk to the westerly sidewalk before Barbara and her brother George. Then her brother George crossed and after that Barbara was going to cross.

As he was crossing the street, George almost got hit. She was just standing there watching and called out his name so he would hurry up and run across the street. She testified that she was standing on the sidewalk when she called out to her brother; that she did not see defendant’s vehicle before she got hit; that she did not know where she was when she got hit; that she did not remember anything; that the best she could remember, she did not think that she started across the street after she called to her brother; and that she thought she was still on the sidewalk then, and *518 when the accident happened. She had stated earlier in her testimony that she was standing still when she was hit and that the next thing she remembered was when she awoke in the hospital.

We consider first plaintiffs’ claim that the trial justice erred in granting defendant’s motion for directed verdict at the close of all the evidence. 1 In passing on the motion the trial justice ¡referred to what he said when he denied defendant’s motion at the close of plaintiffs’ case. At that time he said that putting aside Barbara’s testimony and viewing the case from all the other evidence, in accordance with the rule governing the trial justice in passing on a motion for a directed verdict, the conclusion was inescapable that defendant’s operator was not negligent. He said that the evidence put in through the police officers, the diagram of the scene, the testimony of the young children who were with Barbara at the time, lead to only one conclusion that a reasonable person could come to, and that was that Barbara came into the street from behind a parked truck and ran into the side of defendant’s vehicle, striking it somewhere in the vicinity of the door handle on the passenger’s side, o<r slightly behind that. He went on to say that the photograph and the physical evidence showed this and that the evidence indicated that the impact took place out in the road, somewhere near the middle of the road. He concluded that a reasonable person could come to no other conclusion from that evidence than that defendant’s operator was not negligent.

The trial justice then went on to discuss Barbara’s testimony. He said that although her recollection was hazy, if *519 her testimony were believed, the reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom would be that she was standing in a place of safety and somehow defendant’s vehicle went onto the sidewalk and caused her injury. He said that this testimony raised a reasonable inference of negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
312 A.2d 581, 112 R.I. 514, 1973 R.I. LEXIS 1014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/economou-v-valley-gas-company-ri-1973.