Leinbach v. Pickwick Greyhound Lines

10 P.2d 33, 135 Kan. 40, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 9, 1932
DocketNo. 30,186
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 10 P.2d 33 (Leinbach v. Pickwick Greyhound Lines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leinbach v. Pickwick Greyhound Lines, 10 P.2d 33, 135 Kan. 40, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 148 (kan 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff and for the death of his wife and for the destruction of his automobile in a collision with defendants’ passenger bus' on a public street and highway in the outskirts of Lawrence.

The locus in quo was as follows:

Seventh street in Lawrence, otherwise’ known as U. S. highway 40, runs north and south in the eastern part of North Lawrence. Lyons avenue runs east and west, about two blocks north of the Union Pacific main line and parallel with the railway tracks. Lyons [42]*42avenue is a dirt street of usual width; Seventh street, or U. S. 40, is paved with an 18-foot concrete slab, with dirt shoulders five to seven feet wide on each side. The ground thereabout is level. On the east side of Seventh street is a slight depression for drainage, not deep enough to be called a ditch.

On a bright Sunday afternoon, July 13, 1930, defendants’ passenger bus was proceeding northward on Seventh street on its regular intercity schedule. It had halted south of the railway, then crossed, gaining speed as it proceeded along the next two blocks. At the same time plaintiff’s Dodge sedan, followed by three other cars, was proceeding southward, the Dodge in the lead. In the Dodge were plaintiff, Charles E. Leinbach, and a Mr. Stickel in the front seat, and plaintiff’s wife and Mrs. Stickel in the rear seat. As the Dodge approached the intersection of Seventh street and Lyons avenue a Ford roadster carrying three young people came from the west and collided with the Dodge, causing it to whirl around and head towards the north on the east side, of the slab, right in the path of the oncoming bus, which crashed into it. The Ford broke a wheel and landed on its side near the southeast corner of the intersection and caught fire. The occupants of the Ford were not seriously injured. Mrs. Leinbach and Mrs. Stickel were killed outright; Mr. Stickel died shortly afterwards, and the plaintiff Leinbach was severely, variously and painfully injured. His Dodge sedan was virtually destroyed.

This lawsuit was brought against the proprietor of the bus and its driver Thompson, seeking to hold them responsible for the consequences which followed the double collision.

Plaintiff’s petition gave his version of the facts at length. His cause of action was predicated on the theory that the effects of the collision between the Dodge and the Ford had ceased before the collision between the bus and the Dodge, and that the latter collision could have been avoided if the driver of the bus had promptly applied his brakes when he first saw, or could have seen, the Dodge in the path of danger ahead of him. Plaintiff’s charges of negligence against defendants were—

(a) Failure to turn the bus aside to avoid striking the Dodge;
(b) Failure to slacken speed and to bring the bus to a stop before the collision;
(c) Excessive speed, to wit, forty miles per hour;,
(d) and (e) Operating bus at higher speed than permitted by city ordinance ;
[43]*43(/) Defective brakes on the bus;
(g) “The defendants were negligent in that the defendant Orville L. Thompson and the defendant Pickwick Greyhound Lines, Inc., through Orville L. Thompson, their agent, in charge of said bus, at the time of and for a long time before the time of the collision between the bus and the Dodge sedan, negligently failed to observe and comprehend the situation ahead of them, and the danger impending over the occupants of the Dodge sedan arising from the fact that the bus was driving rapidly toward the Dodge sedan while the same was in a position of peril from which the plaintiff and his wife were not able to extricate themselves.”

Plaintiff prayed judgment for $10,000 as damages for the death of his wife; $500 for her funeral expenses; $1,000 for hospital bills paid or incurred in his own behalf; $50,000 for injuries, pain and suffering sustained by himself; and $600 for the demolition of his Dodge car — a total of $62,100.

Defendants’ amended answer contained a general denial and a rehearsal of the facts according to their view of them — that the bus was being operated in a careful and prudent manner; that the bus was sixty feet away when the collision between the Ford and the Dodge occurred; that both the Ford and the Dodge were being driven at high and dangerous speed and at a rate in excess of that permitted by the city ordinance at the time they collided; that the effect of their speed and of the collision was such that the Dodge was turned over and thrown directly in front of defendants’ bus, and that the accident occurred without fault or negligence on the part of defendants.

The cause was tried before a jury. The evidence was voluminous; the abstracts and exhibits extend to 300' pages; the briefs to 385 pages. The jury returned a general verdict in favor of plaintiff for the full amount prayed for, $62,100. They also answered certain special questions, chief of which read:

“2. When the impact occurred between the bus and plaintiff’s Dodge sedan,, was the bus traveling in third speed or gear? A. Third gear.
“3. At what maximum speed, in miles per hour, was the bus capable of traveling when in third speed or gear? A. Twenty-seven to thirty miles per hour.
“4. How far south of the south line of Lyons street was the rear end of the Dodge sedan when the bus and Dodge sedan collided? A. Eight or ten feet.
“5. How many automobiles, including the Dodge sedan, were on the west side of highway No. 40, in the block immediately north of Lyons street and traveling south, just prior to the collision between the Ford roadster and Dodge sedan? 'A. Four cars.
[44]*44“6. Had the Dodge sedan come to a complete stop before the collision with the bus, or was it still in motion? A. Came to a complete stop.
“7. In what position was the Dodge sedan, at the time of collision with the bus, as to being upright on its four wheels, or lying on its side, or lying on its top? A. Being on its four wheels.
“9. Did the driver of the bus use every appliance and means at hand that he could use, with safety to the passengers in said bus, to avert the collision with the Dodge sedan, after he saw the Dodge sedan in a position of danger? A. No.
“10. If you answer the preceding question No. 9 no, then state, with particularity, what he omitted to do. A. He failed to apply his brakes in time to avoid the collision, nor did he turn out to the right in time.
“11. Were the air brakes and emergency brakes of the bus in good condition and working order at and immediately prior to the collision between the Dodge sedan and the bus? A. Yes.
' “12. Did the driver of the bus apply the air brakes and also apply the emergency brakes on the bus as soon as he knew that the Dodge was in his path, or coming into his path? A. No.
“13. After the driver of the bus saw the Dodge sedan in a position of danger, how far did the bus travel before it came to a stop? A. Eighty-six feet.

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Bluebook (online)
10 P.2d 33, 135 Kan. 40, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leinbach-v-pickwick-greyhound-lines-kan-1932.