Hendrickson v. Brooks

53 P.2d 646, 40 N.M. 50
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1936
DocketNo. 4139.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 P.2d 646 (Hendrickson v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendrickson v. Brooks, 53 P.2d 646, 40 N.M. 50 (N.M. 1936).

Opinion

HUDSPETH, Justice.

Claud A. Hendrickson, appellee, sued Bert Brooks, appellant, for damages, based upon personal injuries sustained when his automobile left the highway and turned over. The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee for $15,000 which by remittitur was reduced to $10,000, for which sum judgment was rendered. This appeal followed.

The accident occurred about 8 p. m. on the 31st of August, 1933, in the settlement of Polvadera, ten miles north of Socorro on the Albuquerque-El Paso Highway, and was alleged to have been caused by a dip or ditch cut across the highway at a right angle. It appears that another dip of concrete construction was made by the builders of the road near by, but it proved incapable of carrying off the flood waters satisfactorily, and the dip or drainage ditch in question was cut by the removal of the oil surface and base to a depth estimated by different witnesses at from one to two and one-half feet and for a distance estimated at from 10 feet to 42 feet.

No concrete floor was laid in this dip, but the heavy traffic of this main North-South state highway passed over it without recorded injury to man or machine for many months before appellant came into the community for the purpose of “oil surfacing” eleven miles of new highway construction, reaching from a point some 700 yards north of the scene of the accident to the town of Socorro and roughly paralleling the old highway. This new highway had been used by the public for some time before appellant put up barricades and the usual warning signs to keep the traffic off the new highway upon which he was working, but it was not shown that it had been accepted by the state and formally opened to the traveling public.

Appellee testified that he read the word “detour” on the sign board put up by appellant, and was driving at about 35 miles per hour when he approached the unpaved dip or ditch, and that he remembered nothing else until he was picked up some 150 feet further south. One of appellee’s witnfesses testified that the tires on appellee’s car left marks in the middle of the highway, after crossing the dip for a distance of eight feet “showing that the wheels were dragged,” and that the car left the highway some 75 feet south of the dip, passed over a four-wire fence and was upturned near the door of a cottage.

It is admitted that appellant had a right to keep the traffic off the new highway, and that it was not a part of his duties to maintain or repair the old highway where the accident occurred — the state highway department having a maintenance crew on that stretch of the old highway continuously before and during all the time appellant's work was in progress on the new highway and after he had completed his contract. There was evidence that this old highway was to be maintained permanently for the benefit of the residents of Polvadera and Lemitar, another village through which it passed.

Appellee maintains it was the duty of appellant to give warning by road signs or otherwise to the traveling public of the dip or ditch where the accident occurred. His theory of the case may be gathered from an instruction given 'to the jury at his request: “No. 3. You are instructed that a contractor, employed to build or repair a public highway, has the right to block off the highway for the purpose of repairing or constructing an additional highway, and to compel the public to use such other roads • and detours available to travel around the portion of the highway under repair or construction, and while it was not the duty of the defendant to provide a safe road or highway at the point where the accident occurred, yet if the appearance of said road, after it left the main highway, was such as to induce a reasonably careful and prudent person to believe' that the road was in a condition such as would be safe to drive a car on the same at the rate of speed at which plaintiff was driving at the time the accident occurred and that the defendant, or his agents, in charge of said road work, knew, or, with the exercise of reasonable diligence, could have known of the condition of said road, as a reasonable person should have known, and the dangers thereof, if there were such dangers, and could have by signs or other means warned the traveling public of such dangers, if they were in existence; then the defendant was negligent for not having placed signs or other indications of warning on said road which would have been sufficient to warn the traveling public of the dangers.”

Appellee further maintains that even if the state highway department officials and employees were negligent in failing to put up warning signs at the dip or ditch, which it is alleged caused the accident, such negligence would not excuse appellant. Gilbert v. New Mexico Const. Co., 39 N.M. 216, 44 P.(2d) 489.

Appellant urges,, among other grounds for reversal, that the physical facts contradict appellee and show that he was plainly negligent in that he must have been traveling at an extraordinarily fast rate of speed — a speed inconsistent with due care — that a road which can be negotiated by all but most reckless and careless automobile drivers is safe. Esponette v. Wiseman, 130 Me. 297, 155 A. 650.

But in our view of the case, the only question which need be considered is whether or not appellant owed a duty to the traveling public to erect and maintain caution signs on the old highway at the point where the accident occurred. Or, in other words, whether his neglect to put up and maintain such signs subjects him to liability for the injuries suffered by appellee.

In the case of Romney v. Lynch, 58 Utah, 479, 199 P. 974, 975, the Supreme Court of that state, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Corfman, said:

“As has been seen, in the present case the accident is alleged to have occurred on a public road which was under the management and control of the county commissioners of Davis county, and with which the defendant had nothing to do under his contract, or otherwise, unless it be held, as a matter of law, that defendant’s directions to the traveling public to take the Davis county road as a detour burdened him with the duty of maintaining it in a reasonably safe condition for travel or that by warning signs or signals he should have apprised the public of its dangerous defects.

“Under the provisions of Comp.Laws Utah 1917, §§ 2800, 5848, subd. 15, the Davis county road, on which the accident of which plaintiff complains occurred, is deemed a public highway. As such it was under the direction and supervision of the county commissioners of Davis county, and it was the duty of said commissioners to keep the road clear of obstructions and in good repair. Section 2823, as amended by Laws Utah 1919, c. 55.

“It is therefore difficult to conceive upon what theory the defendant might be held to respond in damages for failure to keep in good repair the public road or highway in question. His contract with the State Road Commission was with respect to a state road, the Clearfield-Sun-set Highway, and no other. It is conceded, as it must be, that the defendant had the right to close that highway for the - purpose of making repairs or resurfacing it.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P.2d 646, 40 N.M. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrickson-v-brooks-nm-1936.