Evans v. Davidson

77 P.2d 661, 58 Idaho 600, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 13
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1938
DocketNo. 6518.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 77 P.2d 661 (Evans v. Davidson) 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
Evans v. Davidson, 77 P.2d 661, 58 Idaho 600, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 13 (Idaho 1938).

Opinion

*604 HOLDEN, C. J.

Between 4 and 5 o’clock in the afternoon of October 24, 1934, a collision occurred between two automobiles on the public highway about six miles north of Cascade, Valley county, Idaho. Ezra Evans was driving one of the cars. He had his wife, the respondent, with him. Appellant Frank G. Davidson, a salesman for the Boise Grocery Company, was the driver and sole occupant of the other car. Respondent Pheby Evans and appellant Frank G. Davidson were seriously injured, and Ezra Evans died in a Nampa hospital within a few days after the accident, from the injuries he sustained.

In December following the accident, Pheby Evans, as administratrix of the estate of Ezra Evans, deceased, commenced an action in the district court of Ada county against the appellants. She prosecuted that action in her own behalf and in behalf of the grown children of the marriage, to recover for the loss of the society and companionship of Ezra Evans, husband and father, and for funeral expenses, and damages to the family automobile. Appellants answered and also filed a cross-complaint, in which cross-action appellant Boise Grocery Company sought to recover damages to the automobile appellant Davidson was driving, and Davidson sought to recover damages for his injuries and also medical and hospital expenses.

On the same date, to wit, December 20, 1934, respondent commenced' another action in the same court against appellants to recover damages for the injuries she personally sustained. Appellants denied the material allegations of her complaint and affirmatively charged her with contributory negligence, but- did not plead contributory negligence on the part of Ezra Evans. These cases were consolidated for trial. At the trial, it was stipulated that the damage to the Evans ear was $175, and the amount of Pheby Evans’ expenses for medical treatment, etc., was admitted without objection. The damage to appellant Boise Grocery Company’s automobile and the hospital and medical expenses incurred by appel *605 lant Davidson were also stipulated, as well as that Ezra Evans died by reason of the accident. In the Pheby Evans case, the jury returned a verdict in her favor for $14,000, upon which the court thereafter entered judgment against appellants. Later, upon motion of appellants, the court granted a new trial. In the administratrix’ case, the jury found against the administratrix and also against both appellants. Nothing further was done in the administratrix’ case. In the Pheby Evans case, after granting appellants a new trial and vacating the judgment entered on the verdict for $14,000, the court entered judgment that she take nothing by her action, from Avhich last judgment she appealed to this court (Evans v. Davidson, 57 Ida. 548, 67 Pac. (2d) 83). Upon that appeal, this court reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the cause, with instructions to proceed with a new trial. The Pheby Evans case was tried a second time on the 8th and 9th of June, 1937, and a verdict rendered in her favor, and judgment entered thereon, for $15,700. This appeal is from that judgment.

Appellants pleaded by one of their affirmative defenses that respondent was estopped from relitigating in her case the issue as to the contributory negligence of Ezra Evans, which issue, it was pleaded, was decided and determined by the jury in the administratrix’ case. In support of that defense, appellants made the following offer:.

“We intend and expect to prove by this witness, and offer to prove by this witness (Charles H. Yerrington, then on the witness stand), that the jury did not consider or pass upon the issue as to the damage or loss to the widow or children by the death of Ezra Evans, or on the damage to the Evans automoble, or the right to recover for funeral expenses, but that the jury considered only the question as to whether Ezra Evans was on the wrong side of the road and that the accident was due to his negligence or contributory negligence, and that the jury by its verdict in the said administratrix’ case and by the judgment decided that Ezra Evans was guilty of contributory negligence; and we expect this witness’ answers to the questions we have asked to be in substance that the jury concluded that Ezra Evans was guilty *606 of contributory negligence and that the verdict covered only that issue and, with this explanation, we again ask the same three questions which were asked before.”

It appears therefrom, among other things, that appellants offered to prove that the jury considered Evans was on the wrong side of the road, and, consequently, was guilty of contributory negligence; in other words, appellants thereby offered to prove why the jury reached its verdict. This court held on the former appeal that affidavits of jurors showing why or the reasons for the rendition of the verdict on the first trial were inadmissible. That holding is not only sound but it is also the law of this case. Applying that rule to the above-quoted offer of proof, it is clear that the trial court properly denied the offer.

The refusal of the trial court to instruct the jury to find for appellants is assigned as error. It is contended by appellants that there is no conflict in the evidence, and that “when there is no conflict in the evidence it becomes a question of law for the court and not a question of fact for the jury,” and “that there was no evidence to justify submitting the cause to the jury, and the instruction for a directed verdict should have been given. ’ ’

Respondent Pheby Evans, on direct examination, testified substantially as follows.- That she and her husband had been deer hunting and had camped in Long Valley; that on the afternoon of October 24, 1934, they drove over to the main highway and started south in the direction of Cascade; that they were riding in a 1929 model Chrysler sedan; that her husband was driving the ear; that he was driving at a speed of not over thirty-five miles per hour; that when they reached a point a little north of the residence of one Roy Hall, she saw a car coming at a high rate of speed; that she directed her husband’s attention to the fact by telling him she knew it was going to hit them; that the (Davidson) car was traveling so fast it appeared to be weaving in the road, and that she could not tell which side of the road it was on; that when the approaching car got close, it turned directly in front of them and the two cars collided, after which she lost consciousness. On cross-examination, she testified substantially *607 as follows: That when she first saw the Davidson car, it was about a city block away from them; that Evans was driving along the smooth part of the road, probably the middle, and that there was no traffic on the road; that her husband was a good driver; that when she saw the other (Davidson) car coming, she shouted to her husband telling him to look at that car.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P.2d 661, 58 Idaho 600, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-davidson-idaho-1938.