Hughes v. Hudelson

169 P.2d 712, 67 Idaho 10, 1946 Ida. LEXIS 117
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1946
DocketNo. 7290.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 169 P.2d 712 (Hughes v. Hudelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. Hudelson, 169 P.2d 712, 67 Idaho 10, 1946 Ida. LEXIS 117 (Idaho 1946).

Opinions

*13 AILSHIE, Chief Justice.

This is an action for damages brought by llene Hughes, appellant, as surviving wife, and as guardian of two surviving children, of Marvin G. Hughes:

Late in the evening of February 22, 1945, respondent, R. W. Hudelson, with Roy Agle, left Gooding to go to Ketchum, in Hudelson’s 1940 Chevrolet pickup truck. They were traveling on highway No. 24 from Gooding to Shoshone. About four or five miles east of Gooding, in response to a signal from a pedestrian (later identified as Marvin G. Hughes), respondent stopped his vehicle and consented to Hughes riding in the rear of the truck; he rode as respondent’s guest without pay for transportation. A few miles west of Shoshone, at a point where the highway is curved, the pickup truck met two oncoming cars, the lights of the second car not being dimmed. Momentarily blinded by the lights of the cars, respondent drove the truck to his right to allow ample room for the cars to pass. In doing so, the right wheels of the truck went off the road apd onto the shoulder of the highway. The shoulder was soft and lower than the pavement. On turning the truck to the left, to return the right wheels to the oiled portion of the highway, the truck went out of control, upset and rolled over several times. Mr. Hughes was thrown from the truck and lay right on the edge of the oiled road, “Right up on the shoulder of the road from where the car was.” Mr. Miller and Mr. Neuman came by in the latter’s car; they testified that they “got there about 12:30 or a quarter to one or somewhere along in there”. Mr. Hughes was placed in Neuman’s car and taken to the Gooding County Hospital “around one o’clock or a little after”.

*14 The next afternoon, in discussing the accident with respondent (Hudelson), I. G. Hughes, father of Marvin G. Hughes, testified to the following:

“A. Well, I asked him [respondent, Hudelson] how the wreck happened, and he said, We was on our way to Hailey, and we saw a hand sticking out like this.’ He held out his hand like this. He said, We stopped, and he [Marvin Hughes] got in behind in the back end of the car. We just got started up to going good, and we met two cars.’ He said, We got by the first one all right, but the second one didn’t dim his lights.’ And he said, T was working with this dimming button, and it got off of the road.’ He said, Well, Í kept battling this wheel to get back on, and when it finally come back on the road, why it went out of control, and I rolled over several times.’

“Q. It did what? A. Rolled over several times.

“Q. Was anything further said there at that time? A. Well,’ he says, T finally, I guess I was stunned or something. When I come to myself I could see a hole in the right hand of the window broken out. While at the same time I could roll down the glass on the left hand side and got out, but I couldn’t see that side.’ He said, T told this man that we would have to get out, because this man in the rear end might be hurt. This man, seemingly, was stunned or something, and I worked him out of the car with my hands.’ He said ‘After I got out, he couldn’t get across.’ He said, ‘I pushed him across like this with my feet, and after I pushed him across, I come across myself.’ He says, ‘Your son was laying right on the edge of the pavement on his back.’ He says, T just stooped down to pick him up, and I saw a car coming, and I hailed the car. I knew the man’ he says, ‘and we loaded him in and took him to the hospital inGooding.’ I asked him how long it was from the time that they were wrecked until he was in the hospital, and he said he thought it was about 15 minutes.

“Q. Was anything further said at that time, Mr. Hughes? A. I think that was all.”

On the morning of February 23d (the day following the accident), F. S. Craig, sheriff of Gooding county, and Sheriff Purdum of Lincoln county, met at the scene of the accident and took some measurements. Sheriff Craig testified ■

“We observed whei e .'■he automobile driven by Mr. Hudelson had been — the right wheels were off the pavement, the oiled pavement, followed down this concurve in an easterly direction and to where it went on the pavement, and the marks from there on down to where the car came to rest. * * * I went as far west as where the car went off the curve with the right wheels, and I paced the distance to where it *15 showed a mark of turning onto the oil. I stepped that measurement * * *. As I remember 120 paces. * * * I held the tape, the end of the tape, and let Mr. Purdum go out to where the first mark was from where it went onto the oil, from the tire mark on the oil there. Mr. Purdum took the measurement and wrote it on his notebook. I went from that particular mark and went to the next place we marked. He took those measurements. I just held the end of the tape. * * * We made four different measurements as I recall. He put them down, the mark on the pavement from where it started to where it went off. * * * This would be misleading on the diagram as to where he has his indication where north is. It isn’t that way on the road. He has 360 feet— * * *. I showed him where the car went off the pavement, as near as I remember. Before I arrived they had stakes there, and I agreed that was approximately correct. I showed him where the first mark was, where the first tire mark was on the pavement where a turn was made after it crossed the inner section of the highway. And I showed him the next one where at the time we visited it it showed a very plain space where we agreed that that was the thing that caused the upset. And I showed him approximately where the mark —the paint off a fender rubbed the oil, and we could all see where the car came to rest.

“Q. That is apparent there now where the car came to rest? A. Yes.

“Q. Now, Mr. Craig, you traced, the next day as I understand it, the morning of the 23rd, the car tracks where the tracks left the oil and ran along on the curve? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. A distance of 120 paces? A. Yesi„ sir. * * *

“Q. When the car was turned, when the driver turned to get back on the oil, the car went across in a northeasterly direction where it turned as though the driver was trying to pull it back. That tire mark was ' very plain on the pavement, and we measured — Mr. Purdum did, and I held the tape —where it went on the oil, and he took it over to where that mark of the tire was on the pavement. That was his first measurement. * * * That car went over the center just a little, possibly 2 feet, I think, before it came back on its own side. It showed very distinctly there what had happened. * * * It showed a tire mark on the pavement where it looked as though the tire was turned in this way going into the pavement and probably skidded 3 and a half feet. * * * a mark of red — blue paint and red paint on the pavement * * * The outside paint was blue. The prime coat was red. The blue showed first, and the red near where the car came to rest. * * * There was glass there, small pieces of glass laying there beside the car— where the car had been * * * A. The only time I talked to Mr. Hudelson about the accident was, I believe, the day I served the papers on him. * * *

*16 "Q. Did you make any tests there that day or a day or so after about driving the car along the edge of the road? A.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P.2d 712, 67 Idaho 10, 1946 Ida. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-hudelson-idaho-1946.