May v. Kansas Power & Light Co.

7 P.2d 108, 134 Kan. 470, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 237
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1932
DocketNo. 30,185
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 7 P.2d 108 (May v. Kansas Power & Light Co.) 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
May v. Kansas Power & Light Co., 7 P.2d 108, 134 Kan. 470, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 237 (kan 1932).

Opinion

[471]*471The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action for damages for injuries sustained by plaintiff when his Ford touring car and defendant’s street car met in a head-on collision.

The accident happened near the loop terminus of the street railway in North Topeka. The railway track thereabout is so near the east curb that it is.necessary for northbound motorists to steer their cars toward the left and upon the railway track in order to pass automobiles parked diagonally on the east side of the street.

It appears that on December 29, 1926, about 7 o’clock in the evening, plaintiff was riding northward on Kansas avenue. Two other automobiles were ahead of him. As they approached the place of the accident a car parked diagonally on the east side caused the moving automobiles to veer to the left. Because of these two automobiles ahead of plaintiff he could not see defendant’s street car coming southward about 180 feet away. There were ruts about four inches wide and several inches deep which paralleled the rails. The wheels of plaintiff’s Ford car dropped into these ruts and he could not steer out of them. After driving ahead in the ruts for some thirty feet he stopped his car. Then seeing that a collision with the street car was inevitable unless it was stopped he started to alight from his car, but before he escaped the collision occurred and he sustained injuries to himself and to his machine. Whatever, other details of the accident require to be considered will be set down later in this opinion.

The accident and its consequences became the subject matter of an action between plaintiff and defendant, which apparently failed otherwise than on the merits and was dismissed without prejudice on June 14, 1929. In that action the existence of the ruts in the street which prevented plaintiff from steering his automobile out of the way of the oncoming street car had not been pleaded as a factor in the allegations of negligence of the street-car company. The present action was begun on February 3, 1930. The foregoing facts were elaborated, and defendant’s negligence causing the accident was pleaded in various particulars — allegations of the high and dangerous speed of the street car, of violation of the city speed ordinance, failure of motorman to discover plaintiff’s automobile held fast in the ruts in time to stop the street car, and negligent [472]*472maintenance of ruts in the street alongside the rails in violation of defendant’s duty under its city franchise.

Defendant’s answer traversed the issues tendered in plaintiff’s petition, alleged operation of its street car with due care, and that plaintiff’s accident occurred because of his own negligence in operating his automobile; and so far as plaintiff’s charge of negligence against defendant was predicated on its permitting the existence of ruts in the street alongside its rails, that feature was barred by the statute of limitations. Plaintiff’s motion to strike this last point from defendant’s answer was overruled; and in the trial that followed the evidence concerning the ruts was permitted merely to enlighten the jury as to the facts of the accident and not considered as an element of the negligence charged against the defendant.

The jury rendered a verdict for plaintiff in an itemized sum aggregating $5,000, and answered certain questions:

“1. How far was the street car from the plaintiff’s automobile when plaintiff turned onto the street-car track? A. 180 feet, approximately.
“2. How far did plaintiff travel on the street-car track before the collision? A. Thirty feet, approximately.
“3. At what rate of speed was plaintiff traveling after he turned on the street-car track until the collision? A. About fifteen miles.
“4. How far did the street car travel after plaintiff turned onto the track before the time of .the collision? A. No evidence.
“5. At what rate of speed was street car traveling from the time plaintiff turned onto the track until the time of the collision? A. No evidence.
“6. Did the street car stop before the collision? A. No.
“7. If you answer No. 6 in the negative, state at what rate of speéd the street car was traveling at the time the accident occurred. A. About fifteen miles.
“8. Within what distance could the street car of defendant company have been stopped by the motorman, if it was traveling at the rate of speed you have found in the answer to the preceding question? A. About thirty feet.
“9. At what rate of speed was the automobile driven by plaintiff traveling when the accident occurred, if it was moving? A. It was stopped.
“10. Did the plaintiff sound his horn, or give any other warning to the motorman on the street car, or his presence on the track? A. He stopped his car.
“11. Was plaintiff guilty of negligence which caused or contributed to the collision? A. No.
“12. If you find for the plaintiff, state the particular act of negligence on the part of the defendant which you find was the proximate cause of the collision and resulting injuries and damages. A. Failing to stop street car.
“13. Did the left wheels of plaintiff’s automobile drop into ruts on the inside of the east rail of the street railway track, after he turned onto the streetcar track? A. Yes.
[473]*473“14. If you answer No. 11 in the affirmative, could plaintiff, after he saw the street car approaching, have turned off the street-car tracks in time to have avoided the collision, had not his wheels been in the rut on the inside of the east rail of the street-railway tracks? A. Answered in the negative.”

Defendant’s motion for judgment on the special findings was overruled; likewise its motion for a new trial; and judgment was entered'on the general and special verdicts in plaintiff’s behalf.

Defendant appeals, assigning various errors, the first of which is based upon its right to judgment on the answers to the special questions. The jury found that defendant’s negligence lay in its failure to stop the street car. (Finding 12.) It is argued that a street car has a paramount right over other street traffic in that portion of the street where its tracks are located. We are asked to conclude from finding No. 3 that plaintiff was traveling at fifteen miles per hour when he turned on the street-car track, and from finding No. 5, which declares there was no evidence as to the street car’s speed from the time plaintiff got on the railway track until the time of the collision, that the accident was occasioned by plaintiff’s own fault. Defendant stresses the answer to question No. 14. But according to our reading of the record there is no answer to question No. 14. The jury were only asked to answer that question if question No. 11 was answered in the affirmative. But since it was answered in the negative the jury merely noted that fact and gave it no further attention. If this apparent interpretation of the jury’s entry, “Answered in the negative,” which follows question No. 14, is not the correct one, then the question itself was entirely superfluous.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 P.2d 108, 134 Kan. 470, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-kansas-power-light-co-kan-1932.