Lujan v. Reed

434 P.2d 378, 78 N.M. 556
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1967
Docket8334
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 434 P.2d 378 (Lujan v. Reed) 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
Lujan v. Reed, 434 P.2d 378, 78 N.M. 556 (N.M. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

MOlSE, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment based on a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff Richard M. Lujan in the amount of $2,000.00 on account of out-of-pocket expenses for hospital and doctor charges on behalf of his daugh-' ter, Gayle,' and in favor of plaintiff Gayle D. Lujan in the amount of $15,000.00 for injuries suffered by her.

The facts giving rise to the litigation are briefly that, on June 24, 1965, Gayle, six-tecn-year-old minor daughter of Richard M. Lujan, Was injured when she fell or jumped from an automobile belonging to defendant A. L. Réed, and being operated at the time by his eighteen-year-old minor son, defendant Bruce Reed.

Shortly before the accident and some ’ time in the morning of the day it happened, Gayle had come to visit Larraine McCrack-. en, a sixteen-year-old friend, at her home next door.to where Bruce Reed lived with his parents. At the time; Bruce and a, friend, Bob Clark, were working on a car . in Bruce’s yard. During the morning, at i least three or four conversations were had between Gayle and the boys. Finally, Gayle asked if she and Larraine could borrow. Bruce’s car, to which he agreed if the girls would go riding with him and Bob. The girls refused this offer, whereupon Bruce changed his mind and said they could borrow it and handed Gayle the keys over the wall. The girls went in the house, got their purses and then got in the cár which was standing in front of the Reed house. Larraine tried to start the car but it wouldn’t start. Upon having his attention called to' the fact the car would not start, Bruce opened the hood, took something from his pocket which he put on the engine, whereupon it started and was driven into the • driveway where Bruce put some oil in it. The girls then started to drive away. Lar- t raine was driving and Gayle was sitting on the front seat to her right. Upon backing from the driveway, the phone in Lar-. raine’s house rang, and the boys called to. • her to tell her. She got out of the car and . went in her house to answer the phone, leaving the car at the curb and Gayle sitting in it. Thereupon Bruce and Bob came running, and jumped in the car. — Bruce behind' the wheel and Bob on the back of the back : seat (the car was a convertible). The car was started suddenly, and had moved some ' 40 or 50 feet during an elapsed time of possibly some 30 seconds, when Gayle open- . ed the door of the car and either fell or jumped, striking the pavement and suffer- . ing the injuries which are the basis of the, present suit.

Although Gayle had never been on a date with Bruce, she had been told by Larraine of an occasion when she was out with him, that he had made advances and tried to kiss. ’ her. On the morning in question, Gayle and Bruce had spoken to each other several' times. Gayle testified that when the boys-jumped in the car Bruce gave her a “smug-smile, you 'know, like ‘aha’ * * The ■ faces of the boys scared her and she screamed and said, “Stop it, Bruce,” and he just' “kind ■ of gave : a • smug look.” Gayle’s mother testified that;when’Gayle regained-consciousness, “She said, ‘Mama, Mama, I am still afraid.’ She said, T .can still see that look on Bruce’s face;’ and she would cry, ‘And every time I close my eyes I can still see that expression on his face.’ ” Bruce explained that his intention was to “play a prank” on Larraine in order to be funny or otherwise befuddle or startle Lar-raine by driving the car away and around the block, so when she came out of the house the car would not be where it had been left. However, nothing had been said to Gayle. She had not been let in on the joke and had no knowledge of the purpose or intention of the boys when they ran to the car and suddenly started it and “took off at a very rapid rate of speed.” As stated by Bruce in his testimony, the incident occurred as follows:

“ * * * we just sort of got the idea at the same time that we would ditch LaRaine [sic], so we went over to the car and I don’t remember whether La-Raine [sic] left the door open or not; I think she did, I can’t be sure on that point whether I opened the door or just slid under the wheel with the door open and shut it.
“Bob jumped over the left rear fender into the back seat and was sitting back up on the back deck and I started it and put it in first gear and then started to drive off. I looked in the rear-view mirror to see if there was any traffic. Well, I looked back over my shoulder to see if there was any traffic, to see if Bob was sitting down before I started off. I hadn’t even started to angle over to the other side of the road when I saw Gayle with her passenger door open about half way out and I yelled at her, not to jump and grabbed for her.
“By that time, she was already out the door and I slammed on the brakes. Bob landed in the front seat and I about half way caught him and I said, ‘Are you all right?’ and he said, ‘Sure,’ and so we both jumped out of the car and went over to see what we could do for Gayle, who was lying in the street at this time.” ■ .

It should be added that Gáylé had a history of a nervous condition for which she had received treatment from a doctor. When she struck the pavement she hit her head and suffered a fractured skull, brain concussion and contusions of the scalp. She was in the hospital for approximately a week but, thereafter, was highly nervous and under care of a doctor and was hospitalized because of nervous symptoms.

Appellants’ first point asserts an absence of substantial evidence of negligence proximately causing Gayle’s injuries.

The argument is to the effect-Bruce did nothing which a' reasonable person’ could foresee would have the consequences here present. Beyond having a “smug” or “mischievous” look on his face; he did nothing but run and jump into a car that belonged to him or to his father and which he had a right to drive without permission from Gayle, and, because of his desire to play a prank on Larraine, made a fast start without telling Gayle what he was doing of where he was going.

Reliance is placed on. our statements in many of our cases which have been succinctly incorporated in the following, appearing in New Mexico Uniform Jury Instruction No. 12.1:

“An act to be negligent must be one which a reasonably prudent person. wpuld foresee as involving an unreasonable risk of injury to himself or to another and which such a person in the exercise of ordinary care would ’ not' do. * * * ”

The rule as stated in the instruction generally expresses the law as announced by this court in numerous cases. See Giese v. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co., 71 N.M. 70, 75, 376 P.2d 24 (1962); Bogart v. Hester, 66 N.M. 311, 316, 347 P.2d 327 (1959); Padilla v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Co., 61 N.M. 115, 118, 295 P.2d 1023 (1956); Valdez v. Gonzales, 50 N.M. 281, 176 P.2d 173 (1946); Reif v. Morrison, 44 N.M. 201, 100 P.2d 229 (1940).

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434 P.2d 378, 78 N.M. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lujan-v-reed-nm-1967.