Ham v. Hord

224 S.W. 868, 189 Ky. 317, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 868 (Ham v. Hord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ham v. Hord, 224 S.W. 868, 189 Ky. 317, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 424 (Ky. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion of the- Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

On the night of July 14, 1917, at about Í2 o’clock the appellant arid plaintiff below, Illia Mae Ham, who was an infant fifteen years and one month of age, was struck by an automobile belonging to- and driven by the appellee and défendant below, Dr. Winn Hord. The accident occurred on the Flemingsburg pike some three or four miles from Maysville, Ky. To recover damages sustained, because of her injuries, plaintiff by her statutory guardian filed this suit, alleging in her petition that .defendant was “carelessly, negligently and recklessly driving and propelling his automobile along and over said pike at a rapid and dangerous rate of speed,” and that ‘ ‘ the defendant operated his machine with such speed and force and so negligently, carelessly and recklessly and with such gross and wanton disregard of the predicament of said Illia Mae Ham, that he struck her,” etc., and judgment for ten thousand ($10,000.00) dollars was sought. The answer contained a denial of the averments of the petition as to the negligence of defendant and a plea of contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff, which being denied, .formed the issues.' A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant which plaintiff seeks to reverse by this appeal.

Counsel for plaintiff on this appeal states and argues in his brief four reasons why the judgment should be reversed, each of which, as he contends, is sufficient for that purpose. They are (1) that a peremptory instruction directing a verdict for plaintiff and which was offered by her counsel should have been given to the jury; (2) that the defense of contributory negligence is not available in this case and it should have been stricken from the an[319]*319swer and no instruction submitting it to tbe jury should have been given; (3) that the verdict is, flagrantly and palpably against the weight of the evidence, and (4) because the court erred to plaintiff’s prejudice, in the use of an expression in instruction number 1 hereafter to be noticed.

A disposition of the questions raised requires a brief statement of the testimony concerning,the happening of the accident. Plaintiff, her father and mother were in a buggy going south and slightly upgrade at a point where the pike was between thirty and thirty-five feet wide. Some two hundred and fifty or three hundred feet in front of them was a curve in the pike and plaintiff’s father discovered the reflection of the light of defendant’s automobile around the curve and his horse being a little nervous, he drove to the extreme right or western edge of the pike and stopped. He immediately got out and went to his horse’s head and in the meantime the automobile had come from around the curve. The mother got out of the buggy and went to its rear, and according to the testimony of plaintiff and that of her father and her mother, she got out of the buggy and attempted to follow her mother to the rear of the buggy, but just as she went to make the turn to get behind the buggy, defendant’s machine struck her and. dragged her about forty feet, inflicting upon her the injuries of which she complains. Her left leg and left collar bone were broken and she was carried to. Maysville, where she received surgical attention and was afterwards treated in ,a hospital there and subsequently treated in a hospital in Cincinnati, all at the expense of defendant. There is nothing to show or is there an intimation to the effect that defendant was guilty of negligence producing the nervous or frightened condition of the horse hitched to the buggy-in which plaintiff was riding. On the contrary, it is shown by the father of plaintiff that such condition was pro- ■ duced by the reflection from the lights on the machine around the curve and perhaps by the noise it was making before defendant came in sight. While plaintiff and her witnesses do not claim to be experts as to the speed of automobiles, they were permitted to state that defendant was running his machine at a speed of at least twenty miles per hour. At this point, we might say that if the jury had believed and accepted as true- the testimony of plaintiff and .her witnesses, a clear case of negligence on the part of defendant was established. Defendant had in his machine a young lady companion, and it is [320]*320in proof that three other machines, traveling in the same direction as was the buggy in which defendant was riding, appeared upon th$ scene at about the'time the accident happened or at any rate before any one could get to plaintiff where she was.lying in the pike. Defendant and his companion state in substance that when they rounded the curve traveling at about twenty miles per hour they saw two objects in the pike which they soon learned were individuals and saw the buggy on the west side of the pike but did not observe any frightened condition of the horse; that the two persons immediately went towards the buggy; that the automobile was under complete control and was slowed down to a speed of about eight miles per hour, and when at least two feet away from the buggy the plaintiff, being immediately next to the horse and at about its hips, made a sudden start to go across the pike and got in front of the machine and was struck before it could be stopped. They furthermore testified that the machine passed beyond the buggy only a few feet. This statement of the facts as to how the accident happened is sustained by the testimony of a number of other persons, who were in the three other machines that arrived at about the time of the accident. Those witnesses said that the body of plaintiff as well as the defendant’s machine was out in the pike a considerable distance from the buggy and that she was lying only a short distance beyond the buggy and had been dragged only a few feet. It is further shown that plaintiff on perhaps two occasions after the accident stated that it was due to her fault in trying to cross the pike in front of the defendant’s automobile. Other witnesses testified that plaintiff’s mother, shortly after the accident and while on the way to Maysville to see a doctor, said to plaintiff: “What made you run out there?” It will thus be seen that the evidence as to how the accident happened is sharply contradictory, with hte greater number of witnesses sustaining defendant’s contention. Under such circumstances it would be a waste of time to further consider ground (1) urged for a reversal, since no rule of practice is more firmly fixed in this jurisdiction than the one that where the evidence is contradictory or where reasonable men might draw different conclusions, it is the duty of the court to submit the issue to the jury and to not direct it as to the verdict that should be returned.

Ground (2) relied on is equally untenable. In support of it counsel argues (a) that if there was any contributory negligence shown (which is denied) it was that [321]*321of the father who was driving the horse, and that under the doctrine of Cahill v. Cincinnati, etc., Railway Co., 92. Ky. 345, and a number of others from this court decided both before and since that case, his negligence can not be imputed to the plaintiff under the facts of this case. But in answer to this we need not consider whether the doctrine of those cases is applicable here, since the contri-, butory negligence relied on by the defendant and testified to by him and a number' of his witnesses was the. negligence of the plaintiff and not that of her father. Such negligence consisted in plaintiff running fr.om the buggy across the pike at the time she was struck. It is further.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 868, 189 Ky. 317, 1920 Ky. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ham-v-hord-kyctapp-1920.