Larsen v. Bliss

91 P.2d 811, 43 N.M. 265
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1939
DocketNo. 4454.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 811 (Larsen v. Bliss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larsen v. Bliss, 91 P.2d 811, 43 N.M. 265 (N.M. 1939).

Opinion

BICKLEY, Chief Justice.

This is an automobile collision case in which the jury’s verdict was for plaintiffs (appellees here).

At the close of appellees’ case, appellant moved the court for a directed verdict upon the grounds that appellees had failed to make out a case of negligence entitling them to go to a jury and that the physical facts showed conclusively that appellant could not have been the party whose vehicles collided with those of appellees. This motion was overruled. After both sides had rested and closed their cases, appellant renewed his motion for an instructed verdict which was overruled. Appellant then moved the court to submit to the jury certain special interrogatories which the court refused to do. Appellant thereupon requested certain instructions which request the court denied. Exceptions were taken to each of the above rulings and appellant also excepted to the instructions given by the court as to damages on the ground that there was no jury question in the case.

After the jury returned its verdict of $2500 for appellees, appellant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict upon the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence and contrary to law and that appellees’ version of the accident was impossible of belief and that appellees’ claim was conclusively refuted by the physical facts. This motion, was overruled and final judgment entered for appellees.

The first point raised by appellant is based upon the proposition that there was a total failure of credible evidence to establish negligence on the part of appellant because the physical facts refuted conclusively appellees’ claim that appellant’s trailer had collided with their vehicles and 'made appellees’ claim impossible of belief.

Appellees in _ their amended complaint alleged that appellant, while traveling in .the same direction on the highway as appellees, attempted to pass the car and trailer of appellees, and negligently failed to allow sufficient clearance between the said vehicles and “so struck and sideswiped the trailer of the plaintiffs, and with great force and violence, so that great damage and injury were thereby caused to plaintiffs, etc.”, enumerating thereafter in detail the facts that the house trailer of appellees was overturned and battery acid was scattered over the contents of the trailer, that certain damage was done to their automobile, and that Mrs. Larsen, one of the plaintiffs, received personal injuries, to-wit, an injury to the left breast caused by coming in contact with a lever which raises the car window on the right side of the automobile, and as a result Mrs. Larsen was forced to undergo certain medical and surgical treatment.

Appellants denied generally all of the allegations of the amended complaint and expressly denied that any personal injuries were sustained by either of the appellees.

Mr. Larsen, one of the appellees, testified at the trial that immediately he heard the “honk” of an automobile approaching from the rear “ * * * -my trailer was hit, and my trailer was overturned, along with the car when he cut in in front of me, and broke my hitch, and I managed to get the car up on the road.”

Further on in his testimony Mr. Larsen said the left corner bumper on the trailer was bent in and the bumper along the side had been scraped almost the entire length; that the bumper was about three feet from the ground and extended along the side of the trailer, projecting out about an inch and three quarters. He also testified that the Bliss car and trailer cut in too close to the front of his car and the trailer struck the left front fender of his car, which together with the striking of the trailer, which resulted in breaking the hitch and turning over the trailer, caused his car to up-turn but the car did not turn over.

Mrs. Larseii’s testimony as to the accident was substantially the same as Mr. Larsen’s.

Mr. Larsen and several of his witnesses testified that there was a mark on the Bliss trailer approximately three feet from the ground as though something had been dragged along the trailer, the mark being more noticeable near the rear of the trailer, and there was some testimony that there was paint of a different color showing along the scratch that looked like gunmetal paint, the color of the Larsen trailer.

All of appellant’s witnesses testified that the Bliss trailer did not strike the Larsen vehicles at all; that there was a space of several feet between the cars and trailers when Mr. Bliss overtook and passed the Larsen vehicles.

The appellant introduced evidence, which was undisputed, showing that his trailer was constructed of Masonite, a composition substance one-tenth of an inch in thickness and so brittle that it might be crushed in the hand. He also attempted to show that the amount of battery acid which was in the battery in the trailer and which was claimed to have ruined the contents of the trailer was one-half pint. There was some dispute as to this, one ofappellees’ witnesses saying that there were two quarts of acid in the battery.

It is upon this evidence that appellant relies principally as showing the inherent impossibility of appellees’ version of the accident, contending that any blow of sufficient force to have the effect claimed by appellees would necessarily and beyond doubt have crushed the Masonite sidewalls of the Bliss trailer, and that it is absurd to say and incredible of belief that a half-pint of acid could have ruined the entire contents of a trailer as large as the one involved in this case. Appellant also said the scratches on his -trailer were received when he drove through some mesquite in Arizona.

Thus it appears that the only undisputed facts in the case are:

1. That appellant’s trailer was constructed of Masonite a composition substance one-tenth of an inch in' thickness and so brittle that a small section, which was exhibited to the jury, could be crushed in the hands.

2. That there was no break in the right side of appellant’s trailer and the only mark was a scratch along the right side of the trailer. None of the witnesses differed as to the fact that the trailer was not crushed, but the appellees’ and appellant’s witnesses differed as to the width and extent of the mark on the trailer. ■

Appellant says in his brief: “The character of the construction of appellant’s trailer and its condition after the accident were matters about which none of the witnesses differed. They were physical facts that absolutely refuted the claim of the appellees that appellant’s trailer had collided with their vehicles and made their claim impossible of belief.”

At § 6554, “Physical Facts Contradicting Testimony”, Blashfield’s Cyc. of Automobile Law and Practice, Vol. 10, Permanent Edition, it is said:

“Where facts testified to are opposed to all natural laws and common experience, so that it is inconceivable that any such thing could.have occurred, courts will refuse to believe it, on the ground that they will take judicial notice of its incredibility. * * *

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 811, 43 N.M. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larsen-v-bliss-nm-1939.