Graham v. Johnson

166 P.2d 230, 109 Utah 346, 1946 Utah LEXIS 154
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1946
DocketNo. 6868.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 166 P.2d 230 (Graham v. Johnson) 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
Graham v. Johnson, 166 P.2d 230, 109 Utah 346, 1946 Utah LEXIS 154 (Utah 1946).

Opinions

WOLFE, Justice.

Appeal from a judgment directing a verdict in favor of the defendants in an action for damages due to the alleged negligence of the respondent minor in driving her father’s car in such a manner as to injure the appellant minor. When the evidence of both sides had been presented, the *348 court, upon motion of defendants, directed a verdict for them. A subsequent motion for a new trial was denied. The plaintiff appealed. Assigned as error are the court’s action in directing a verdict, in denying the motion for a new trial, and! in sustaining objections to questions asked the respondent on cross examination.

The facts in reference to which we find no material conflict are as follows: The accident occurred in the late afternoon of September 22, 1944, on Lake Street in Salt Lake City. The street runs north and south. It is 30 feet wide from curb to curb. A construction joint of black bituminous material in the concrete pavement delineates the center of the street. On this street, just south of Yale Avenue, plaintiff, Gary Graham, age 13, with two other boys, Donald Hendrickson, age 14, and Jack Ware, age 12, were playing football. While the game was in progress, Darlene Johnson, age 16, was washing her father’s car in the driveway of her home, located on the east side of Lake Street and south of where the boys were playing football. Finishing this, she drove the car out of the driveway to the front of her home where she stopped a few minutes. She then drove north on Lake Street to the Yale Avenue intersection, passing Gary and Donald as she did so. Yale Avenue runs east and west. It intersects with Lake Street north of where the boys were playing ball. Darlene turned the car west on Yale Avenue, stopped, backed the car east across the intersection and stopped the car near the center of Yale Avenue, facing west with the front of the car about even with the east gutter line of Lake Street. From this position she started the car in low gear, turned south on Lake Street, attaining a speed of about ten miles per hour. She saw the plaintiff standing near the center of Lake Street, facing south with his back to her car. The evidence shows that he was about 49 feet south of the south curb of Yale Avenue. Donald Hendrickson was a little south of Gary close to the east gutter. He was facing north. He saw Darlene’s car approach Gary and shouted, “Gary, look out.” As will be noted more in detail hereafter, the *349 evidence varies as to the location of the Johnson car when Donald yelled. Gary, upon hearing Donald yell, ran in a westerly direction. At about the same time, the car swerved slightly to the right and a collision between Gary and the car soon followed. The evidence shows that Darlene stopped the car almost immediately or within two' feet of the spot of collision. Gary was found lying on his back in the street about opposite the center of the left front fender on the east side of the car. His right leg was injured.

It seems to be undisputed that at the time of the accident there were no other cars in that vicinity on Lake Street. It was daylight and the street was dry and the car had good brakes.

The court at the conclusion of the case directed a verdict for the defendants, we suppose on the theory that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law which in law contributed to the accident and that under any view of the evidence the so-called clear chance doctrine was not applicable. We think this was error. Having stated in the main those facts in regard to which there is no dispute we find it necessary to consider the testimony of the witnesses regarding the disputed facts in some detail. In this testimony there is much conflict. We have italicized the portions of the testimony of each witness wherein there are material discrepancies. It should be kept in mind in reading this summation of the testimony of each witness that it is done for the purpose of endeavoring to show the various possible reasonable combinations of the testimony that the jury might make in its attempt to determine the actual relative positions of Gary and the car at different stages of Darlene’s journey south on Lake Street from Yale Avenue.

Donald' Hendrickson testified that as defendant drove her car south on Lake Street, Gary was about 2 or 3 feet west of the center line of the street; that he was looking south with his back to the car; that he saw defendant drive the car towards Gary; that when it was about 5 feet from him, he shouted, “Gary, look out * * * because the car was *350 going to hit him [Gary] ”; that Gary then started running sidewise southwest towards the curb, away from the car; that the car swerved towards the west side of the street; that Gary had just run a few steps when the collision occurred in the vicinity of the left front fender — between the wheel and the fender; that he fell dbwn on his back east of the wheel; that defendant stopped the car immediately with the front part of the car about 2 feet away from the curb, and the back part about 3; that it stopped about 10 feet north of Jack’s driveway; that the car did not slow down; and that he did not hear defendant blow her horn.

Jack’s driveway referred to above is the driveway of the Ware home where Jack lives.

Jack Ware, who was further south of Gary, was standing on the west parking looking north. He testified that Gary was standing about a foot west of the center of Lake Street facing south; that he saw defendant north of Gary driving her car with “most of the car on the west side of the middle of the street, that line”; that when the car was within 15 or 20 feet of Gary — that is, when it had just got around the corner, and started to straighten out a little bit — he heard Donald yell, “Lookout”; that Gary then ran to the southwest sort of sideways about 8 or 10 feet; that he took 8 or A sort of running steps; that when Gary started to move over toward the curb, then the car turned out the same way; that the collision occurred near the vicinity of the front wheel on the east side of the car right under the bumper; that the car stopped within a foot or foot and a half after the contact; that the wheels were about IV2 feet away from the curb and the back end was about a foot further out; that it stopped 13 or 1U feet north of Jack’s driveway; that Gary was laying right by the front of the car east of the front wheel; that he heard no horn sounded by defendant; and that the car did not slow down.

Gary Graham testified that he was standing about 2 to 5 feet west of the center of the street facing generally south about on the mark “G. G.” (0Y2 feet west of the center line; see Tipton’s testimony below) on the map (Exhibit *351 “A”) ; that while he was standing there watching for the ball to come out and be kicked, he heard Donald yell; that he ran 2 or 3 steps to the southwest — about 3 to 5

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Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 230, 109 Utah 346, 1946 Utah LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-johnson-utah-1946.