Gray v. Esslinger

130 P.2d 24, 46 N.M. 421
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1942
DocketNo. 4703.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 130 P.2d 24 (Gray v. Esslinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Esslinger, 130 P.2d 24, 46 N.M. 421 (N.M. 1942).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The plaintiff as administrator of the estate of his deceased brother, Louis Linton Gray, appeals from a judgment of the district court of Dona Ana County entered on an instructed verdict for the defendant. As appellant, the plaintiff assigns a single error, namely, that the court erred in sustaining defendant’s motion for an instructed verdict interposed at the close of plaintiff’s case in chief. Under this claim of error, he argues two points, (1) that when reasonable minds may differ on the issue of contributory negligence, the matter is issuable and must be submitted to the jury; and (2) that if the defendant’s negligence approaches wantonness by showing reckless 'disregard of human life, contributory negligence constitutes no defense. Since either point, if well taken, renders erroneous the. action of the trial court in instructing a verdict for defendant and the first, certainly, and the second, contingently, will involve an analysis of the plaintiff’s evidence, we turn at once to its examination.

The decedent, a resident of El Paso, Texas, who followed the trade of manufacturing jeweler, engraver and watch repairer, came into the small village of Mesquite in Dona Ana County from the nearby settlement of San Miguel around 4 o’clock on the afternoon of June 21, 1941. Mesquite is located on highway No. 85 extending through the village from north to south, being the principal thoroughfare between Las Cruces, New Mexico, and El Paso, Texas.

The business houses of Mesquite all are located on the east side of the highway facing west and paralleling the right of way of the railroad between Las Cruces and El Paso. The southbound bus from Las Cruces to El Paso is due in Mesquite about 8:30 o’clock in the evening. The decedent planned to board this bus for El Paso at 8:30 o’clock, if in the meantime he should not succeed in getting a ride to his destination with some passing motorist. Accordingly, he spent the intervening time walking up and down the row of business houses inquiring for motorists going his way and stopping occasionally to visit with some local business man or loiterer.

In the course of his stay in Mesquite, the decedent passed the tavern of Frank Parra two or three times, sometimes pausing to engage in conversation with the proprietor if he chanced to be near the front of his establishment. It was not until 8 o’clock in the evening, however, that he entered the tavern. He then complained of a disordered stomach and purchased a small glass of wine in the expectation of getting relief from drinking it. He sat on a stool near the bar sipping the wine and visiting with the proprietor for nearly half an hour. Indeed, he had consumed the first glass of wine and had ordered the second and had partly consumed it, when the proprietor suddenly cried out: “There goes the bus!”

The highway through Mesquite is 41 feet in width and is paved with asphalt. The bus stop is located south of Parra’s tavern, directly opposite and across the street from Ripley’s Cafe, that is to say, the bus ordinarily comes to a stop on the west side of the highway as it did on the occasion in question. There is no bus depot or station house at Mesquite.

Upon hearing Parra’s exclamation, the decedent hurriedly left the stool on which he was sitting and rushed through the front door, running south paralleling the highway, but remaining just off the paving until he passed the second light pole located on the east side of the highway. From the time he ran out of the building until he reached the second light pole the headlights of a closely approaching automobile coming in from the south were plainly visible. The highway extends in a straight line for approximately two miles south of Mesquite and continues in a straight line north for a considerable distance. The view is unobstructed in either direction.

Perhaps not sensing either the speed or the nearness of the approaching car, the decedent, after hesitating momentarily at ■the second light pole, ran directly into the path of the on-coming car and, upon reaching approximately the center of the highway, was struck by it and instantly killed.

Mrs. Frank Parra, wife of the proprietor of the tavern, was an eye witness to this unfortunate tragedy and, as a witness for the plaintiff, gave in evidence the following account thereof, to-wit:

“Q. Just state what you saw the deceased, the man that was killed, state what you saw him do when he left your place, and what you did to enable you to see. A. I was with my husband there in the saloon and he was talking with my husband and he was drinking a small drink of wine— he didn’t even finish the drink. He hadn’t finished the drink when my husband told him, ‘There goes the bus!’ Then he got off the stool in a hurry and he went out the door and running and across the road; he was off the road on the left hand side, he was running and he called out twice for the bus to be held until he got there, and he ran off the road until he passed the second light pole, then he stopped there for a moment because I, too, saw that car coming with very bright lights, but he kept on across the road and it was just a moment and then I saw him in front of those lights and I heard the screech of the tires on the pavement. That is all I saw.
********
“Q. You say he stopped momentarily. What did he do? A. I think he stopped to see if he could cross the road without being run over. He probably thought he could beat the car in crossing the road.
********
“Q. Could you see him plainly from the time he left your store until he arrived at that post? A. Yes, because there is light there with the saloon lights and the garage lights, everything is well lighted there.
“Q. At that time when he left there were there any cars or trucks along the east side of the highway? A. Not at that moment, no.
“Q. Was there anything to obstruct either your view or his view of the car which was coming up the highway? A. No, sir.
“Q. And that car was coming up from the south? A. Yes, sir, coming from the south.
“Q, Have you any idea as to the rates of speed of an automobile? A. I see them go by speeding, but I don’t know.
“Q. Do you ride with your husband in an automobile? A. Yes.
“Q. Do you drive a car? A. No, sir.
“Q. Can you state with respect to that car that struck Mr. Gray, whether it was traveling fast or slow? A. I think it was traveling fast.
“Q. I believe you stated you heard the brakes? A. Yes, sir.”

The body of decedent was either hurled by the impact or carried on the hood of the car a distance of approximately one hundred feet from the point where struck and deposited on the west side of the highway just off the paving.

The defendant was the driver of the Buick sedan which struck decedent and according to the testimony of several witnesses was traveling at an excessive speed.

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Bluebook (online)
130 P.2d 24, 46 N.M. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-esslinger-nm-1942.