Harris v. McCuiston

64 So. 2d 692, 217 Miss. 601, 32 Adv. S. 6, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 468
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1953
DocketNo. 38745
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 64 So. 2d 692 (Harris v. McCuiston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. McCuiston, 64 So. 2d 692, 217 Miss. 601, 32 Adv. S. 6, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 468 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Kyle, J.

Dean McCuiston, the plaintiff, recovered a judgment in the circuit court of Montgomery County against J. C. Harris and Dan Dunn, the defendants, for the sum of $334.78 in an action for damages to the plaintiff’s auto[604]*604mobile and for personal injuries alleged to,have been sustained by tbe plaintiff as a result of the plaintiff’s automobile colliding with a 1% ton Chevrolet truck owned by the defendant, J. C. Harris, and operated by Dan Dunn, his employee; and from that judgment the defendants prosecute this appeal.

The accident occured on a public road about three miles south of Winona on January 7, 1952. The plaintiff was driving his 1941 Chevrolet automobile northwardly toward Winona, and as he was passing the north entrance to the private driveway leading from the public road to J. C. Harris ’ dwelling house his automobile collided with the Chevrolet truck, as the truck driver was making a left turn to enter the driveway. The collision occurred a few feet north of'J. C. Harris’ mailbox, which was located on the crest of a hill. From the photographs introduced in evidence and the testimony of the witnesses, it appears that there was a curve in the road in front of the Harris dwelling' house, and the road ran down hill in both directions from the mailbox.

McQuiston testified that he was driving northwardly toward Winona at a rate of speed of about 30 or 35 miles per hour, and that he had passed the south entrance to the driveway in front of the Harris dwelling house and was approaching the north entrance to the driveway when he saw the truck coming toward him; that he pulled to the right immediately, and the truck kept coming across the road toward him; that he applied his brakes and whirled his car back to the right and up into the edge of the driveway in an effort to avoid a collision; but that the truck continued across the road into the edge of the driveway; and that the collision occurred in the entrance to the driveway. McCuiston’s automobile was badly damaged, and McCuiston sustained minor personal injuries as a result of the collision. McCuiston testified that Dan Dunn, the driver of the truck, gave no signal to indicate that he intended to make a left turn at the entrance to the driveway, either by extending his hand and arm hor[605]*605izontally, as required by the statute, or otherwise, to indicate that he proposed to execute a left turn; and that he made no effort to stop his truck when he saw the plaintiff approaching in his automobile, until he saw that the two vehicles were about to collide. He stated that he was only a few feet in front of the truck when the driver of the truck started across the road in front of him.

B. H. Dyess testified that he was driving northwardly toward Winona and was about a quarter of a mile behind McCuiston at the time McCuiston’s car came to a sudden stop on the crest of the hill near J. C. Harris’ mailbox, and that he reached the scene of the accident almost immediately. Dyess stated that the left side of McCuiston’s automobile and the right side of the truck were the parts that withstood the impact. On cross-examination Dyess stated that McCuiston had passed him only a few minutes before the accident occurred, and he estimated that Mc-Cuiston was going about 30 miles per hour as he passed.

J. C. Harris was called as an adverse witness for the plaintiff and testified that he was the owner of the truck and that Dan Dunn was his employee and was driving the truck for him at the time of the accident. Harris stated that he arrived at the scene of the accident soon after it occurred. He saw skid marks in the graveled roadway which showed that McCuiston’s automobile skidded approximately 69 feet before striking the truck, and Harris stated that the truck appeared to have been knocked over about three feet when the automobile struck it. Harris testified that the road in front of his residence was a graveled road 3'0 feet wide, and that the Chevrolet truck was 26 feet in length. He stated that the two entrances into the driveway were approximately 75 feet apart.

Dan Dunn, the colored truck driver, testified that he crossed a bridge at the foot of the hill below the north driveway entrance; that the road was rough and that he cut, down his speed; that as he approached the entrance to the driveway he opened his left door and looked back to [606]*606see if there was anything behind him; that he saw nothing behind him, and that he proceeded np the hill; that he changed gear as he turned to enter the driveway; and that he got across the road, all bnt the right rear wheel of the truck, and at that time saw a car approaching from the south at a distance of about 500 feet. He said that he had already turned toward the left when he saw the car and that he drove about 18 or 20' feet across the road before the car hit his truck. On cross-examination Dan Dunn stated that he did not hold out his hand or extend his arm and hand toward the left when he undertook to execute the left turn; and he stated that the plaintiff could not have seen him if he had held out his hand. He admitted that he knew that it was his duty to look in both directions and to hold out his hand before undertaking to execute a left turn.

Dewitt Tyler, the outgoing sheriff, and J. W. Herring, the incoming sheriff, testified that they went to the scene of the accident soon after the accident occurred. Both testified to the layout of the road and the location of the driveways and the skid marks which they observed along the graveled road. Herring also stated that the entrance to the driveway was below the crest of the hill, and that Dan Dunn did not drive his truck to the crest of the hill before he made the left turn into the driveway.

The appellants’ attorneys argue only two points on this appeal: (1) That the court erred in granting the plaintiff’s instruction No. 2, and (2) that the verdict of the jury is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

The plaintiff’s instruction No. 2 reads as follows:

‘‘ The court instructs the jury that the driver of a vehicle on a public highway intending to turn to the left must exercise care that he is not turning into the path of some vehicle coming toward him, and he must take a proper position, and must signal in the manner required by law by holding his left hand arm out horizontally, and unless he has sufficient time to pass to the left, he must wait for [607]*607a clear opportunity and proceed safely and other drivers have the right to assume that he will do so.”

The appellants’ attorneys say that the above mentioned instruction is erroneous for the reasons, first, that the instruction is not applicable to the facts in the case, and second, that the latter part of the instruction is not the law of this State and is in direct conflict with the decisions of our own court.

The appellants’ contention that the instruction is not applicable to the facts in the case is untenable. The instruction represented the plaintiff’s theory of the law, as applied to the facts testified to by him and his witnesses. It is true that Dan Dunn testified that he had already crossed over the road into the edge of the driveway before the plaintiff saw him; hut Dan Dunn’s testimony on that point was in direct conflict with the testimony of the plaintiff; and the jury rejected that part of Dan Dunn’s testimony. The instruction was based principally upon the plaintiff’s own testimony. The plaintiff testified that when he started around the curve in front of J. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 So. 2d 692, 217 Miss. 601, 32 Adv. S. 6, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-mccuiston-miss-1953.