Humes v. Schaller

99 A. 55, 39 R.I. 519, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 99 A. 55 (Humes v. Schaller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humes v. Schaller, 99 A. 55, 39 R.I. 519, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 64 (R.I. 1916).

Opinion

Baker, J.

The plaintiff in this case on August 14, 1915, was severely injured by an automobile driven by a servant of the defendant at a point on the main road in Warwick, just south of Apponaug. A verdict has been returned in his favor and the trial judge has denied defendant’s motion for a new trial. To such ruling the defendant duly excepted, as he also did to the refusal of the court to grant two requests for instructions. The case is before this court on these three exceptions.

*520 Two grounds of error are urged in support of the exception to the denial of the motion for a new trial, namely: first, that upon the plaintiff’s own testimony as a matter of law he was not in the exercise of due care; second, that the trial judge would not consider “the question whether the jury had responded to the real merits of the controversy, and whether the verdict failed to do justice between the parties.”

These facts are shown by the plaintiff’s evidence. The plaintiff, as a sergeant of the First Light Infantry in charge of a detail of three men, was riding on an automobile truck which was conveying camp equipage and stores from Providence to the camp at Quonset. Between one and two o’clock in the afternoon, at a point on the highway south of Apponaug, opposite Brayton Cemetery, the tire on the truck’s left rear wheel burst and the truck was brought to a stop alongside of and two or three feet to the east of the trolley track. This track is on the west side of the highway and its easterly rail is ten feet from the electric car poles on the west side of the highway, and twelve feet from the fence on that side. From the easterly rail to the curb or edge of the sidewalk on the east side the distance is twenty-one feet. Poles of the Narragansett Electric Light Company are placed in this sidewalk at its edge, the sidewalk being six feet wide. The macadam portion of the street lies between the edge of the sidewalk on the east and the easterly rail of the car track. The extreme over-all width of the truck was five feet and eight inches. By the testimony there was a space of about thirteen feet between the curb or edge of the sidewalk and the east side of the truck after it was stopped. After the truck stopped there was at first some conversation as to what was to be done, as they had with them no spare tire. Three of the men — Freese, Clarke and the plaintiff— alighted and went to the rear to look over the injured tire. Freese took a position close to the left rear wheel facing it; Clarke stood near him a little to the north and east, and the plaintiff was a little more to the north and east facing southeasterly, bending over slightly and looking over his *521 right shoulder at the wheel. The attitude of Clarke was similar. All three say that they were thus engaged for a minute and a half. The plaintiff who was farthest from it was about three feet east- of the truck, thus leaving ten feet of the roadway between him and the edge of the sidewalk. At the point of the accident the highway was nearly straight and from the truck southward there was an unobstructed view for at least 350 feet. The chauffeur of defendant’s automobile testified that he saw the truck standing there when even at a greater distance. The plaintiff says he looked up and down the highway, when he took his position at the rear of the truck, but did not look up afterwards, and admits that if he had looked up he would have seen the approaching automobile, but says he did not pay attention to what might be coming because he thought he was in a safe place. The defendant’s automobile was an Oldsmobile of the Autocrat 1911 type. Its width is not stated but, from what is common knowledge, we think it may be inferred that its extreme width did not exceed six feet.

Upon this testimony the defendant argues that as a matter of law the plaintiff was not in the exercise of proper care for his own safety at the time of the accident. In support of this claim he cites seven or eight street railway cases in which the duty of persons working upon or in close proximity to street railway tracks to exercise care by looking or listening for approaching cars is upheld. We think that these and similar cases are clearly distinguishable from the case at bar. Practically every one knows that a street car normally used can only proceed upon its track. The track' is, therefore, an obvious place of danger and the law imposes upon every one on or in close proximity to it the duty of exercising care to avoid the danger arising from passing cars. But it is clear that the law does not require one lawfully standing at noonday on a country highway and directing his attention to a burst or punctured tire on a wheel of the vehicle on which he has been riding to anticipate and to guard against being run over by an automobile having *522 ample room to pass him in safety. In other words, the law does not require an ordinarily prudent person to expect such carelessness. On the contrary, he has a right to expect and to rely on the expectation that the driver of the automobile will avail himself of the opportunity to pass by in safety. We hold, therefore, that it does not appear that upon this evidence the plaintiff was negligent as a matter of law.

(1) The defendant bases his second claim of error in the denial of the motion for a new trial on this portion of the rescript of the trial judge, namely: “Defendant says that the preponderance of the evidence is that plaintiff stepped suddenly in the way from behind the stalled truck; suppose I do believe that this is more probable than that defendant’s driver ran down a man in plain sight, it is a question of fact which has been passed upon by the tribunal appointed to try questions of fact. Motion for new trial denied.”

The defendant urges that by this language the trial judge refused to consider whether the jury had responded to the real merits of the controversy,, and of whether the verdict failed to do justice between the parties, because apparently of the opinion that he had no power to do so. This court in Wilcox v. R. I. Co., 29 R. I. 292; Noland v. R. I. Co., 30 R. I. 246; McMahon v. R. I. Co., 32 R. I. 237, has considered and discussed the powers and duties of trial judges in passing upon motions for new trials. From them two rules emerge, namely; “when the evidence is nearly balanced, or is such that different minds would naturally and fairly come to different conclusions thereon, he has no right to disturb the findings of the jury, although his own judgment might incline him the other way;” but when his judgment tells him that the verdict is wrong, because it fails to respond truly to the real merits of the controversy and to administer substantial justice, and is against the fair preponderance of the evidence, then his duty is to set aside the verdict. These rules have been referred to and affirmed in numerous cases since those above cited. We think it should not be inferred that the trial judge was not informed as to these decisions, *523 but that being aware of them he has intended to imply that in his judgment the evidence in this case places it in the first class where the verdict of the jury is to be accepted as conclusive as to the facts.

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 55, 39 R.I. 519, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humes-v-schaller-ri-1916.