Flamion v. Dawes

169 N.E. 60, 91 Ind. App. 394, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 406
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 1929
DocketNo. 13,521.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 60 (Flamion v. Dawes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flamion v. Dawes, 169 N.E. 60, 91 Ind. App. 394, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 406 (Ind. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Nichols, J.

Action by appellee to recover damages for the wrongful death of her daughter, Jessie Killams, age 13 years, who was killed in an automobile accident in Perry County, Indiana. The .complaint is in two paragraphs.

The first paragraph allegés that appellant approached the car in which appellee’s daughter was riding, traveling in the same direction and to the right of the traveled portion of said highway at a. dangerous and reckless rate of speed; and, without warning, purposely, recklessly and carelessly attempted to pass and did pass the auto.mobile in which appellee’s daughter was riding while it was upon a narrow levee and fill; that, by reason of a curve in said highway and its running down a hill, and the dust created by the passing of a coal truck, appellant did not have a clear and unobstructed view of said highway for a distance of 500 feet at the time he attempted to pass; that the automobile in which appellee’s daughter was riding was being driven on the right-hand side of said highway, and as near the edge of the embankment as safety would permit; that appellant, in attempting to pass the automobile in which appellee’s daughter- was then riding, struck it with his truck with great force and violence; that, by reason of appellant so striking the car in which appellee’s daughter was riding, *396 and wholly without any fault or negligence of the daughter or the driver of the automobile, such automobile was thrown from the highway and down said embankment on the left-hand side of said highway and overturned, and the daughter was thrown against the concrete bulkhead or abutment of a drain and the automobile was thrown upon her, crushing and wounding her, and thereby causing her immediate death.

The second paragraph alleges that appellant crowded in toward the automobile, forcing the driver thereof to drive so far to the right of the traveled part of the surface of said highway as to cause the right hand wheels of said automobile to slip off the right side of the embankment or levee, under fear of imminent danger of being struck by the truck; that the driver of the automobile in which appellee’s daughter was riding being alarmed and disconcerted by the reckless, negligent, and careless driving of appellant, lost control of his automobile while-attempting to regain the traveled roadbed, skidding in the loose gravel and clay on the right side of the embankment, and was thrown down the embankment on the left-hand side of said highway while appellee’s, daughter was riding therein, and she was thrown against the concrete bulkhead or abutment of the drain, and the automobile in which she was riding thrown upon her, causing her death.

Appellant’s motion to make the first paragraph more specific, his motion to require appellee to state facts in each paragraph to support conclusions, and his demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint were each overruled.

There was a trial by jury resulting in a verdict against appellant for $2,500, and judgment was rendered on the verdict. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and this appeal followed. The errors relied on for reversal are the respective rulings of the court.

*397 *396 We have stated briefly the respective paragraphs of *397 complaint filed by appellee, and, from this statement of the contents thereof, it is apparent that the court did not err in overruling appellant’s motion to make more specific. Each paragraph was sufficient to apprise appellant of the nature of the charge against him and to show that appellant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the death of the daughter. The evidentiary facts which appellant sought to have embraced in the complaint were not necessary. Each paragraph of complaint was sufficient to withstand appellant’s demurrer.

Appellant does not contend that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict, but does contend that certain evidence, hereinafter considered, was improperly admitted.

It appears by the evidence that, about two miles to the south of the place of the accident, and a few minutes before, witness Lonnie Landman met the automobile driven by appellee’s husband, and in which she and the daughter and another little girl were riding, and, at the same time, appellant came, up, going in the same direction as the Dawes car, an cl that appellant attempted to pass at a place where there was a curve; that he met Landman, who, in order to avoid a collision, went into the ditch. Appellee testified that, the first she knew, appellant’s truck was coming right at them from the rear, and they gave him the road and took the ditch, a small ditch. She noticed the Land-man car approaching from the opposite direction, and that he also took the ditch, and that there still was not room for appellant to pass, and so he fell back. Appellant testified that he followed appellee’s car, in which the little girls were riding, about two miles, all the way out to McCallister schoolhouse (near which the accident occurred), during which time, the little girls were looking back through the back light, and, when he overtook them *398 the little girls were looking out through the back light and saw him coming. Appellee’s husband also testified as to this first occurrence, and then testified that he saw appellant again on the fill (the place of the accident) through his mirror as he came up behind at what looked like a pretty high rate of speed. He thought appellant wanted to pass, and pulled over to the shoulder of the road as far as he could, and appellant kept coming up to him, and ran into him, hitting his bumper with the rear right wheel of appellant’s car. Appellant objected to this evidence of the first occurrence as being, too remote, and now contends that its admission was error for which the judgment should be reversed. But we are not in harmony with the contention. We hold that the first occurrence when the two cars were forced to the ditch by appellant, and when he failed to pass, and his following the Dawes car so closely thereafter that he could see the little girls looking through the back window or light, and his second attempt to pass at the place of a curve, and on the fill, constituting such a dangerous place, which resulted in the accident, were one continuous action, making all of the acts of the parties- during this time competent as part of the res gestae, helping ito explain the conduct and motives of the parties at the time of the accident. In Daywitt v. Daywitt (1917), 63 Ind. App. 444, 114 N. E. 694, in passing upon the admissibility of evidence, the court said: “ The term ‘res gestae ’ includes the surrounding facts of a transaction, and the accompanying declarations as well, to explain the act done, or for showing a motive for the acting. . . . ‘Circumstaiices and declarations which are contemporaneous with the main fact under consideration, or so nearly related to it as to illustrate its character and the state of mind, sentiments or dispositions of the actors are parts of the res gestae.’ ”

If, under circumstances such as here, appellee’s hus *399

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.E. 60, 91 Ind. App. 394, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flamion-v-dawes-indctapp-1929.