Horton Transfer & Storage Co. v. Donaldson

95 S.W.2d 1086, 265 Ky. 47, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 428
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 1086 (Horton Transfer & Storage Co. v. Donaldson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton Transfer & Storage Co. v. Donaldson, 95 S.W.2d 1086, 265 Ky. 47, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 428 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the- Court by

Judge Perry

— Affirming.

This appeal is prosecuted from a judgment for $5,000, recovered as damages in an action brought in the Boyd circuit court for personal injuries by E. W. Donaldson, as next friend, for his infant son, David Wylie Donaldson, received in a collision between a car in which he was riding and a motortruck of the appellant, Horton Transfer & Storage Company.

The Chevrolet car involved was the property of E. W. Donaldson and,; at. the time of the collision, was driven by his wife, the plaintiff’s mother, accompanied by her sister, Miss Eleanor Browning, who sat on the front seat beside her and held in her lap Mrs. Donaldson’s five year old son, the plaintiff, David Wylie Donaldson.

Appellant’s truck involved in this collision was at the time in charge of and operated by Ray Sparks, its driver, and Glenn Prater, his helper.''

Eleanor Browning received slight injuries as the result of the accident, for which she also, by a- second suit, sought to recover damages, and wherein she was awarded a verdict and- judgment for $100 upon hearing and -trial thereof had with the instant case, which fact is here mentioned only as being explanatory , of' the testimony found in the record relating to' hér injuries. The smallness of the amount, awarded ,her, .however, precluded her appeal, and we are here concerned only with the, appeal' prosecuted, by the .defendant transfer company from the . verdict and • judgment for $5,000 *49 obtained upon the trial of this cause in favor of the infant plaintiff, David Wylie Donaldson.

It appears that many of the facts as to the time, place, and circumstances attending this unfortunate accident are not in dispute, it being agreed that the collision between the car and truck here involved, and shown by the evidence to have resulted in plaintiff’s serious and probably permanent injury to his sight, occurred in broad daylight on the afternoon of October 12, 1934, on Sixteenth street, between Winchester and Carter Avenues, in Ashland, Ky.

It appears by the map exhibited with the record, and admitted, that Sixteenth street is about 60 feet wide and runs north and south, while Winchester and Carter avenues, intersected by it, run east and west; also, that on the east side of Sixteenth street, between its intersection with Winchester avenue on the north and an alleyway about the middle of the block between Winchester and Carter avenues,. where the , collision occurred, is located the Presbyterian Church, while on its. west side' the like space, between Winchester and the alleyway, is occupied by the Second National Bank building and. the telephone building, extending from its rear to the alleyway.

It further appears that shortly before the occurrence- of this collision automobiles were parked on both sides of Sixteenth-street-at -about a forty-five ■ degree-angle, -and that, appellant’s truck had been parked against its east curb, in front of a side door of the church, for loading a church organ, but had, in order to permit an automobile parked next the truck to get out, been driven across the street by Bay Sparks, its driver, to within some five feet of the west' curb of the street, opposite the telephone building, where it stopped and was standing at the' time that Mrs. Donaldson, accompanied by her sister and little son,' the infant plaintiff, starting home, was driving eastwárdly on Winchester avenue, -towards it ■■■Sixteenth street intersection;, that she turned off Winchester avenue into Sixteenth street, aiong' which she was driving southwardly' towards' the alley and Carter avenue, when, as they testify, they saw appellant’s truck parked near the west curbing, where it was, by reason of its extra length of some twenty feet, plainly visible tb *50 them, since it extended out into the street much further than the other nearby automobiles parked closer to the curb. Mrs. Donaldson and her sister admit that the truck, when first seen, was then so parked and stationary. However, they testify that as they approached the truck, she swung her car over to the left, nearly to the middle line of the street, in order to clear its rear end projecting far out into the street,, but that, while thus attempting to pass behind it, the driver of the truck, without notice or warning given them, suddenly began backing it into and across the middle of the street, negligently ramming its rear corner into her passenger car, causing the resulting injury and damage to it and its occupants here complained of.

The evidence for plaintiff is further that Mrs. Donaldson, upon perceiving that the hacking truck was about to run into them, sounded her horn two or three times, warning the truck driver of her position and approach, and also undertook to avoid the threatened collision with i't by swinging her car even farther away from it, over to the east side, across and beyond the middle line of the street some six or seven feet, when the rear end of the truck, which was still being backed by its driver, so violently struck and rammed her automobile near its center, at about a right angle, as to crush in its doors and side, break its windows, and shove and force the car sideways some five or six feet farther eastward, or almost against the cars parked at the east curb of the street.

It is admitted that by reason of the force of the collision and the flying broken glass caused thereby, the infant plaintiff was badly cut about the head and face and his right eye cut open, causing him great suffering and probably resulting in permanent injury to his sight.

To the petition alleging such facts, an answer was filed traversing all its allegations.

The contending parties, however, while agreeing as to the fact and force of the collision, the time and place of its occurrence, and the serious and probably permanent character of the plaintiff’s eye injury and sight impairment resulting therefrom, strongly dif *51 fer in their theories of the case, as to its cause and the manner of its happening and as to which of the. two, under the adduced evidence, should bear the blame and responsibility therefor.

It is appellant’s contention and theory as to the cause of the collision that when his truck was driven across Sixteenth street and stopped near the curb on its we'st side, plenty of room was left between the rear end of the truck and the middle line of the street for Mrs. Donaldson’s car to have safely passed on the west side of the street behind it, but that she, in operating her car, failed to see or else misjudged the location of the rear end or lowered “tail gate” of' the truck, and that because of such oversight or mistake she drove her car against it, and in so doing scraped and crushed in its side, shattering the glass, of the doors and throwing it into and against plaintiff’s head and face.

It is the opposing contention of appellee that tho point of collision was on the east side of Sixteenth street and that the truck suddenly began backing at or about the same time as she was passing behind it; and that it, by its yet continued backing, pushed her car, after striking it, some five or six feet further to the east side of the street, or almost against the cars parked along its east curb.

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Related

Thomas v. Boklage
170 S.W.2d 348 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 1086, 265 Ky. 47, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-transfer-storage-co-v-donaldson-kyctapphigh-1936.