Madron v. McCoy

126 P.2d 566, 63 Idaho 703, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 75
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1942
DocketNo. 6975.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 126 P.2d 566 (Madron v. McCoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madron v. McCoy, 126 P.2d 566, 63 Idaho 703, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 75 (Idaho 1942).

Opinions

AILSHIE, J.

— Appellant, a resident of Twin Falls County, was engaged in the trucking business and owned and operated a 1939 “Mercury Model” Ford truck and semi-trailer, which will hereinafter be referred to as the brick truck. Richard T. White was employed by appellant as driver and was hauling brick. Respondent, Carstens Packing Company, a corporation, employed Lee McCoy, also a respondent, as driver for its, hereinafter designated, stock truck, used “to haul chopped hay and cattle.” McCoy had no driver’s license.

The brick truck was equipped with hydraulic brakes, signaling device and a rear view mirror; the semi-trailer was equipped with air brakes, controlled from the steering wheel of the truck. As for the stock truck, it was a 1928 Fageol, “had no rear view mirror and no mechanical arm for use in indicating intention to turn”; the body of the truck was so high and wide, that the driver “could not see what was following him from the rear and could not give any signal of intention to turn to the left.”

About two o’clock p. m., November 5, 1940, McCoy was proceeding with the stock truck in a westerly direction on U. S. Highway 30, about two miles east of the Village *706 of Kimberly in Twin Falls County. Near this point there is a gravelled farm market road, running north and south, which intersects U. S. Highway 30; the latter is paved and runs east and west. The highway is “straight right there” and for considerable distance each way. Following the stock truck (but unknown to its driver, McCoy) was White, driving appellant’s truck, with a trailer, loaded with “around fourteen ton” of brick. McCoy says he reached a point “about two telephone posts” (200 feet) back of the intersection of the two roads above mentioned and noticed another car (later identified as the Powers car) approaching from the opposite direction; that he slowed down, from a 25 to a 10-mile an hour speed, as he figured, if he kept on traveling at the 25-mile pace, he would reach the intersection at the same time as the other car. When the Powers car reached the intersection, it turned south on to the gravelled road.

Upon reaching the intersection, the stock truck, without signal or warning of any kind from the driver (McCoy), turned slightly left and south toward the side road, intending to go south on the intersecting road. White driver of the brick truck, not having notice of McCoy’s intention to turn, and apparently endeavoring to avoid running into the stock truck, pulled to the left, avoided a rear end collision, and hit the side of the stock truck “about three feet from the rear end and scraped the full length along the side.” The brick truck then crashed headon into a tree at the southwest corner of the intersection, killing White, demolishing the brick truck, and damaging the semi-trailer. This action was brought by the owner of the brick truck and trailer, for damages for the 'loss of the truck, for costs and disbursements expended. From a judgment for defendants, this appeal is prosecuted.

The case was tried to the court without a jury and the court found, inter alia:

“V.

“That the act of defendant, Lee McCoy, in attempting to make a left turn into said intersecting highway at said intersection contributed to said accident.

*707 VI.

“That the overtaking and passing by plaintiff of defendant’s truck in said intersection contributed to said accident.

VII.

“That there is a presumption that the driver of plaintiff’s truck and semi-trailer drove said truck and semitrailer in a careful and prudent manner; that plaintiff proved that defendant, Lee McCoy, was making a left hand turn in said intersection without giving a signal and without any rear view mirror or mechanical device by a preponderance of the evidence; that the defendants proved that plaintiff’s truck was overtaking and passing defendants’ truck in said intersection by a preponderance of the evidence.”

It is contended by appellant that there is no sufficient evidence to support the finding, that appellant’s driver was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to overtake and pass respondent’s truck at the intersection.

During the inquest, Nov. 6, 1940, on the death of White, testimony was given by Mr. Powers, (the driver of the car traveling in an easterly direction on U. S. Highway 30) in part as follows:

“We had observed these vehicles approaching from the east. They were travelling westward, and of course we turned south. They were down the highway just a little distance.....I was looking in the rear view mirror and I just remarked there was going to be a crash there. Then this car [stock truck] made a turn to the left. The car in front .... a stock truck, a big truck .... a very large truck. When I saw it make the turn to the left I just mentioned there was going to be a crash and just about that time we heard the crash. Of course it just happened there within the matter of just a few seconds. .... It was in my mind when I observed him make that turn there was going to be a crash, because that big a truck couldn’t do anything but make that crash as I saw it.

Q. You refer to the big truck?

A. The one on which the brick were being transported. *708 . ... Of course this big truck hit this other truck, just sideswiped it and knocked it over here into a cement culvert, the head of a culvert here and hit that and just ran into a large tree. That is, the larger truck, just hit that as squarely as anyone could possibly drive it. His position bears out that statement. That, of course, is where it naturally stopped.....

Q. In referring to the big truck, you refer to the truck which was following?

A. The one loaded with brick, yes.

Q. You stated that as you turned this corner this truck in the lead was still moving. It hadn’t, that truck hadn’t stopped in order to let you turn south?

A. No. He was still coming toward us. We made our turn. There wasn’t anything there that would interfere with our turning.” (Italics supplied.)

As to the speed of the two trucks, Powers said:

“They were both traveling, I didn’t make any guess— if they had been going — they weren’t traveling fast, neither truck, of course.....Nothing out of the ordinary.”

Roy Fuller, superintendent of the county farm and a deputy sheriff, testified: that the accident occurred “pracitcally on the yellow line [of the highway] ; maybe a little south .... almost center of the intersection there.”

“Q. According to the observation which you made there would you say the brick truck was passing the Carsten truck there at the place where the impact occurred ?

A. Yes, I’d say it was.

Q. That the Madron truck was passing the other truck in the intersection ?

A. Yes.....

Q.

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Bluebook (online)
126 P.2d 566, 63 Idaho 703, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madron-v-mccoy-idaho-1942.