Frazee v. Gillespie

124 So. 6, 98 Fla. 582
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 9, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 124 So. 6 (Frazee v. Gillespie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazee v. Gillespie, 124 So. 6, 98 Fla. 582 (Fla. 1929).

Opinions

Brown, J.

This writ of error brings up for review a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court for Duval County, by which the plaintiff, W. H. Gillespie, recovered against the defendant J. L. Prazee, damages for serious personal injuries received in an automobile collision on the water front at Atlantic Beach.

The case went to trial on two counts alleging that the defendant Frazee ‘ carelessly and negligently drove and ran an automobile with great force and violence against and upon an automobile in which plaintiff was then and there riding. ’ The second count differed only in that it alleged that “plaintiff was then and there riding as a passenger.”

Issue was joined upon two pleas, the plea of the general issue, and a special plea, no doubt intended as a plea of contributory negligence, which alleged that the automobile in which plaintiff was riding was in his custody and control and was being driven by one Johnson at plaintiff’s request; that plaintiff and Johnson were riding together on a joint *584 enterprise; that at the time and place of the accident said automobile was driven by Johnson sharply in front of the automobile of defendant in a negligent and careless manner so that though defendant made every effort to avoid a collision he was unable to do so; and that the negligent turning of said automobile by said Johnson was ‘ ‘ the proximate cause” of the collision and damage. (Not that it “proximately contributed to causing” the collision and damage as is usually alleged in a simple plea of contributory negligence.)

The accident occurred at the point where the concrete approach westward to Atlantic Boulevard begins to rise from the level of the north and south driveway along the beach. It was on a Sunday afternoon. The incoming tide had narrowed the usually broad driveway on the smooth, hard sand of the beach to a width of about fifty or sixty feet.

The testimony of the witnesses for the plaintiff was in substance that plaintiff’s car was one of quite a long line of cars proceeding leisurely northward on the east side of the center of the beach drive and turning westward, at the intersection above mentioned, crossing over to the left and ascending the concrete runway up to the boulevard leading to Jacksonville. That progress across to the runway was slow on account of the depth of the ruts which had been cut in the sand opposite the foot of the runway. That plaintiff’s car was following a car about twenty feet ahead when the left turn to go up the runway was reached. That in making the turn plaintiff’s car slowed down to six or eight miles per hour and the front wheels of plaintiff’s car were within about three feet of the foot of the runway when plaintiff saw defendant’s car bearing down directly and very rapidly upon them from the’ north, whereupon plaintiff exclaimed to the driver to go ahead, that they were about to be hit. *585 Johnson, the driver, looked to the right and saw defendant’s car, abreast of and passing another car about 75 to 100 feet away, and coming very rapidly toward them, and putting on all the power he could, he succeeded in getting, the car almost on the runway, but not entirely so, and defendant’s car hit the right rear wheel of plaintiff’s ear with great violence, swinging it around so that it faced north, while defendant’s car swung partially around and skidded some fifteen feet in the sand, the impact completely disabling both cars and seriously injuring plaintiff, whose head was cut and hip badly fractured. That defendant was coming down the beach at about fifty miles per' hour, passing all other cars, and that from the time plaintiff first saw him, although plaintiff waved his hand and gesticulated wildly toward him, defendant came straight on at the same high speed, and would have hit plaintiff’s car in the center had not the driver promptly speeded up as soon as they saw him. That plaintiff’s wife, who was riding on the front seat with the driver, was by the force of the impact thrown through the window and clear of the car, while a Mr. Adkins who was riding with plaintiff on the rear seat, was also thrown through a window; whereas the plaintiff, who held firmly to the coat rod on the rear of the front seat, remained in the car, but was thrown violently against the side of the car, and sustained far more serious injuries than those who were thrown out.

On the other hand, the defendant testified that there was no great amount of traffic on the beach at the time; that he was driving south at a moderate rate of speed, passing one slowly moving car some distance back north from the runway ; that his ear was an old Marmon roadster, out of condition, and would not run over thirty-five or forty miles per hour. That as he approached the runway he saw a ear coming up the beach on the water side, and other’s beyond *586 it, but leaving him ample room to pass, and that, as he neared the runway, he was looking closely at it to see if any cars were coming down it from the direction of Jacksonville, from which direction most of the cars were coming, which was to be expected on Sunday afternoons, and that he did not see plaintiff’s ear until he was within twenty feet of it and did not know how on earth it got there. That as soon as he saw it, he swerved his car to the left as quickly as possible in an effort to avoid hitting it, but in spite of all he could do his right front wheel struck the right rear wheel of plaintiff’s car. That he, the defendant, was himself badly stunned for some seconds. That he came down a runway near the Atlantic Beach Hotel some little distance north of the place where the collision occurred, passed a slowly moving car, and continuing on south toward the runway up to Atlantic Boulevard, he passed no other cars which were moving south on the land side of the beach driveway except the one mentioned above, and that if he passed any at all they were entirely out of his way on the ocean side of the driveway.

There was some testimony, though not very convincing, by plaintiff’s witnesses to the effect that defendant after the collision appeared to have been under the influence of intoxicants. This defendant denied. The shock of the collision, and the excitement following, could very well have accounted for what the testimony showed as to the appearance and conduct of the defendant immediately after the accident.

The evidence for plaintiff also showed that in going northward up the beach plaintiff’s car was proceeding just to the east, or on the water side, of the center line of the fifty or sixty foot driveway between the '“water lap” on the right and the area of soft dry sand on the left, leaving about twenty-five or thirty feet between the line plaintiff *587 was travelling and the foot of the runway. That just before getting opposite the foot of the runway, plaintiff’s car, following another car about twenty feet ahead, curved around to the left, thus traveling probably thirty feet to the left across the space or passage way for southbound traffic before reaching the point where the runway to the westward began. Neither before or when making this turn, does it appear that any one in plaintiff’s car made any signal to warn southbound traffic; nor did they see defendant’s rapidly approaching car until they were within three feet of the runway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 So. 6, 98 Fla. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazee-v-gillespie-fla-1929.