Hedden v. Town of Bingham Canyon

78 P.2d 637, 94 Utah 442, 1938 Utah LEXIS 23
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1938
DocketNo. 5768.
StatusPublished

This text of 78 P.2d 637 (Hedden v. Town of Bingham Canyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hedden v. Town of Bingham Canyon, 78 P.2d 637, 94 Utah 442, 1938 Utah LEXIS 23 (Utah 1938).

Opinion

YOUNG, District Judge.

The appellants, plaintiffs below, brought this action to recover damages for the wrongful death of their daughter, resulting from an automobile accident in the Town of Bing-ham Canyon, Salt Lake county, Utah. The accident which caused the death occurred January 14, 1934, at about the hour of 10:20 p. m. The alleged acts of negligence on the part of the town are: (1) In not maintaining a sufficient curb between the sidewalk and the paved street to keep vehicular travel in the street, and to prevent drivers of vehicles from driving outside the paved highway; (2) in suffering and permitting accumulations of ice and snow in the street at the place in question, thereby rendering travel in the highway unsafe and dangerous; (3) in failing and neglecting to put up or maintain curve signs or signal lights, reflectors or barriers at and about the curve to warn vehicular travelers of the existence of the curve; and (4) in permitting an extension of an iron pipe hand railing, not on the outside of and between the sidewalk and the street, but on the inside of the sidewalk.

*444 *443 At the conclusion of all of the evidence, both on behalf of the defendant and the plaintiffs, the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. The motion was based and granted on the ground of insufficiency of evidence to *444 show any of the alleged acts of negligence on the part of the defendant. Plaintiffs appeal and assign as error the action of the court in granting the motion and the admission of certain testimony over plaintiffs’ objection. Counsel for appellants concede that if the lower court was right in granting the motion, then this court need not consider the other claimed errors. Counsel for appellants, in their brief and in their argument to this court, contend there was evidence to go to the jury on the second and third acts of alleged negligence, and, in considering the evidence with respect to these matters, the writer is cognizant of the rule that the evidence must be considered in the light most favorable to appellants’ contentions. In considering the evidence as to these two questions, a statement of the evidence will be of assistance to the reader.

The evidence shows that the deceased was a resident of Salt Lake City, and that on the evening of the accident she, in company with three other young folks of about her age, left Salt Lake City in a 1931 Ford coupe to go to the Town of Bingham Canyon; that, after arriving at the point of their destination, they stayed about half an hour and then started back to Salt Lake City. Walter Holmes was the driver of the car and deceased was sitting next to him on his right, and a young man sat to the right of deceased holding the other occupant on his lap.

Holmes, who was called! as a witness for plaintiffs, testified that the road upon which he was driving was a winding one, and that there was no snow and ice thereon except over by the gutter; and as he approached the scene of the accident he was driving 20 or 25 miles per hour and saw a driveway to his right which he thought was a continuation of the road he was then traveling. When he discovered his error he applied his brakes and the car started sliding. He then attempted to turn but was prevented from doing so on account of the ice; that next he felt a jar, and, after getting out of the car and investigating learned that his car had run onto the sidewalk and into an iron guard rail *445 on the east of 'the sidewalk and that the guard rail had penetrated the floor of the car and through one of deceased’s legs. Deceased was rushed to a hospital, but died two days later from complications which followed as a result of the injuries suffered.

The highway at and near the scene of the accident varies in width but is approximately 20 V2 feet wide, and in going down the canyon courses in a northeasterly direction, but in order to avoid confusion hereafter, in referring to directions, the writer -will assume that the highway .at the scene of the accident runs due north. On the east side of the highway, and running parallel with it, there is a sidewalk which is about 4% feet wide and from 3% to 414 inches above the level of the highway. On the east side of the walk there was a handrailing consisting of galvanized or iron pipe about 2 inches thick, set perpendicularly in the cement, and from these perpendicular iron pipes there were suspended two horizontal pipes, the first being about 20 or 21 inches above the sidewalk and the other about 20 inches above the first and at the top of the posts. It also appears that the degree of the curve is 43-44 and that the total angle of the curve is from 28 to 30 degrees, and that just a few feet north of the sharpest angle of the curve there is a wire and bracket arm extending from a light pole, from which is suspended a street or arc light of 400 candle power. The pole from which the light is suspended is on the west side of the street, and the arm extends easterly over into the road about 7% feet. It is further shown that about 185 feet north and about 185 feet south of the scene of the accident there are arc lights of the same candle power. It also appears without question that there were no signs or signal lights to warn travelers of the existence of the curve. Again referring to the driveway which the witness Holmes testified he thought was a continuation of the road he was then traveling, the record discloses that it was unpaved and about il.6 feet wide, leading but a short distance to an apartment house and garage. Where this side road *446 connects with the main highway there had been built a cement structure from the street over the sidewalk, which extended out into the street 10.8 inches. This structure is solid and has no opening to permit water to flow thereunder.

It is the contention of the appellants that this cement structure caused snow and ice to accumulate at this particular point, and that whatever snow and ice was there was not there because of natural causes. There is no allegation in the complaint that the accumulation of ice and snow at the scene of the accident was caused by a structural defect, but the case seems to have been tried as if that had been alleged. Therefore, we will discuss the matter upon the theory on which it was tried. In order to determine whether there was any evidence that the cement structure was the cause of the accumulation of ice and snow on the highway at the scene of the accident, we quote what the various witnesses had to say with respect to that matter. The witness Holmes testified:

“There was no snow and ice on the road until you got over by the gutter. The ice was right over there by the curb. I do not know how much of the road was covered with ice at that point. I didn’t stop to look. I couldn’t state whether the whole road was covered with ice. I may have testified that way at the former trial. I had seen ice on the road farther up, just how much I do not know, and I do not know how far in the road it extended.”

The witness O. D. Henry:

“I did not notice any snow there, but frozen ice. The ice was created along the curb line all the way down. The ice would naturally slush. In the day time cars would throw ice and snow and water around, and at night it would freeze.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Phoenix v. Mayfield
20 P.2d 296 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1933)
City of Phoenix v. Clem
237 P. 168 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1925)
Wessels v. Stevens County
188 P. 490 (Washington Supreme Court, 1920)
Scoville v. Salt Lake City
39 P. 481 (Utah Supreme Court, 1895)
Berger v. Salt Lake City
190 P. 233 (Utah Supreme Court, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 P.2d 637, 94 Utah 442, 1938 Utah LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hedden-v-town-of-bingham-canyon-utah-1938.