Kealoha v. Tanaka

370 P.2d 468, 45 Haw. 457, 6 A.L.R. 3d 919, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 71
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1962
Docket4075
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 370 P.2d 468 (Kealoha v. Tanaka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kealoha v. Tanaka, 370 P.2d 468, 45 Haw. 457, 6 A.L.R. 3d 919, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 71 (haw 1962).

Opinions

[458]*458OPINION OP THE COURT BY

MIZUHA, J.

This is an action in negligence instituted by plaintiffs-appellants against defendant-appellee for damages resulting from the wrongful death of one Homer Russell Barber, in a collision of a motorcycle operated by said Homer Russell Barber and an automobile operated by the defendant, Raymond Tanaka, on September 28, 1956. Plaintiff Jacquelyn Arruda is the orphan daughter and plaintiff Mabel Chang Kealoha the surviving mother of the deceased, Homer Russell Barber.

After a lengthy trial, the circuit court pursuant to a verdict of the jury, entered judgment in favor of defendant and against plaintiffs on January 10, 1958. Plaintiffs moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and at the same time moved for a new trial. These motions were denied and a notice of appeal to this court was filed by plaintiffs on January 30, 1958.

On May 23,1958, plaintiffs moved for a new trial in the circuit court on the ground of “newly discovered evidence of misconduct of the jury and the court.” The circuit court entertained the motion and at the conclusion of the hearing indicated that it was disposed to grant a new trial. Plaintiffs then moved in this court to have the action remanded to the circuit court.

On July 17, 1958, the opinion of this court on the motion to remand this action was filed in Kealoha v. Tanaka, 42 Haw. 630. The circuit court on July 28, 1958, without a hearing entered an order granting a new trial. On the same day, the tenure of the circuit court judge ended by reason of the appointment and qualification of a new judge. Defendant moved to vacate this order. The [459]*459motion was denied by tbe new judge, and defendant moved for and was allowed an interlocutory appeal by tbe circuit court from tbe order granting a new trial.

On January 21, 1960, this court in Kealoha v. Tanaka, 44 Haw. 57, 351 P.2d 1096, reversed tbe order of tbe circuit court granting a new trial on the ground that defendant was not accorded a bearing after tbe original remand and before tbe entry of tbe order granting a new trial. Tbe case was remanded to tbe circuit court for bearing on the motion for a new trial.

At tbe bearing before tbe circuit court, tbe evidence adduced in June 1958, was considered by stipulation of counsel. Tbe only other evidence was on tbe diligence of counsel, a point on which tbe finding was in favor of the plaintiffs. On April 21, 1960, tbe circuit court entered an order denying a new trial. This appeal was then reinstated as authorized by this court in Kealoha v. Tanaka, 42 Haw. 630, 639.

Plaintiffs contend in their first specification of error that tbe lower court erred in submitting to tbe jury tbe issue of contributory negligence when there was no evidence of negligence of tbe decedent, Homer Russell Barber. A careful review of tbe record indicates that there was sufficient evidence to warrant charging the jury on tbe issue of contributory negligence. Tbe collision occurred when tbe defendant made a left turn in front of tbe oncoming decedent.

Defendant testified that on September 28, 1956, having finished bis day’s work, be drank three cans of Scblitz beer between 5:30 and 6:30 P.M. at tbe construction yard of J. M. Tanaka Construction Company, and proceeded to drive bis automobile toward bis home. As be approached tbe intersection of Kapiolani and Kaimuki Avenues, be turned on bis blinker lights and made bis band signal, both indicating an intention to make a left turn. At this [460]*460point, he was in the number two lane from the mauka (north) curbing of Kapiolani Boulevard, the “left hand lane” for traffic traveling in the Ewa (westerly) direction, where he stopped for about five seconds, waiting for five cars to go by. After the cars had passed, he looked, and not seeing any vehicles approaching from the Ewa direction, commenced to make his left turn into Kaimuki Avenue. As he passed the first lane from the center and entered the second or middle lane, there being three lanes of on-coming traffic, he looked to his right and saw a motorcycle coming toward him. He tried to avoid a collision by accelerating his vehicle, but was struck anyway. He stated that he was going between ten and fifteen miles an hour at the time of impact. The motorcycle was about eighty-seven feet away when he first noticed it. He saw the motorcycle in the motion of skidding in applying its brakes, but did not see the motorcycle come in contact with his car.

At the scene of the accident defendant stated to Sergeant Huch of the Honolulu Police Department, that the speed of the motorcycle was between thirty and thirty-five miles an hour. After the accident a single tire skid mark was noticed on the road by Officer Lee. It was approximately one hundred feet long but ending seventeen feet short of the point of impact. The statutory speed limit was thirty-five miles per hour. The decedent struck the defendant’s vehicle with enough force to cause extensive, damage to the side thereof.

From the foregoing the jury could adduce that the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence in at least two particulars. First, that the decedent had as ample an opportunity to see the defendant as the defendant to see the decedent and hence that it was negligent of the decedent not to keep such a lookout as to be able to avoid the accident.

[461]*461Secondly, the jury could have believed, from the fact that the decedent laid down a one hundred-foot skid mark, which stopped ten to seventeen feet short of the impact point and still struck the defendant’s car with sufficient force to cause extensive damage to the side thereof, that he was going at an excessive rate of speed, and that, to that extent decedent was negligent.

This conclusion follows from the testimony of the expert witness called by the plaintiffs that a motorcycle of the type which the decedent had, traveling at thirty-five miles per hour, would lay down a one hundred to one hundred fifteen-foot skid mark. Here he laid down a one hundred-foot skid mark, traveled another ten to seventeen feet and then struck the defendant’s vehicle with great force, indicating a speed considerably in excess of thirty-five miles per hour.

In this case Plaintiffs’ Instruction No. 7 read in part:

“In accordance and under the provisions of the above statute, you are instructed that if you find that the Defendant was negligent and that the deceased was not contributorily negligent and that such negligence of the Defendant was the proximate cause of the death of HOMER RUSSELL BARBER, and that the Plaintiff, MABEL CHANO KEALOHA, was partly dependent upon the deceased at the time of his death, you will assess the damages due the mother, * * * J?

Further on in Plaintiffs’ Instruction No. 7, the same language appears with respect to the claim of the other plaintiff, Jacquelyn Arruda.

Thus it is clear that the issue of contributory negligence was submitted to the jury by Plaintiffs’ Instruction No. 7. It was also included in and submitted to the jury by Defendant’s Instruction No. 6, which was given by [462]*462agreement.1 It is still the law in this jurisdiction that invited error cannot he complained of and this applies to jury instructions with full force and effect. Glover v. Fong, 42 Haw. 560.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
370 P.2d 468, 45 Haw. 457, 6 A.L.R. 3d 919, 1962 Haw. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kealoha-v-tanaka-haw-1962.