Lee v. Pesterfield

1920 OK 108, 188 P. 674, 77 Okla. 317, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 277
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 16, 1920
Docket9537
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1920 OK 108 (Lee v. Pesterfield) 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
Lee v. Pesterfield, 1920 OK 108, 188 P. 674, 77 Okla. 317, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 277 (Okla. 1920).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Oklahoma county on the 3rd day of January, 1917, by defendant in error to recover of plaintiff in error certain damages alleged to have resulted to an automobile owned and operated by defendant in error and occasioned by the wrongful and negligent acts of plaintiff in error; the accident from which said damages resulted having occurred on the night of December 2, 1916, at the intersection of Tenth street and Robinson street, in the city of Oklahoma City. The evidence, as presented in the record, discloses that at the time of the accident plaintiff in error was traveling south on Robinson street, while defendant in error was traveling west on Tenth street. Both of the parties were driving heavy automobiles.

The record further discloses that the defendant in error approached the street intersection, driving at the rate of 12 or 15 miles per hour, while plaintiff in error admits operating his car at the rate of 25 miles per *318 hour, while disinterested witnesses testified that such speed was not less than 35 and probably 40 miles per hour. Plaintiff in error admits that at the time of the accident he had been “drinking”, while other witnesses testified that he was in an intoxicated condition. The evidence further discloses that the ear driven by defendant in error was to the west of the center of Robinson street when lp.is ear was struck on the rear wheel by the car driven by plaintiff in error, and the car driven on and against the curb at the southwest corner of the intersecting streets.

No exceptions were taken to the instructions to the jury given by the coux-t. Plaintiff in error asks for a reversal of the case, and states his contention as follows:

“It is our contention that* the instructions given by the court below, unquestioned and not excepted to, become the law of the case, whether correct or erroneous, and the verdict of the jury, being contrary to said instructions, is contrary to law within the meaning of our Code. And that the jury were bound to act upon it as law, and if in their verdict they -disregarded it, it was the duty of the trial court, and is now the duty of this court, to set the verdict aside.”

This contention is apparently predicated upon two theories: First, that the defendant in error, having testified that as he approached the intersection of Robinson and Tenth streets he observed praintiff in error approching on Robinson street at a rapid and unusual speed, thereby admitted himself guilty of contributory negligence; and, second, that the court having instructed the jury, following the statutes of Oklahoma:

“You are instructed that under the statutes of Oklahoma vehicles meeting each other shall keep to the right of the center of the road, and at the intersection of roads or streets, vehicles approaching from the right shall have the right of way over those approaching from the left”

—such instruction as the law of the case gave plaintiff in error such preference right as required defendant in error to yield an uninterrupted passage of plaintiff in error. In so far as the question is presented as to whether the verdict is contrary to law when such verdict is contrary to the instructions of the court whether said instructions be correct or erroneous, we do not think it necessary to discuss, under our view of the record in this case, for the reason that the instructions of the court did not direct nor require the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, nor did the evidence in the case admit or necessarily establish contributory negligence on the part of the defendant in error, for, while it is true defendant in error testified' that he saw plaintiff in error approaching the street intersection at a distance of 160 feet north of such intersection, and that the plaintiff in error was traveling 35 to 40 miles per hour, he also testified:

“Q. You are satisfied that he was going at least 35 miles an hour ? A. When he got up to me, I figured that.”

And we think it not an unfair conclusion from the record in this case to assert that the rate of speed traveled by plaintiff in error was necessarily determined by the witness in connection with the distance actually traveled by plaintiff in error from the time he was first observed until the time of the collision and the conditions resulting therefrom. Under such state of facts, together with the proof of plaintiff in error’s reckless speed, even if it were in the authority of this court to declare that such acts amounted to contributox-y negligence as a matter of law, we would not feel justified in making such declaration, for such a conclusion would be to license recklessness, if perchance approaching from the right. Such an assumption eliminates entirely the duty and obligation ' of plaintiff in error to travelers and pedestrians arising from his x-eciprocal duty to be hereinafter noted. A contention not dissimilar was made in Weber v. Beeson, 164 N. W. 255, in which case the Supreme Court of Michigan held:

“Where plaintiff, riding a motorcycle north on S. avenue across G. avenue at a speed of six to ten miles an hour, had reached the north street car track on G. avenue, when he saw an automobile approaching on the nox’th side of that avenue at an unusual rate of speed and then about 150 feet away, he was not negligent, as a matter of law, in attempting to pass in front of the automobile, though the traffic on G. avenue had the right of way.”

But there is another reason, even more compelling than the one suggested, why we may not hold that such acts constitute contributory negligence, for, as held by this court in St Louis, I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Lewis, 39 Okla. 677, 136 Pac. 396:

“Under section 6, art. 23 (section 355, Williams’ Ann. Ed.), Constitution of Oklahoma, the defense of contributory negligence or of assumption of risk is, in all cases whatsoever, a question of fact, and must, at all times, be left to the jury; and the verdict of the jury is conclusive upon such question.”

Hence, we think whether the unusual speed at which plaintiff in error was traveling when observed at the distance mentioned made it hazardous and negligent to undertake to cross such street intersection was a proper question for the jury. Nor do we *319 agree with the contention of plaintiff in error that rule 7, sec. 11, ch. 173, Sess. Laws 1915, as quoted by the court in instructions to the jury and which provides, “that at intersecting roads or streets, vehicles approaching from the right shall have the right of way over those approaching from the left,” gives the plaintiff in error any right to disregard the safety of travelers or pedestrians at street intersections, or relieves from the obligation to use reasonable care and caution to avoid injury to persons or property. The provisions of this rule, like any provision of statutory regulations, must be given a reasonable construction, and to assert that the observed approach of an automobile from the right is to preclude the advance of vehicles approaching from the left until the passage of such vehicle approaching from the right is to place a prohibition upon all traffic approaching from the left in streets of towns and cities where the streets must care for heavy traffic.

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Bluebook (online)
1920 OK 108, 188 P. 674, 77 Okla. 317, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-pesterfield-okla-1920.