Lutz v. Peine

498 P.2d 60, 209 Kan. 559, 1972 Kan. LEXIS 608
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 10, 1972
Docket46,351
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 498 P.2d 60 (Lutz v. Peine) 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
Lutz v. Peine, 498 P.2d 60, 209 Kan. 559, 1972 Kan. LEXIS 608 (kan 1972).

Opinion

The opinion o£ the court was delivered by

Owsley, J.:

This is a personal injury action. Judgment was entered in favor of defendant on a special verdict of the jury. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff Lutz was lying down across the seat of a parked 1950 Chevrolet pickup truck, asleep, when defendant Peine drove into the rear of the pickup in which the plaintiff was sleeping.

Thurman Carter and the plaintiff owned sheep which were *560 located at a farm near the scene. They drove the pickup from Ottawa, Kansas, to the scene where the collision occurred. Carter parked the pickup headed west “off the roadway between the fence and the grader ridge” on the east-west road. Carter was employed regularly by plaintiff and was paid every two weeks. He was also at the time of the collision under the direction and control of plaintiff.

The collision occurred shortly after 1:00 p. m., on October 19, 1967. The roadway was a smooth, gravel surface, twenty-five or thirty feet wide. The weather was clear; it was daylight; the sun was shining.

The pickup involved was owned by the plaintiff, but it was driven and parked by Carter. Carter, after parking the truck, proceeded to do some weed mowing while the plaintiff pulled weeds at the farm for about fifteen or twenty minutes. Because she was not feeling well, she returned to the pickup, lay down and fell asleep on the seat of the pickup, and was sleeping at the time of the collision.

The defendant testified at the trial that she and her husband ate lunch at their farm home southeast of Ottawa on the day in question at about noon. Thereafter, she left for Ottawa at about 1:00 p. m. Her home was about two and one-half miles from the accident scene.

The undersheriff of Franklin county who investigated the accident found the pickup occupied by plaintiff headed westerly, off the right side of the road. He testified that the right two-thirds of the front of defendant’s car was damaged and that the left two-thirds of the rear of the pickup was damaged. At the trial the undersheriff said the pickup was about twenty feet east of a driveway and sitting “partly on the road and partly off the road.”

The defendant saw Carter helping the plaintiff after the accident. She observed Carter going to the telephone, and after returning to the scene she again observed Carter helping plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s injuries were established by the testimony of herself, Carter, her employer Phillip Everett, and Drs. M. E. Pusitz and Richard Tozer of Topeka. Plaintiff said the impact caused her breast to strike the steering wheel three times and that she was rendered unconscious. She was taken to the Ottawa hospital by ambulance where she remained twenty-four horns. She had pain in her neck and her head. She remained home over the weekend *561 with pain in the cheek and in the head and neck areas. On November 5, 1967, she was hospitalized for three weeks for chest pains that may have been complicated with pneumonia. She was later treated by Drs. Pusitz and Tozer. She made 121 trips from Ottawa to Topeka for therapy with Dr. Pusitz and none of these treatments helped her. Dr. Tozer testified the pneumonia that required her to go to the hospital several weeks after the accident was not related to the accident.

The record shows that plaintiff Lutz was precluded from showing that defendant Peine had testified in her discovery deposition that she had been watching Carter on the mowing machine prior to the impact.

At the conclusion of the trial, the plaintiff moved for a directed verdict on the issue of liability. In considering the motion, the court ruled that the defendant was negligent and that her negligence was a proximate cause of the collision, and also ruled that the question of contributory negligence should be submitted to the jury. The case was submitted to the jury on the two following special questions:

“1. Do you find the defendant has met the burden of proof that plaintiff was contributorially [sic] negligent in the manner the vehicle was parked and that this contributed as a proximate and direct cause of the collision?
“2. What amount of money would compensate plaintiff for the injuries and damages she received from the collision?”

The jury returned their verdict answering question No. 1, “Yes,” and answering question No. 2, “$5,000.00.” The plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled by the trial court and judgment was entered for the defendant on the special question. The plaintiff appeals from this ruling.

We first refer to the propriety of submitting question No. 1 to the jury. The form of the question requires three answers. Did defendant meet the burden of proof? Was plaintiff contributorially negligent in the manner the vehicle was parked? Was the manner the vehicle was parked a proximate cause of the collision? The main object of special questions is to ferret out the various facts separately in order to enable the court to apply the law and to guard against any misapplication of the law by the jury. (Allen v. Ellis, 191 Kan. 311, 380 P. 2d 408.) A special question should be clear and understandable, requiring a single answer on one issue of fact. This question requires one answer to three questions. It *562 also asks the jury to answer questions which are basically issues of law. (Ziegelasch v. Durr, 183 Kan. 233, 326 P. 2d 295.) We have approved verdicts based on like questions, but such questions were supplemented by questions requiring specific findings of fact. (Applegate v. Home Oil Co., 182 Kan. 655, 324 P 2d 203.)

The only act of negligence charged against the plaintiff was the manner in which the truck was parked. The jury was instructed on this issue as follows:

“The laws of Kansas provide that upon any highway outside of a business or residence district, no person shall stop, park, or leave standing any vehicle, whether attended or unattended, upon the paved or improved or main traveled part of the highway when it is practical to' stop, park, or so leave such vehicle off such part of the highway, but in every event a clear and unobstructed width of at least twenty feet of the highway opposite the standing vehicle shall be left for the free passage of other vehicles, and a clear view of the stopped vehicle shall be available from a distance of two hundred feet in each direction upon such highway.” (In accord with PIK 8.47a, page 212.)

The court instructed that the defendant had the burden of proving contributory negligence. (Instruction No. 9.) The jury was also instructed that violation of a duty or a law is negligence, but that to permit recovery such negligence had to be a direct cause of the injury and damage. (Instruction No. 13.) Although not covered in the instructions, it follows that a violation of a duty or a law is contributory negligence, but to deny recovery such contributory negligence had to be a direct cause of the injury or damage.

Carter testified he parked the truck on the right side of the roadway headed in a westerly direction; that he parked the truck off the roadway between the fence and the grader ridge.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

J.C. v. YMCA
Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2024
Fitzpatrick v. Allen
955 P.2d 141 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1998)
Gans v. C.F. Menninger Memorial Hospital
888 F. Supp. 125 (D. Kansas, 1995)
Comeau v. Rupp
810 F. Supp. 1127 (D. Kansas, 1992)
Miller v. Zep Manufacturing Co.
815 P.2d 506 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1991)
Eckdall v. Negley
624 P.2d 473 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1981)
Hubbard v. Estate of Havlik
518 P.2d 352 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
498 P.2d 60, 209 Kan. 559, 1972 Kan. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lutz-v-peine-kan-1972.