Lindenstruth v. Leveque

23 P.2d 486, 138 Kan. 93, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1933
DocketNo. 31,237
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 23 P.2d 486 (Lindenstruth v. Leveque) 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
Lindenstruth v. Leveque, 23 P.2d 486, 138 Kan. 93, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 154 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

The plaintiffs, Otis Lindenstruth and Eva Lindenstruth, brought this action against F. J. Leveque, to recover damages for the death of their son, Glenn, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. The defendant prevailed, and the plaintiffs appeal.

Glenn Lindenstruth was about eight years of age, and the accident which resulted in his death occurred on the outskirts of Neodesha. A man named Anderson was driving a team attached to a farm wagon along a graveled street. The wagon had a floor made of two-inch planks with four-inch planks on the sides of the wagon. The wagon had a coupling pole three inches by three inches, which protruded six or seven feet back of the floor of the wagon. The team was being driven on a walk along the street, and as it passed a store Glenn and another boy, Clarence Kammerer, came out and mounted the projecting coupling pole and rode along a short distance, when Clarence got off the wagon. Glenn rode farther, holding to the hind end of the wagon bed, and when he was near the Lindenstruth [94]*94home another boy called “Glenn,” whereupon Glenn jumped off the coupling pole and ran across the street behind the wagon. The farm wagon he left was going north on the east side of the traveled street, and at this time the defendant, F. J. Leveque, was driving an automobile going in the opposite direction on the west side of the street at a speed of about thirty miles per hour. The graveled portion of the street at this point was about twenty-five feet wide. When Glenn was going over to the west side of the street he was struck about two feet west of the center of the road by the defendant’s car. Defendant’s automobile was equipped with four-wheel brakes, and the marks in the gravel showed that the brakes were applied about eight feet north of where the boy lay after the accident. With a general verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, the jury returned the following special findings of fact:

“1. Was Glenn Lindenstruth, on the 27th day of August, 1929, a bright, intelligent boy, of the age of eight years, and more than ordinary intelligence? A. No.
“2. Was the injury and death of Glenn Lindenstruth the result of an accident as defined to you in the court’s instructions? A. Yes.
“3. Did Glenn Lindenstruth at the time he went into the highway at the point where he was struck by defendant’s automobile have judgment and intelligence enough to appreciate the danger of coming in contact with a moving automobile of the kind and character there operated by the defendant? A. Yes.
“4. At the instant that Glenn Lindenstruth went into the road in front of defendant’s car, how many feet away was defendant’s automobile? A. Fourteen feet.
“5. At what rate in miles per hour was defendant driving his automobile at the time Glenn Lindenstruth went into the road in front of defendant’s car? A. Thirty miles per hour.
“6. How many feet did defendant’s automobile go after striking Glenn Lindenstruth before it was stopped? A. Twenty-seven feet.
“7. After Glenn Lindenstruth appeared in front of defendant’s car did defendant have sufficient time to avoid striking him? A. Yes.
“8. If you should answer the last question ‘yes,’ then state why defendant failed to avoid striking him. A. Lack of presence of mind.
“9. Was the defendant driving upon the west side of the road as he passed the Anderson team and wagon? A. Yes.
“10. If you find the defendant guilty of negligence causing the death of Glenn Lindenstruth, state the act or acts of negligence of which the defendant was guilty. A. No warning of horn. Too close to center of road.”

Motions were made by defendant to set aside certain answers to special questions, also one for judgment for defendant, notwith[95]*95standing the general verdict. The motions were argued and taken under advisement, with the request for written briefs on the questions of law involved. These were filed and later the court overruled the motion to set aside the special findings but sustained the defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the general verdict. The general verdict was set aside and judgment was rendered for defendant upon the special findings, and this appeal followed.

Plaintiffs contend that the court erred in giving judgment for defendant on the special findings and discusses at length the evidence which they say tended to show that defendant was driving too near the middle of the road and should have avoided the boy when he ran out from the back of the wagon. According to the findings defendant’s automobile was only fourteen feet away when the boy came into view in the path of defendant. Defendant was driving at a speed of thirty miles per hour, and there is nothing to show that the defendant knew of the presence of the boy on the farm wagon or that he was about to leave it until he trotted in front of the track of the automobile. An automobile with four-wheel brakes traveling at that speed was going forty-four feet per second and, according to approved computations, could be stopped in a distance of forty-five feet.. The distance traveled by the defendant’s car to the point where the boy was struck being only fourteen feet, it is evident that the defendant had only a small fraction of a second to stop his car and avoid striking him. Defendant promptly applied his brakes, and the wheel marks in the street showed that a stop was made in twenty-seven feet from the point of collision. There was no lack of diligence in the effort of defendant to stop his car. On the contrary it shows promptness and care and a very quick stop.

It is argued that the defendant was driving his car close to the center of the road, and that he might have avoided the collision. He was driving on the right side, which was on the tvest side of the street, and was not negligent because he was driving nearer the center than the outside or west side of the road. (Giles v. Ternes, 93 Kan. 140, 143 Pac. 491.) Defendant did not know that the boy was on the wagon or likely to run out from behind it until he came in the path of the automobile, which was only fourteen feet away, and the defendant then applied his brakes in an effort to save him. There was only a split second of time, a tick of a clock, to avoid a collision, and we fail to see what more the defendant could have [96]*96done to avoid striking the boy than was done by him. It is clear there was nothing approaching negligence in the defendant’s action or omission in his endeavor to avert the lamentable tragedy. Neither do we see any negligence in failing to sound a horn when meeting and passing the approaching wagon. The accident occurred in daylight. The automobile was traveling on the right side of the road as was the wagon, and nothing in the law or the rules of the road requires the useless blowing of the horn in meeting a coming vehicle, each on its own side of the road, where there is no congestion of traffic nor any pedestrian in sight.

In Crutchley v. Bruce, 214 Ia.

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Bluebook (online)
23 P.2d 486, 138 Kan. 93, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindenstruth-v-leveque-kan-1933.