Hemmerle v. Aldrich

192 A. 166, 58 R.I. 227, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 22, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 192 A. 166 (Hemmerle v. Aldrich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hemmerle v. Aldrich, 192 A. 166, 58 R.I. 227, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 26 (R.I. 1937).

Opinion

Moss, J.

The latter of these two cases was an action of trespass on the case, brought to recover, for injuries suffered by the plaintiff, while she was walking across Broad street in the city of Cranston, by being hit by an automobile operated by the defendant. She alleged in her declaration that she was at the time in the exercise of due care and that her injuries were caused by the defendant’s negligent operation of the automobile. The former .case was a similar action brought by her husband to recover for damages suffered by him as a result of these injuries to her.

*228 At the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiffs, when the two cases were being tried together in the superior court before a jury, the defendant first moved for a non-suit in each case and, when that was denied, moved for the direction of a verdict for the defendant. This motion was in each case granted by the trial justice and a verdict directed accordingly, on the sole ground that on the evidence the wife was clearly guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

Each case is now before us solely on the plaintiff’s exception to such direction. As the question now involved in each case is exactly the same, we shall discuss only the case of the wife, whom we shall refer to as the plaintiff. As the defendant put in no evidence, and as there was nothing that was clearly incredible in the testimony of the plaintiff and the supporting testimony of her witnesses, we must, for the purpose of ruling upon the direction of a verdict for the defendant, assume that all such testimony was true.

At the place of the accident and for a long distance north and south of it, Broad street is straight and runs in a generally northerly and southerly direction. At the place of the accident there is a sidewalk on each side and the distance between the two- curbs is 45 feet. On the west side of the street there are two trolley car tracks, the westerly one being for southbound street cars, and the easterly one for northbound street cars. The westerly rail of the westerly track is 6.67 feet from the curb; the space between the rails is 4.71 feet; the space between the two tracks is 4 feet 11 inches; and the width of the easterly track is 4.71 feet. The easternmost rail then is 21 feet from the westerly curb and the space between that rail and the curb on the éasterly side of the street is 24 feet. The tracks and the space between them are used for general vehicular traffic, so far as consistent with the movements of the trolley cars.

The plaintiff lived in' a house at the north corner of *229 Broad street and a short street named “Talbot Manor,” which enters Broad street on the east side of the latter street, but does not cross it. The next street to the south is Wentworth avenue, about 290 feet from Talbot Manor. The nearest street to the north that enters Broad street from the east is Armington street, the northerly line of which is 248 feet northerly from the northerly line of Talbot Manor. For a much longer distance there is no street entering Broad street from the west, most of the space being occupied by a cemetery.

At about 11:45 p. m. the plaintiff alighted from an automobile on the westerly sidewalk on Broad street, nearly opposite her home, and the automobile was then driven on to the south. The weather was clear and there was an incandescent street light at the southerly corner of Talbot Manor and Broad street. There were also two arc lights on the westerly side of the latter street, one being at Went-worth avenue and the other about 197 feet north of where the plaintiff alighted. All of these were functioning properly.

She waited a few moments for several automobiles coming from the north to pass by and then looked to her left, that is, to the north on Broad street, and saw á line of automobiles coming from that direction along the westerly car track and near the westerly curb,' the nearest one being at Arlington street and'thus about 248 feet away from her, with its headlights on and not going very fast. Then, having assured herself that she had time to get across ahead of the automobiles, she left the curb and walked rapidly towards her home on the opposite side of the stret. She did not look again to her left, as she saw some automobiles coming from the south near Wentworth avenue, which would naturally proceed north along the easterly side of Broad street, and she wished to keep them under observation. ^

When she had reached a point which was at least to the *230 east of the middle line of the street and which she testified was about the middle of the space between the easternmost rail of the car tracks and the curb on the east side of the street, she was struck and badly injured by the defendant’s automobile, which was the one that she had seen at the head of the line coming from the north and which had come upon her without any warning of its approach being given and without her being aware of its proximity.

One of her witnesses testified that at the time of the accident he was driving south on Broad street in an automobile, which was the second one behind that of the defendant from Arlington street to the place of the accident; that his own automobile was traveling along the space between the two car tracks, when they approached the place of the accident; that the defendant’s automobile, about 150 to 200 feet ahead of his own, was then traveling on the easterly track; that it suddenly made a sharp left turn and came to a stop with its front end only two or three feet from the curb and its rear end projecting out into the street; and that the plaintiff was then picked up, to the right of the defendant’s automobile and four or five feet east of the most easterly car rail.

Another witness testified that at a point about 450 feet ' north of the place of the accident his automobile was passed by the defendant’s, which was then going at an estimated speed of twenty-five miles per hour.

On this evidence the trial justice ruled that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, not because she started to cross the street, knowing that the automobile which finally hit her was coming south, at what she judged to be a moderate speed, from a point that was 248 feet away, but because she did not again look at it, while she was rapidly walking across the street. It is our opinion, however, that on this evidence there was a question of contributory negligence by her which the jury could reasonably decide either way.

*231 The trial justice, in announcing his decision, said that this court had laid down “a pretty hard and fast rule, a person who walks into a highway, knowing of the approach of an automobile, and attempts to cross the path of that automobile, must not continuously look, but must reasonably observe, from time to time, the conditions as they are continuously changing.” He also said that in Kalify v. Udin, 52 R. I. 191, 159 A. 644, this court apparently decided that the doctrine of last clear chance does not apply in such a case as this.

We do not find that this court has decided either that a person who has started to cross a street, right after observing an automobile at a considerable distance and coming from his left at a moderate speed, is

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 A. 166, 58 R.I. 227, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemmerle-v-aldrich-ri-1937.