Greenwell's Adm'r v. Burba, Etc.

182 S.W.2d 436, 298 Ky. 255, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 863
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 28, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 436 (Greenwell's Adm'r v. Burba, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenwell's Adm'r v. Burba, Etc., 182 S.W.2d 436, 298 Ky. 255, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 863 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Perry, Commissioner

Affirming.

The above styled five actions were brought in tbe Nelson circuit court against Felix Burba, here tbe appellee, for tbe recovery of damages by tbe several ad *257 ministrators of the five young men who were killed in an automobile accident, which they alleged was brought about by the negligence of the defendant.

The tragic accident out of which this litigation arose occurred about 10 P. M., Saturday, November 15, 1941, just south of the Beech Fork river bridge on highway 31-E, running between Bardstown and New Haven, as they were returning to their homes in Bardstown, about a mile distant therefrom.

An administrator was appointed for each of the five young men who were killed in this accident, each of whom instituted a separate action against the appellee, Burba, on behalf of the estates of their respective decedents.

The evidence is to the effect that on the Saturday afternoon on November 15, 1941, seven boys or young men, living in Bardstown and ranging in age from seventeen to nineteen years, who all wished to go to the nearby town of New Haven to attend a dance to be given there that night, got together and proceeded to make plans whereby they could attend it. By the joint plan agreed upon it was provided that one of them, J. It. Durbin, would borrow a Ford coupe from their friend, Barney Rizer, with which to make the trip and that they would all "chip in” to pay the cost of the gas used in making the trip and the evidence is that they all did so contribute.

Pursuant to their plan, later that afternoon, at about dark, they left Bardstown in the borrowed car, driven by Durbin,' for New Haven, their common objective, all apparently having had a community of interest in attending the dance to be given there. Their purpose being to make it a pleasure trip, in going to New Haven they visited restaurants and soft drink stands in several of the small towns along the way, at which it appears they got refreshments, played the music boxes, etc., but that -none of them took any intoxicating drinks, after which they drove to New Haven and went to the Rolling Fork Inn. About nine o’clock, after picking up another boy there, they started on their return trip to their homes in Bardstown over highway 31-E, four of the boys riding on the front seat and four on the rumble seat of the car.

It is further disclosed by the record that the appellee, Felix Burba, a quarry employee of Nelson coun *258 ty, upon quitting work that afternoon, drove into Bards-town in the county truck, of which he had charge, to take several of his co-employees to their homes, after which he drove southwardly over this same highway 31-E to his home some eight miles distant, where he changed his. clothes and ate supper. At about five o ’clock he returned in the truck to Bardstown, where he proceeded to. stand around, talking with friends, and to buy a half pint of whiskey, which it appears he shared with his friends,, himself taking “about two drinks” of it. The evidence is contradictory as to whether appellee was intoxicated at the time he left Bardstown, about nine thirty, with his- companion and neighbor,- Zola Woods, to return to his home, some eight miles distant, as stated supra, some-of those who met and talked with him at such time stating that he was drunk and others that he was not.

Appellee, after driving almost due south over theBardstown-New Haven road or highway 31-E and crossing the long Beech Fork river bridge, about a mile south of Bardstown, continued to drive on up the somewhat steep and winding road leading up the hill and had. passed a rock pile on the east side of the road when suddenly the motor of his truck stopped and his starter-failed, as he states “It did all the time I was driving the-truck. ’ ’

His truck having thus stalled, he testifies that as. there was a steep, declivitous bank on the west side of the road, upon which he was driving, and his brakes were-bad, he backed the truck down across the road and parked it on his left or its east side near the rock pile, which, was but a few feet distant from the eastern edge of the-traveled portion of the road, where the ground was; level.

The evidence is conflicting as to just how far the-truck, as parked by appellee, extended over on the east traveled portion of the highway, the appellee and some-of his witnesses stating that its right front wheel was left standing only about a foot on the traveled portion of the-highway on the east, while others stated that the bumper-of the truck extended almost over to the medial line.

Appellee and his companion, Zola Woods, testify that as they were sitting there in the parked truck, they saw the car in which these eight young men were returning home coming northwardly over the top and down-the hill on their right or the east side of the road to- *259 wards their truck, which was parked in the lane or path of travel in which the car was approaching, at a high and reckless rate of speed; that it was “making seventy-five miles — going at full speed;” and that they got out of the truck and attempted to flag the car down or over onto the other or west side of the road, upon which, they state, there was then no car approaching.

However, Harry Hicks, a witness for plaintiffs, stated that he followed the boys’ car all the way from New Haven, up to the top of and down the hill, and that they were not driving at an excessive rate of speed as they went down the hill. Also he testified that there was then a car, which he saw approaching from the north, in the vicinity of the truck, the two serving to block the boys’ passway on each side of the road.

It appears admitted that when the boys ’ car reached a point in the road a hundred and fifty feet distant from where the truck was parked, it left the traveled portion of the road and continued to run at high speed along or by the east shoulder of the road, through the opening between the rear of the truck and the nearby rock pile and over a part of the rock pile, from which it leaped, as shown both by the testimony and the map introduced in evidence portraying the car’s tracks, a distance of some fifty-six feet, where it struck solid ground and continued to run a further distance of twenty-eight feet, where the body of the first of the five boys who were thrown out and killed was found, and from thence still onward a distance of some sixty-four feet, where the car ran over the embankment, turned over and finally stopped, the car having traveled from the point where it left the highway a distance of some three hundred feet, and the inference is that the driver of the car was unable to stop it either because the car’s brakes were bad or because the car was being driven at an excessive rate of speed.

Shortly following this accident, in which these five young men met their deaths, appellee was indicted in the Nelson circuit court on five charges of manslaughter. However, he was tried on only the one indictment or charge which arose out of the death of Shelton Brook-shier, Jr.

On the trial of this ease in the Nelson circuit court, the appellee was by the jury convicted and his punishment fixed at a fine of $100.

*260

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 436, 298 Ky. 255, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwells-admr-v-burba-etc-kyctapphigh-1944.