Laws v. Rogers

1923 OK 693, 219 P. 324, 104 Okla. 118, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 25, 1923
Docket11912
StatusPublished

This text of 1923 OK 693 (Laws v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laws v. Rogers, 1923 OK 693, 219 P. 324, 104 Okla. 118, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 42 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, C.

The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff began this action against the defendants on the 9th of July, 1918, in the district court of Tulsa county. It is alleged in the petition that an automobile owned by G. W. Laws, and in which Thomas Laws and John Arberry were riding, and being driven by Thomas Laws with th^ knowledge and consent of G. W. Laws, the owner, collided, on East Second street in the cit5r of Tulsa, with an automobile owned and driven by the plaintiff, resulting in injury and damage to plaintiff, both to his person and to his car.

The negligence charged against the defendants is, in • substance, thát the defendant Thomas Laws was driving at a dangerous rate of speed, that the car of defendants was made to zigzag along the street in its onward progress, ' that defendants' car was without a headlight on the right side and with a too bright spotlight on the left slide, that the driver of defendants’ ear was in a state of intoxication, and that the driver of defendants’ car carelessly and negligently drove the car against plaintiff’s car when plaintiff was on his own side of the street under the rules of the road, and when plaintiff was stopped or moving very slowly.

The defendants G. W. Laws and Thomas Laws filed separate amended answers specifically denying all the allegations of negligence set out: in plaintiff’s petition. Pur- *119 ther answering defendants charged that plaintiff’s injury was occasioned by his own negligence which was the proximate eausej of the injury, and further pleaded contributory negligence which concurred in producing plaintiff’s injury, setting up what' defendants claimed to be the facts, and further alleged that plaintiff, in the operation of tiis car, on the occasion referred io, violated city ordinance No. 1402 requiring that a driver operate his car in a carelul manner, and No. 1421, providing that no person shall willfully or recklessly ride or drive so as to produce a collision, and No. '1424 regulating the speed of vehicles, and No. 1399 requiring drivers on the street to drive to the right of the center of the street.

The defendant John Arberry was released from any obligation in the matter on motion for a directed verdict as to him.;, at the close of the evidence, the plaintiff, at the time, agreeing that there was no liability on the part of Arberry.

No question was raised upon the trial as to the sufficiency of the evidence as against the defendants G. W. Laws and Thomas Laws, and no complaint is made here that the evidence was insufficient.

Upon the announcement of rest by the respective parties, the trial judge instructed the jury in part as follows:'

“(5) Under the laws applicable to this case, it was the duty of both the plaintiff and the defendant Thomas Laws in the operation of their automobiles to each drive upon the right hand side, or to the right of the center of the street in the direction in which they were respectively traveling, and a failure to do that would of itself be negligence.
‘‘(6) Under the law applicable to this case the driver of each of these automobiles was under obligations to drive the same in a careful manner and with due regard to the safety and convenience of pedestrians and of other vehicles, and street cars, and to avoid driving such automobiles in such manner as to come in collision with or strike any other vehicle, object, or person upon the street. A violation of this provision of the law would also be an act of negligence on the part of the person so violating such requirements.
“(7) If the defendant Thomas Laws, in the operation of the automobile, that he was driving, violated these provisions of the law, and such act upon his part produced the injury of which plaintiff complains, and the resulting damages, the defendants G. W. Laws and Thomas Laws would each be liable for the damage resulting to plaintiff by reason thereof, unless the plaintiff himself in the operation of the automobile that he was driving, was also negligent and violated these laws to which I have just referred, and such negligence and violation of the rules upon his part contributed to the injuries of which the plaintiff complains. In other words, the defendant has pleaded what is known in law as contributory negligence, in addition to the general denial of negligence up on his part, and the rule is lhat where one commits an act of negligence which results in injury to another, he is liable for the damages resulting therefrom unless that other person by his acts of negligence contributes to that injury.
“(8) So, in this ease, notwithstanding you might find by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant Thomas Laws, in the operation of this automobile being driven by him, was negligent, and his negligence resulted in the injury complained of, if the plaintiff himself, in the operation of the automobile which was being driven by him was also negligent in such operation and his negligence contributed to the injury of which the plaintiff com plains, no recovery could be had and your verdict should be in favor of the defendant.
“(12) Evidence has been introduced to the effect that the plaintiff, in the operation of his automobile> just a short time prior to the collision and within a distance which the jury will determine, turned his automobile to the left and across the center of the street, so that at the time! of the collision his car was on the south side of this Second street going west, which would be upon the wrong side of the street at the time, as prescribed by the ordinances of the city, and if you should find from the evidence that the plaintiff’s car was upon the wrong side of the! street, under these instructions, at the time of the collision then the fact that he was there would be an act of negligence on his part. • The jury are- to determine whether his being there at that time contributed to the injuries complained of.”

The defendants excepted to the giving of instructions Nos. 5, 6, 7„ and 8, and instruction No. 12 was given at the suggestion of the defendants that the point therein contained had not been otherwise sufficiently covered.

The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of 8350 on which judgment was entered, and motion for a new trial was filed and overruled.

The defendants assign as error the giving of instructions 5, 6, 7, and S, and contend that the giving of these instructions will necessarily work a reversal of the judgment. Their contention, if we properly understand them, is, that since the allegations of plaintiff's petition charged negligence under the common law, the plaintiff could recover only under the rules of the common law, and that the court should have instructsd the *120 jury that the defendants would be liable only in case the jury should find that the defendants failed to exercise ordinary care to not injure plaintiff. That ordinary care to not injure plaintiff was all defendants owed him.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 693, 219 P. 324, 104 Okla. 118, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laws-v-rogers-okla-1923.