Heald v. Milburn

125 F.2d 8, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4305
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 1942
DocketNos. 7651, 7652
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 125 F.2d 8 (Heald v. Milburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heald v. Milburn, 125 F.2d 8, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4305 (7th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

SPARKS, Circuit Judge.

Appellant appeals from judgments rendered in favor of the plaintiffs in suits to recover for personal injuries sustained in an automobile collision. The complaints were in two counts, the first charging negligence as to speed, failure to keep a proper lookout, operating a car on the wrong side of the road, and operating a car in an unsafe condition in that one wheel was so insecurely attached thereto that it became detached from the car. The second count alleged willful and wanton misconduct in the operation of the car in the same respects. The jury rendered a general verdict of guilty and assessed damages in favor of appellee, Mrs. Heald, at $9,000, and appellee Mr. Heald, at $1,000. Appellant assigns as error the alleged improper remarks of counsel to the jury, rulings on evidence, instructions, and failure to grant motions for a directed verdict and a new trial.

The accident occurred about 2:15 o’clock in the afternoon of July 1, 1940, as appellee, William Heald was driving his car east on Route 330 a few miles west of Geneva, Illinois. The road at this point is a two-lane concrete highway, eighteen feet wide, with a black line marking the center. Appellant was driving west on the same highway, operating a 1934 Chevrolet sedan which had been acquired a week or ten days before in a trade by the used car firm of which he was a partner. As his car approached appellee’s, and at a point estimated by the latter to be about seventy-five or eighty feet away, appellant’s car suddenly veered from the north lane across the center line into the lane in which appellee was driving east. The cars crashed, damaging appellee’s beyond repair. Appellant’s was also badly damaged, and after the accident it was found that the left rear wheel had become detached and rolled over into a field from which it was subsequently recovered at a place about one hundred feet north of the highway, with the tire still inflated.

Both appellees were injured, Mrs. Heald very seriously. Although there was some conflict in the evidence as to the extent of these injuries, we cannot say that there was not substantial evidence to support the finding of the jury as to the amount of the damages. There is no suggestion of any contributory negligence on the part of Mr. Heald. Appellant contends, however, that neither is there any substantial evidence of any negligence on his part, to say nothing of [10]*10negligence to support a charge of willful and wanton misconduct.

To sustain their charge of negligence and misconduct, in addition to the evidence that appellant’s car crossed the center line and was traveling in the wrong lane when the accident occurred, appellees introduced the evidence of many witnesses that immediately after the accident they observed that appellant was in an intoxicated condition. Heald and another witness testified that he refused to give Heald his name and address, and cursed when he was requested to do so. They also stated that he handed Heald his wallet containing some papers, stating that he could pay for any damages from it. One witness testified that after getting out and looking at the car from which one wheel had been detached, he climbed back in and started the engine, racing it “sky high,” and saying, “Sure, I can get out.”

Appellant sought to show that his condition was the result of the shock of the collision. However, a physician who examined him after the accident said that his injuries were slight — a slight cut on his forehead and perhaps some broken ribs, although he refused to have X-rays taken so that could not’ be determined. He too testified to appellant’s intoxication, and said that appellant admitted that he had had too many drinks. Testimony to the same effect was given by police officers in the jail to which he was taken after the accident. Appellant denied that he was intoxicated at the time of the accident although he did say that he had had two drinks of whiskey about 10:30 or 11:00 in the morning before it occurred. Another witness testified that he stated shortly after the accident that he had had seven drinks and that that was too much.

Appellant stated that he had left his home early for the purpose of visiting used car dealers to look for cars to buy. While he was in LaGrange, Illinois, he stopped at a garage to ask a mechanic to investigate the cause of a creak in the rear end of the car he was driving. He stated that he drove the car backward and forward, and that the •mechanic then took off the hubcap and tightened the nuts on the wheel to hold the wheel on. He said that he started to use the wrench himself and did tighten one nut but the mechanic offered to do it for him. He knew that one nut was loose, and could see the condition of the wheel. He watched the mechanic tighten all the nuts on the wheel. The mechanic corroborated his testimony as to the repair. After this stop he drove on to a lunch counter for lunch and then visited another used car yard. He then started on to call on a customer, driving along Route 330 at a speed estimated by him at one part of his testimony at thirty-five to forty miles an hour, because, “I wouldn’t drive any ’34 more than thirty-five or forty.” At another point he stated that he was going approximately forty or forty-five miles an hour at the time of the accident. There was no other evidence as to his speed.

Mr. Heald stated that until appellant reached the point where he saw appellant’s car suddenly veer across the center line and into the opposite lane of traffic, there appeared to be nothing unusual about appellant’s driving. To this extent they agree on the facts. They differ, however, as to what happened as the car swerved. Mr. Heald stated that he did not see the wheel become detached although he was watching the car and would have seen it if a wheel had been missing. Appellant testified that the first thing that attracted his attention was the sudden dropping of the car which he thought must have occurred before the cars came together, although he could not say definitely that that was what happened.

There was no evidence as to any marks on the pavement which would indicate that the wheel had become detached and let the car down. The only evidence as to markings on the highway related to the skid marks apparently made by appellee’s car when he tried to stop it.

A mechanic who examined the wheel after the car was towed to a garage after the accident testified that the holes in it through which bolts were inserted to hold it in place had become enlarged so that the wheel had slipped over the nuts, and that the nuts were then still attached to the bolts that led into the brake drum.

During the trial, appellant objected to the introduction of evidence that he was arrested and taken to jail after the accident, and to all evidence relating to criminal prosecution, and he here urges that the court erred in admitting such evidence. We agree with appellees that they were entitled to introduce the evidence of a police officer, a deputy sheriff, and a physician, all of whom examined or talked with him in jail, and testified as to his intoxication, and that they were also entitled to show where, when, how, and under what circumstances they had obtained their knowledge of his [11]*11condition. After the deputy sheriff had testified as to his conversation with appellant in jail, on cross-examination, appellant inquired as to whether or not he had ever testified at any other time or place as to his condition, thereby opening up the question of the criminal prosecution. Thereafter appellant himself brought in the record of the proceeding, and it was shown that if had been nolle prossed.

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125 F.2d 8, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heald-v-milburn-ca7-1942.