Hultberg v. Phillippi

220 P.2d 208, 169 Kan. 610, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1950
Docket37,944
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 220 P.2d 208 (Hultberg v. Phillippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hultberg v. Phillippi, 220 P.2d 208, 169 Kan. 610, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 410 (kan 1950).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

This was an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff when she was struck by an automobile driven by defendant, and is the second appearance of the case before this court. When the case was first tried the lower court sustained a *611 demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and on appeal we reversed and remanded the cause for a new trial (Hultberg v. Phillippi, 167 Kan. 521, 206 P. 2d 1057).

On the second trial the jury answered special questions and returned a general verdict for plaintiff, and defendant’s appeal is the case now before us. While this appeal was pending the plaintiff died and the cause has beeen revived in the name of her personal representative. For convenience, the parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.

The evidence of the plaintiff on the second trial was substantially identical to that introduced on the first trial and in the interest of brevity the detailed summary of such evidence contained in our opinion on the first appeal is by reference incorporated herein.

The defendant testified that on the evening of the accident she had been out north of town to an outdoor movie and as she was driving back through town, south on Main Street, about nine o’clock, she heard something “collide with the car”; that she didn’t stop immediately, but when she “saw something laying in the back on the street” she then knew that something had hit her car and she then stopped and went into the American Legion building and called the police. She further testified that it had been raining a little and the pavement was rather damp; that her car was in excellent mechanical condition; that there was no traffic on her (west) side of the street immediately in front of her, and that she did not learn the identity of the injured-party until the next morning.

A Mrs. Cipra, defendant’s grandmother, was riding in the front seat with defendant and she testified that a large truck and other cars were parked on the west side of the street at about the point of the accident. Her testimony was rather confusing, but the substance of it was that she did not see plaintiff until the latter was “just in front of car,” and her version was that plaintiff had walked into the street between the truck and a car parked on the west side. Some of her answers indicated she thought plaintiff “walked into the car.”

The theory of the plaintiff, as disclosed by her evidence heretofore referred to, was that while attempting to cross the street from east to west she was hit and run down by defendant’s car while it was being negligently driven on the east or left side of the center line of the street. Defendant’s theory was that plaintiff was hit immediately after stepping out from between cars parked on the west side of the street.

*612 The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $3,325.98, made up of the following:

“Medical, Hospital, Nursing & Ambulance expense prior to Sept. 17, 1948 (Filing date of petition).................................. $1308.17
“Further future medical, nursing or hospital care.................. 1917.81
“Pain and suffering and permanent disabilities.................... 1000.00
$3325.98”

In addition thereto the jury answered special questions as follows:

“1. Immediately before and at the time of the accident, were the headlights on the front of defendant’s auto lighted, and in plain view?
“Answer: Yes.
“2. Did parked cars or trucks prevent Mrs. Phillippi from seeing the plaintiff before the accident occurred?
“Answer: No.
“3. Did the plaintiff step from between parked cars at the west curb into the path of defendant’s car?
“Answer: No.
“4. If you answer Queestion 3 ‘No’, state how the plaintiff got into the path of defendant’s car.
“Answer: Crossing the street.
“5. Did Mrs. Hultberg attempt to cross the street between intersections and fail to yield the right-of-way to Mrs. Phillippi’s auto?
“Answer: No.
“6. Could Mrs. Phillipi have seen Mrs. Hultberg in time to have avoided the accident?
“Answer: Yes.
“7. Did Mrs. Hultberg, by her own negligence, contribute to her injury?
“Answer: Yes.
“8. Did Mrs. Phillippi drive her car on the left of the center stripe on Main Street?
“Answer: Yes.
“9. If you answer Question 8 ‘Yes’, was the right (west) side of the street open for traffic at that time?
“Answer: Yes.”

Defendant’s motions to set aside the answers to questions 5, 6, 8 and 9, as being not supported by the evidence, to set aside the verdict and to enter judgment for defendant on the answers, and for a new trial were overruled — hence this appeal.

One of defendant’s specifications of error is that the court erred in overruling her demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence. This point was before us on the former appeal and what was there said can well apply to the question as now raised.

Defendant also alleges error in the introduction of the report made to the police department the next morning and it is contended *613 that our former decision held this report to be incompetent and inadmissible. We think that defendant misconstrues what was there said with respect to the matter. It is to be kept in mind that the question in the former appeal was the correctness of the order sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence, which included this police department report. Defendant was relying solely on our decision in Goodloe v. Jo-Mar Dairies Co., 163 Kan. 611, 185 P. 2d 158, where the plaintiff went out between two parked cars across the center line of the street and into the side of a truck and sustained injuries. In our former decision in the case at hand we held that the Goodloe case was not in point and that defendant’s statement in her report to the police that the plaintiff came out into the street between two parked cars could be nothing more than her conclusion in view of her further statement that she never saw plaintiff, from which it clearly appeared that she did not know whether plaintiff came from behind parked cars on the west side of the street or from the east side where there were no parked cars. We think that the police report was admissible and competent for whatever it was worth, not as being a part of the res gestae but as a statement in the nature of an admission against interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 P.2d 208, 169 Kan. 610, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hultberg-v-phillippi-kan-1950.