Howard v. Ringsby Truck Lines, Inc.

269 P.2d 295, 2 Utah 2d 65, 1954 Utah LEXIS 155
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1954
Docket8030
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 269 P.2d 295 (Howard v. Ringsby Truck Lines, Inc.) 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
Howard v. Ringsby Truck Lines, Inc., 269 P.2d 295, 2 Utah 2d 65, 1954 Utah LEXIS 155 (Utah 1954).

Opinions

WOLFE, Chief Justice.

Appeal by the plaintiff from an order of the lower court granting defendants’ motion to dismiss an action brought by her against defendants for wrongful death of Francis A. Howard and Allen Howard, her husband and son, respectively. The motion was granted at the conclusion of the presentation of the plaintiff’s evidence upon [67]*67the ground that she 'had failed to show any negligence of defendants which was a proximate cause of the accident or of the death of Francis A. Howard and Allen Howard.

Fatal injuries were sustained when the Willys pickup truck, hereafter called a jeep, which deceased Francis A. Howard was driving and in which deceased Allen Howard was a passenger, struck the side of a bridge over Red Creek on U. S. Highway 40, in Duchesne County, went out of control, and collided with the defendants’ truck on defendants’ side of the highway.

The sole issue is whether under the evidence, viewing it in the light most favorable to plaintiff, a reasonable man could find that the defendant truck driver was negligent in failing to avoid colliding with the jeep. Unless he was so negligent, the defendants cannot be liable on any theory for the death of either deceased.

On October 19, 1951, Francis and Allen Howard left Salt Lake City in the jeep with the intention of hunting deer in Eastern Utah. Several brothers of Francis, their wives, and children, were proceeding to the same general area in different vehicles, and during the journey east on Highway 40 other relatives and friends joined them. Lloyd Howard, a brother, his wife and child, were the last members of the party to see Francis and Allen Howard. Lloyd stopped at Current Creek on Highway 40 to observe some deer, and Francis and Allen stopped also. Lloyd then proceeded ahead in his Studebaker sedan, and he last saw Francis in his rear vision mirror just before he reached Fruitland, a short distance from the scene of the accident.

In the immediate area of the accident Highway 40 runs in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction, through a ravine. At the bottom of the ravine is Red Creek Bridge. The road approaching the bridge from the southeast along which defendants’ truck was traveling in a northwesterly direction, makes a turn around the side of a mountain, provides approximately 800 feet visibility southeast of the bridge, and proceeds downhill at a grade of approximately 6%. The road approaching the bridge from the northwest along which the deceased were traveling in a southeasterly direction, comes up over the crest of a ridge, then proceeds downhill at a- grade of from 7.3% to 3.6% in the immediate vicinity of the bridge. The oiled surface of the highway is 22 feet wide, but it narrows down to 20.4 feet over the bridge. Near the southeast end of the bridge is a turnout area for traffic traveling in a northwesterly direction.

At the time of the accident, mid-day on October 19, 1951, the weather was clear and the road was dry.

As Francis.Howard and his son crossed over the Red Creek Bridge, the jeep scraped the southeast corner of the bridge, proceeded across the highway, and collided on the north edge of the’ oiled surface of the road at a point 225 feet southeast of [68]*68the bridge with the right front portion of a truck driven by defendant Byington and operated by defendant Ringsby Truck Lines, Inc.

There is no evidence as to the speed of the jeep just prior to the accident or why the jeep struck the bridge.

Leading from the southeast corner of the bridge, tire marks and a line made by some liquid extended 'down the south side of the highway for approximately 75-100 feet and then cut across to defendants’ side of the highway to the point of impact.

The defendants’ truck, a tractor and trailer combination was 53 feet, 6 inches in length and loaded with high explosives, gross weight being 60,090 pounds. Defendant Byington, the driver of the Ringsby truck and the only eyewitness surviving the accident, was not called as a witness; however, several individuals testified as to what Byington said to them shortly after the accident. Glen Wing, a radio technician for the State Highway Patrol, testified that Byington stated his speed was 45 miles an hour as he approached the bridge, and that “'he [Byington] observed this pickup truck as it hit the abutment of the bridge and then continued on down the highway and that is the last he saw of it.” Other witnesses quoted Byington as follows:

Lloyd Howard — “He saw the j eep hit the bridge. He didn’t see it again.” Brady Howard — “It looked like it hit the corner of the bridge and went out of control and it cut across, cross-wise, across the road and he didn’t see it any more until he felt the impact.” Dale Howard — “He saw the jeep truck hit the bridge; he figured it hit the bridge and it came across the road until it hit his truck.”

Inspection of the road southeast of the point of impact revealed no evidence of brake marks made by defendant’s truck, which traveled approximately 135 feet after impact and stopped at the north edge of the turnout area after being empaled by heavy boulders.

The jeep was knocked northwest approximately 86 feet from the point of impact, and it came to rest 15 feet to the rear of defendants’ truck. Francis Howard was entombed in the burning jeep; Allen Howard was thrown clear, but he died on the way to the hospital.

Plaintiff first contends that defendant By-ington was negligent in failing to stop the Ringsby truck short of the point of impact. She maintains that the jury could reasonably have found that neither deceased Howard nor defendant Byington applied his brakes before the impact; that the jeep and the Ringsby truck were both traveling at the rate of 45 miles an hour; that the accident occurred 225 feet from the southeast corner of the Red Creek Bridge, placing the vehicles equidistant from the point of impact at the time the jeep struck the bridge; that at the rate of 45 miles an hour, each vehicle would be [69]*69traveling 66 feet per second, and a total of 3.43 seconds would elapse between the time the jeep hit the bridge and the time of impact; that at a speed of 45 miles an hour, allowing for the three-fourths of a second which is necessary for an average driver to react to an obvious warning, the Ringsby truck could have been stopped in 180 feet; that defendant Byington, acting with due care under the circumstances, should have reacted to the danger created when the jeep struck the bridge, immediately applied his brakes within the three-fourths of a second reaction time, and the Ringsby truck could have been stopped 45 feet before the point of impact, avoiding the accident.

To be sure, when Byington saw the jeep strike the bridge and go out of control, it became his duty to avoid colliding with it if he could do so in the exercise of reasonable care under all the circumstances. It must be borne in mind, however, that Byington was faced with a sudden and unexpected happening — and emergency — not caused by his own tortious conduct, and consequently he is relieved of the same coolness of judgment which would be required of him in the absence of an emergency. 1 Blashfield Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, part 2, page 553; Morrison v. Perry, 104 Utah 139, 122 P.2d 191; Redd v. Airway Motor Coach Lines, Inc., 104 Utah 9, 137 P.2d 374.

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Howard v. Ringsby Truck Lines, Inc.
269 P.2d 295 (Utah Supreme Court, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
269 P.2d 295, 2 Utah 2d 65, 1954 Utah LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-ringsby-truck-lines-inc-utah-1954.