Johnson v. Griepenstroh

33 N.W.2d 549, 150 Neb. 126, 1948 Neb. LEXIS 121
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1948
DocketNo. 32354
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 33 N.W.2d 549 (Johnson v. Griepenstroh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Griepenstroh, 33 N.W.2d 549, 150 Neb. 126, 1948 Neb. LEXIS 121 (Neb. 1948).

Opinion

Chappell, J.

Plaintiff, a pedestrian, was struck by defendant’s car at an intersection, and brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries allegedly resulting therefrom. Upon trial to a jury, defendant’ was awarded a verdict and judgment. Plaintiff’s motion for new trial was overruled, and he appealed. Assignments of error were substantially that the trial court erred: (1) In giving instruction No. 3 on its own motion, and in failing to instruct the jury that plaintiff’s alleged contributory negligence was an affirmative defense to be proved by defendant; (2) in giving instructions Nos. 13 and 14, and each.of them respectively, on its own motion; (3) in failing to give the statutory definition of right-of-way accorded a pedestrian under section 39-751, R. S. 1943; and (4) in excluding certain rebuttal evidence offered by plaintiff. We sustain the foregoing first, second, and fourth assignments. Other assignments appear in plaintiff’s brief, but, in view of our conclusions, they will not require separate discussion.

Concededly, Central Avenue, a paved street approximately 50 feet wide, runs east and west in Nebraska City. It is a busy main thoroughfare, intersected by Eighth Street, a paved street approximately 44 feet wide, running north’ and. south. At the time of the accident, there was a metal stop button in the middle of Eighth Street, north of but adjacent to its intersection with Central Avenue, into which the movement of traffic was [129]*129not being regulated by traffic officers or mechanical signal-changing devices.

Competent evidence introduced by plaintiff in support of the material allegations of his petition were substantially as follows: That on March 1, 1945, between 4:30 and 5 p. m., plaintiff, standing on the sidewalk at the edge of the curb, on the northwest corner of Central Avenue’s intersection with Eighth Street, looked both ways, west and east, and then started to walk south in the sidewalk space. He had taken three or four steps when defendant, driving his car from the north on Eighth Street at 10 to 15 miles per hour or more, failed to stop at the stop button, came on into the intersection, turned west on Central Avenue, without sounding his horn or giving any other signal, and, although plaintiff tried to step back, defendant’s car struck him on his left side, leg, and hip, with the front of the right front fender. Plaintiff was thrown up on the car between the fender and the hood, and defendant’s car proceeded west until it stopped at a point where the front end was about a car-length west of the intersection, or where the front half of it was west of the sidewalk space and the back half was still therein, where plaintiff rolled off the car into the street.

There was evidence adduced in plaintiff’s behalf that defendant got out of the car to give assistance, and told plaintiff “I didn’t see you until I hit you. The sun was in my eyes.” Defendant admitted that the sun flashed on his windshield and that he was blinded for a split second, seeing plaintiff afterward. An ambulance took plaintiff to a hospital, and it was discovered, without dispute, that he had a fractured left hip, and he claimed serious and permanent injuries and damages.

On the other hand, competent evidence introduced by defendant in support of the material allegations of his answer, was substantially as follows: That defendant stopped at the stop button on Eighth Street until several cars passed and its intersection with Central Avenue had [130]*130cleared of traffic. Thereafter, he proceeded to. make a right-hand turn west, in low gear, at three or four miles an hour, when he saw plaintiff just- pne or two steps before the collision. Plaintiff was then on the left, or south, side of defendant’s car, not within the area of the cross-walk but at the west edge thereof, jaywalking to the northwest. At that time, defendant proceeded to stop, but plaintiff kept on walking, and walked right into the left front fender of defendant’s car, after which plaintiff fell or rolled in front of the left side of the car and there lay in the street on his left side, head to north, feet south.

Defendant assisted plaintiff over to the north side of the car, out of the lane of traffic, where he leaned upon the right fender until an ambulance. arrived. At the time of the accident, plaintiff purportedly said to defendant, in the presence of defendant’s father, that: “he didn’t see me, and he didn’t know what had hit him.” “I didn’t see no car coming * * * You made an awful quick stop.” In the hospital three or four days later, plaintiff allegedly made similar statements.

Plaintiff, in his original petition, alleged that he was lawfully walking from the “southwest corner to the northwest corner” which was amended before trial to read “from the northwest corner to the southwest corner.” As held in Arman v. Structiform Engineering Co., 147 Neb. 658, 24 N. W. 2d 723: “When a litigant files an amended pleading, the averments of which are inconsistent with the averments of his original pleading, the original is evidence which may be offered in the case as an admission of the litigant contrary to his claim in the amended pleading.” It must be remembered, however, as discussed and held in the opinion, that such original pleading is not conclusive evidence but competent, as any other admission of a party against interest, and should be given such weight as the trier of fact deems it entitled in the light of the pleader’s explanation, if [131]*131any, of the circumstances under which the admissions were made.

In the foregoing situation, we conclude that the issues of negligence pleaded by plaintiff, and contributory negligence affirmatively pleaded by defendant, were questions for determination by the jury under appropriate instructions of the trial court.

At the outset, we will discuss plaintiff’s 'contention that the trial court erred in failing to give the statutory definition of right-of-way accorded a pedestrian under section 39-751, R. S. 1943. That contention of itself has no merit for the reason that plaintiff’s requested instruction No. 1, although marked “Refused” was actually given verbatim by the trial court ‘in instruction No: 7. It correctly and exactly' quoted the applicable provisions of the statute relating to the right-of-way' of pedestrians crossing a highway within a business or residence district and vehicles traveling thereon. " • '

In that connection, the term' “right-of-way”' used in the statute and in the instruction required no definition as argued by defendant, since they are words'of common use, generally understood by' everyone 'of ordinary intelligence.

As stated in Johnson v. Batteen, 144 Neb. 384, 13 N. W. 2d 625: “Jurors are accepted because they are men and women of common sense and have a common Understanding of words ordinarily uséd in our language.” Also, as held in Horn v. Goldberg, 137 Neb. 813, 291 N. W. 493: “Where an instruction correctly státes the law' in language commonly used and generally understood, it is not necessary that the trial court, bn its own motion, define the language used. A party desiring' a definition of the terms so used should offer such an instruction. In the absence of a specific request, the failure of the trial court to define the terms used in' the requested instruction is not error.” : : - •' •

With few immaterial' exceptions, the evidence adduced herein was very similar to that in Halliday v. Raymond, [132]*132147 Neb. 179, 22 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.W.2d 549, 150 Neb. 126, 1948 Neb. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-griepenstroh-neb-1948.