Greenfield v. Bruskas

68 P.2d 921, 41 N.M. 346
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1937
DocketNo. 3988.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 68 P.2d 921 (Greenfield v. Bruskas) 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
Greenfield v. Bruskas, 68 P.2d 921, 41 N.M. 346 (N.M. 1937).

Opinion

BRICE, Justice.

This action was brought to recover damages for the negligent killing of plaintiffs intestate. Certain of the facts, which are taken from the uncontested findings of the court, are as follows:

On the morning of the 8th day of October, 1932, at a few minutes before 8 o’clock, the deceased, Claire Frank, a young man twenty-one years of age, and his brother, Austin Frank, nineteen years of age, were riding a motorcycle, going east on Central avenue in the city of Albuquerque, up a 3% per cent, grade, at áspeed in excess of twenty, but less than twenty-five miles an hour. The motorcycle was equipped with a special seat larger than the ordinary seat, and Claire Frank was sitting in the back of the seat, while his brother, Austin, who was driving the machine, was sitting on the forward part of the seat and had hold of the handle bars. Claire Frank was carrying a book and a package of drawing instruments in one hand and the other hand was around his brother’s waist. Claire’s feet were on the footboard provided for that purpose. The motorcycle was in good working order, and the brakes were in such condition as when applied they would slide the tires. Both boys were experienced motorcycle drivers, and each had owned a machine of that kind for a considerable period of time; each had taken part in driving around the city and in cross-country driving, and understood how to ride and handle a motorcycle.

It had been raining on the morning in question, but the shower had passed, the atmosphere was clear, and the asphalt paving on East Central avenue was still wet. The two boys were proceeding on the right side of the street, and as they approached the intersection of South Ash street with East Central avenue, the wife of the defendant was driving west on East Central avenue and approaching the intersection of South Ash and East Central, and was plainly seen by Austin Frank, who was looking east as he was driving in that direction.

The wife of the defendant, who was driving the automobile, turned left from Central avenue on Ash street and gave no signal with the horn of her intention to so turn. Austin Frank threw on the brakes of his motorcycle and swung it sharply to the left in an effort to go behind the automobile, and, due to the use of his brakes on a wet pavement and the making of the sharp turn to the left, the motorcycle skidded and swung around, coming in contact with the right rear wheel of the defendant’s car, throwing the motorcycle and the riders to the pavement. By reason of the fall upon the pavement, Claire Frank suffered a broken leg, and was soon thereafter taken to a hospital, where, on the following morning, he died as a result of the accident, from a cerebral embolism or blood clot which lodged in his brain.

The authorities of the city of Albuquerque have not modified the state law with reference to turning at the intersection of South Ash and East Central avenue by placing buttons, markers, or other direction signs thereon.

The defendant is the owner of a De Soto automobile, of the kind and number specified in the complaint, which he kept for the use of himself and his wife for both business and pleasure, and the wife of the defendant was permitted at all times to drive the automobile, and at the time in question was using the car for the purpose of making a visit to her sister, who lived on the east side of South Ash street.

The plaintiff, Myrtle Greenfield, is the administratrix of the estate of Claire Frank, deceased, who died intestate, and brings this suit as such administratrix. Claire Frank left surviving him a father, who lives in Kansas, and two minor brothers, one nineteen years of age, and one fourteen years of age. Claire Frank was a senior in the University of New Mexico, taking a course in mechanical engineering, was a member of an honorary undergraduate engineering fraternity, based on scholarship ; was a boy of good habits, studious, diligent, and of upright life and deportment, and was interested in the education of his two younger brothers. He was employed by the State Health Laboratory at the University of New Mexico during the school term at $40 a month, and during the summer made $100 a month salary, besides certain extras in attending lawns and doing other work. He was in good health at the time of his death, and had an expectancy of forty-two years of life. The average earning power of a mechanical engineer in New Mexico and vicinity, for the first five years after graduation from college, is approximately $1,800 a year, and thereafter from $4,000 to $8,000 a year.

The evidence shows that Ash street begins at Central avenue running at right angles south therefrom.

The following findings of fact, requested by appellant, were refused by the court, and such refusal assigned as error:

“7. That as the two Frank boys approached the intersection of South Ash with East Central, their view was unobstructed, and they could see the wife of the defendant coming west on Central avenue, driving on the right side of the street going west.
“8. That the defendant’s wife turned her car to the left before reaching the center of the intersection between Central and Ash, and without looking west, from which direction the two Frank boys were coming.
“9. That, at the time the defendant’s wife crossed the center line of Central Avenue turning left, the motorcycle ridden by the two Frank boys had gotten past the center of the intersection of South Ash and Central, and, upon her making the left turn, (the remainder of this requested finding was adopted by the court).
“10. That, at the time Mrs. Bruskas turned left across Central Avenue, the motorcycle was about fifteen feet away.”
“12. That, if the wife of the defendant, before turning left on Central Avenue, had looked west for approaching traffic, she could have seen the two Frank boys approaching on the motorcycle in time to have stopped and to have avoided the collision.”
“21. That, at the time the defendant’s wife turned left on Central Avenue, she did not make any sign or warning with her arm or hand of her intention to turn.”
“23. That, at the time the defendant’s wife turned her automobile left on Central Avenue and crossed the center line of Central Avenue, the motorcycle was so close that the application of its brakes could not stop it before a collision would result with the automobile.”

The contention is that the court erred in refusing to make each of-the requested findings.

In regard to requested finding No. 7, there is no evidence in the record that both boys could see the wife of the defendant at the time mentioned, although the evidence shows that the driver, Austin Frank, could and did see Mrs. Bruskas at that time, and the court so found by his finding No. 10, incorporated in the facts we have set out. The district court did not err in refusing this request.

Regarding requested finding No. 8, the evidence of Mrs. Bruskas, the driver of the automobile in question, was as follows: She testified that she was going west on East Central avenue to her sister’s home.

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Bluebook (online)
68 P.2d 921, 41 N.M. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenfield-v-bruskas-nm-1937.