Gibson v. Utah Light & Traction Co.

151 P. 76, 46 Utah 562, 1915 Utah LEXIS 43
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1915
DocketNo. 2750
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 151 P. 76 (Gibson v. Utah Light & Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson v. Utah Light & Traction Co., 151 P. 76, 46 Utah 562, 1915 Utah LEXIS 43 (Utah 1915).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries which he alleged he suffered through the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff, after stating that the defendant owned and operated an-electric street car system in Salt Lake City, in substance alleged that on the 3d day of March, 1914, while ‘'in the exercise of due care,” he was crossing the intersection of certain streets in Salt Lake City, the defendant carelessly and negligently operated a street car [564]*564at an unlawful and excessive rate of speed, to wit, in excess of twenty miles an hour, and also carelessly and negligently failed to give any warning signals in approaching the street intersection aforesaid, and carelessly and negligently ran said car so that it struck the plaintiff with great violence while he was in the act of crossing the defendant’s street car tracks on said intersection, and that by reason of being struck as aforesaid he sustained serious and permanent injuries about his body. The'plaintiff also pleaded the city ordinances in which the speed limit for street cars was fixed at twelve miles an hour, and in which it was also provided that all street cars must be equipped with gong bells or whistles, which must be rung or. sounded as provided in said ordinances in approaching street crossings. The defendant answered the complaint denying all acts of negligence and pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. When the plaintiff had rested his ease, the defendant moved for a nonsuit. The motion was denied by the court, and defendant excepted. The case was submitted to the jury upon all the evidence, and they returned a verdict for the plaintiff, upon which judgment was duly entered. The defendant appeals from that judgment.

In appellant’s brief counsel state the proposition submitted for decision thus:

“The action of the trial court in overruling the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit is the sole ground upon which this defendant relies for a reversal in this case. ’ ’

This requires us to state plaintiff’s evidence somewhat at length. So far as’possible, we shall follow appellant’s printed abstract of the evidence. We do this because, after examining the original bill of exceptions, we find that appellant’s counsel have fully and fairly abstracted the evidence upon which they rely for a. reversal. •

According to the printed abstract, plaintiff, in respect to the accident, testified in chief as follows:

“My name is Samuel Gibson. I am seventy-seven years old. My birthday is on June 18th. I was seventy-seven in June. I have lived in the city here for nine years now. I was in the city last March when this accident occurred. It occurred on the 3d [565]*565day of March. It was in the evening, just about dark. I was going out to Mr. Powell’s. He is an old friend of mine, and we were together. When I reached the corner of First West street, I went across the street to get some tobacco and did not like the tobacco, and came out of that and came across the street over to the hotel there, and he went in and got some tobacco and then went on down the street, put tobacco in our pipes, and stopped to light our pipes, and we were going across the street next block. That was crossing First West street, First West street and First South street. He (Mr. Powell) went a little bit ahead of me, and I started on to walk fast to get up with him on the other side, and he got ahead of me, and I went across the first line of tracks, and just stepped right about the middle of the other track, and that bell rang right behind me, right alongside of me. I did not have time to look one way or the other. I did not know how to get out of that; but I was ■quickly put out. I was quickly knocked out. I stopped right in the track. I never heard a thing until I heard the crash of that bell. The bell that I heard was the sound of the bell on the street car. It was on the car because the ear was making the noise. It sounded like a bell ringing. When I heard that, I stood right about the middle of the track that the car was on. The ear was going down the street. That would be going west, and when I saw it I tried to get either one way or the other and broke me up so I lost half my senses, I guess, until it hit me. Then it put me off. The car hit me. It knocked me unconscious. I lost my senses. It hit me some-wheres right on the back of the head, and in my ribs here, and in my back and in here..”

On cross-examination he said:

“I have been in Salt Lake about nine years. This injury happened on First South street, down on First South street and First West, and that is a distance of about three blocks from Main street. I know where Main street is. It is two blocks. And Main street is the principal business street in the city, and the place where I was injured was about two blocks from that street. * * * The day of the accident, I went across one track and went to cross the other, just [566]*566happened to stop. Stopped right in the middle of that track, and this come right onto me, and I just heard the crash of the bell. That was the first thing I knew of.the approach of the car. I didn’t have time to look to see whether it was coming before that. While I was walking across the street there, I didn’t look up First South to see whether a car was coming. I never thought of it, never thought of it until I heard the bell. The first thing I knew of the approach of the car was when I was standing in the middle of the north track and heard the bell ring. It was right on me then. Before stepping on the north track, I hadn’t looked up to see if a ear was coming, because I thought I was clear. The thought of a car did not enter my mind before that time. It entered very quick after. I was just a little hard of hearing in one ear at the time of the accident, not a great deal.”

On re-direct he testified as follows :

“I didn’t hear the bell when I stopped, but just went to move, and I heard the bell. Then just turned around like that, and the car was right on me. I didn’t stop on the track no time hardly at all, come that quick, come right onto me. I just stopped there to see Mr. Powell, went down to that corner, or went up this sidewalk here. Just stopped to get my directions; that is just what I happened to stop. Just as quick as you could think. I heard that bell, but I could not get that way or get this way until it hit me. I started to go across this way to the coner. I saw Mr. Powell over there and started to go that way, and the bell come in that quick on me, and the car.”

Mr. Walls, on direct examination, testified as follows:

‘‘I remember that an accident occurred on the street car. I could not tell you what day it was; it was a long while since. I remember a man that got hurt with the car. This is the gentleman, Mr. Gibson, the plaintiff in the case. I could not tell you the time either. It was light. The sun hadn’t gone down. It was in the afternoon. I stood at the gate, and I saw that man same as he was paralyzed in my estimation, did not know whether to go across the track or stay back, and at last he made a motion to go across, and the car struck him. When I first saw the plaintiff, Mr. Gibson, he was going away [567]*567from the Fourteenth Ward Chapel and going on that side of the road from the Fourteenth Ward Chapel, going across. * * * He was crossing the street. I saw him crossing the street until he got — there was a pole somewhere about here, and he just got to the pole. No, he hadn’t got past the pole; he got up to the pole when the car hit him.

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Related

Miller v. Utah Light & Traction Co.
86 P.2d 37 (Utah Supreme Court, 1939)
Barlow v. Utah Light & Traction Co.
298 P. 386 (Utah Supreme Court, 1931)
Jackson v. Utah Rapid Transit Co.
290 P. 970 (Utah Supreme Court, 1930)
Kent v. Ogden, L. & I. Ry. Co.
167 P. 666 (Utah Supreme Court, 1917)
Musgrave v. Studebaker Bros.
160 P. 117 (Utah Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 P. 76, 46 Utah 562, 1915 Utah LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-utah-light-traction-co-utah-1915.