Holmstrom v. C.R. England, Inc.

2000 UT App 239, 8 P.3d 281, 411 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 2000 Utah App. LEXIS 73, 2000 WL 1059701
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 3, 2000
Docket990354-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2000 UT App 239 (Holmstrom v. C.R. England, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmstrom v. C.R. England, Inc., 2000 UT App 239, 8 P.3d 281, 411 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 2000 Utah App. LEXIS 73, 2000 WL 1059701 (Utah Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

JACKSON, Associate Presiding Judge:

11 Cheryl Holmstrom challenges the trial court's denial of her requests for two jury instructions and her motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) and, alternatively, for a new trial. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

12 "In reviewing a jury verdict, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to it, and recite the facts accordingly." Ortiz v. Geneva Rock Prods., Inc., 939 P.2d 1218, 1215 (Utah Ct.App.1997) (citation omitted).

3 On September 29, 1998, Joseph Hyatt, while working for C.R. England, Inc., was driving a semi-tractor (without a trailer attached) northbound on Park Street in a residential area of Salt Lake City. Park Street ended in a T-intersection at Division Lane. At the intersection, Hyatt prepared to make a right turn onto Division. He stopped behind the curb, then slowly crept straight forward and stopped with the nose of his truck protruding into the intersection. He could see better from that vantage point and observed no vehicles coming toward him on westbound Division. An S-curve started about 120 feet east on Division, and Hyatt could not see vehicles past the S-curve.

4 Hyatt had begun his turn when he saw Holmstrom about thirty feet away driving her car toward him in a westerly direction on Division. He stopped the truck, but not before at least part of his truck extended about two to eight feet into the westbound lane of Division. He was stopped for between one and two seconds before Holm-strom's car hit his truck.

. 5 Division Lane was about thirty-five feet wide from curb to curb. Parked cars were on the south side of the street, but none were on the north side of the street (westbound) adjacent to the accident seene. The police officer who diagramed the accident scene thus measured from the north curb to the edge of the cars parked along the south curb to come up with what he called "the usable portion of the road," which was about twenty-cight feet. Basing his calculations on the usable portion of the road, Holmstrom's accident reconstruction expert, Ronald Probert, testified that "the point of impact is ... two feet, one inch to the south of the usable portion center of the roadway." In other words, according to Probert, Holmstrom was "about four feet, six inches left of center" based on the usable portion of the road. Further testimony established that that would place Holmstrom's car entirely left of center, except for maybe the passenger side tires. Probert further testified that "(there is a very good likelihood" that the accident would have occurred even if Hyatt had been able to make his turn wholly in his own lane (the eastbound lane of Division). Probert also testified that, with Hyatt stopped as he was, Holmstrom could have avoided the accident by driving past him on her right in her own lane.

T6 Other testimony showed Holimstrom's perspective as she approached the point of impact. She was driving westbound through the S-curve on Division. Probert testified that drivers tended to straighten out the S-curve as they came through it-meaning they generally drove down the center of the road. Holmstrom followed that general tendency and was driving in about the center of the road when she came out of the S-curve and saw Hyatt's truck slowly turning in her direction. She did not decelerate or move to her right, but continued at her rate of twenty-five to thirty miles per hour and was distracted as she glanced 'down at the clock or the speedometer for about one-half to three-quarters of a second.

17 When Holmstrom looked up, she was about fifty-five feet from the point of impact. She realized for the first time that a potential *284 problem existed and she might collide with Hyatt. By the time she perceived the gravity of the situation and reacted by slamming on her brakes, she was about forty-eight feet from the point of impact; however, at her rate of speed, she needed about fifty-eight feet, or one-half second more reaction time, to stop. She thus hit Hyatt. The skid marks she left before the point of impact on Division Lane were parallel to the curbs, veering neither left nor right.

T8 Holmstrom filed suit against Hyatt and C.R. England, alleging. that Hyatt's negli-genee caused the damages she sustained in the accident. After both parties presented their evidence at trial, Holmstrom proposed two jury instructions. The first presented the theory that a finding of negligence could be based on a driver's selection of an unsafe route. The trial court refused to give that instruction. The second was a "sudden peril" proximate cause instruction that Hoim-strom had changed from the uniform instruction. See Model Utah Jury Instruction 4.3 (1993). The trial court thought the proposed instruction was somewhat confusing and invited Holmstrom to try to clarify and resubmit it. Holmstrom did not raise the issue again.

T9 Holmstrom also moved for a directed verdict, arguing any reasonable juror would have to conclude that Hyatt was negligent and that his negligence was the proximate cause of Holmstrom's damages. The trial court denied Holmstrom's motion, stating "that there is enough evidence in the support of a jury verdict going either way, depending which witnesses [the jury] chose to believe."

T10 The jury returned a verdict finding Hyatt negligent, but determining that his negligence was not a proximate cause of Holmstrom's injuries. Holmstrom brought a motion for JNOV on the issue of proximate cause, along with a new trial on the remaining issues, or, alternatively, for a new trial on all the issues. The trial court denied Holm-strom's motion, ruling:

[There is substantial evidence to suggest that the defendants [sic] negligence did not play a substantial role in causing the accident and the plaintiff's injuries, and therefore the jury, applying jury instruction no. 34, [1] could reasonably conclude that defendant's negligence was not a proximate cause of the accident and plaintiff's injuries. The record contains testimony from experts and lay witnesses suggesting that defendant's negligence did not play a substantial role in causing the accident or the plaintiff's injuries.

T11 Holmstrom appeals, arguing the trial court erred as a matter of law in refusing to give her two proposed jury instructions and to grant her motion for JNOV. She further argues the trial court abused its discretion in denying her new trial motion, which was based on the insufficiency of the evidence supporting a finding that proximate cause was lacking.

ANALYSIS

I. Unsafe Route Instruction

$12 "A trial court's decision regarding jury instructions presents a question of law, which is reviewed for correctness." Vitale v. Belmont Springs, 916 P.2d 359, 361 (Utah Ct.App.1996). However, for the trial court's refusal to give a jury instruction " '[tlo require a new trial, we must also conclude the error was prejudicial, ie., that it "tend{ed] to mislead the jury to the prejudice of the complaining party or insufficiently or erroneously advise{d] the jury on the law."'" 2 Id. at 363 (citations omitted; alterations in original).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 UT App 239, 8 P.3d 281, 411 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 2000 Utah App. LEXIS 73, 2000 WL 1059701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmstrom-v-cr-england-inc-utahctapp-2000.