McDonald v. Pratt

152 A. 532, 129 Me. 434, 1930 Me. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 3, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 A. 532 (McDonald v. Pratt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Pratt, 152 A. 532, 129 Me. 434, 1930 Me. LEXIS 105 (Me. 1930).

Opinion

Thaxter, J.

This is an action by an administrator to recover for conscious pain and suffering of. his decedent, who died from injuries received when he was struck by the defendant’s automobile. The defendant pleaded the general issue with a brief statement setting up the plaintiff’s own want of due care. The case is before this court on a general motion and on exceptions.

It appears that at about seven o’clock in the evening of the nineteenth day of September, 1929, the deceased, Roderick A. MacDonald, was engaged with his son, the plaintiff, and with Roderick A. McLean in cleaning up some branches and brush from a tree which had been felled on the McLean lawn in East Millinocket. The McLean house and that of MacDonald were situated beside each other on the main highway leading from Medway to Millinocket with a narrow driveway between them. On the same side of the street for a distance of more than a quarter of a mile the houses were situated close together. On the opposite side of the road, however, there was an open meadow, and the branches and brush were being taken across the street and deposited in this vacant field. The plaintiff’s father, a strong, rugged man of seventy-three years of age, had made a number of trips across the road carrying brush before the happening of the fatal accident. The width of the travelled or tarvia portion of the highway at this point was twenty-eight feet, and two feet beyond that on the farther side of the road was a ditch or gully. There was an unobstructed view on the road northerly from the plaintiff’s house of three hundred and fifty to four hundred feet. The weather was clear and the road was dry. It was dusk, almost dark, so that street lights and automobile lamps were burning. Northerly on the road toward Millinocket, about three hundred feet from the plaintiff’s house, there is a street lamp, and southerly toward Medway another about one hundred and fifty feet away. The deceased, just prior to receiving his injuries, picked up an armful of brush, and, carrying it on his left arm and preceded by the young child of McLean, started across the street. Beyond the middle of the road he was struck by the car of the defendant, a Ford sedan, which the defendant was driving on his right-hand side of the road in the direction of Medway. So far the facts do not seem to be in dispute.

[436]*436There were two eyewitnesses of the accident who testified for the plaintiff, Roderick McLean, the owner of the adjoining property, and Donald MacDonald, the administrator, who is the plaintiff. Their testimony, which is substantially the same, is to the effect that before MacDonald started across the street with the load of brush he looked both ways, that he had an unobstructed view for three hundred and fifty or four hundred feet in the direction from which the defendant’s car came, that at that time no car was visible, that he walked practically straight across the street, and that as he did so the defendant’s car appeared travelling at the rate of forty or forty-five miles an hour. Walking with MacDonald or just in front of him was the young boy of the witness, McLean. Both witnesses testified that the automobile had but one headlight burning. When the car was first seen, Mr. MacDonald was, according to this evidence, about in the center of the road, and the car at that time was three hundred and fifty to four hundred feet away. What then happened is best described in the words of the plaintiff.

“Q. Did anything happen at that time, so far as a warning was concerned? Did anybody give any warning at that time?
A. Yes.
Q. Who?
A. Mr. McLean.
Q. What did he say or do ?
A. He hollered, ‘Look out for the car.’
Q. Mr. McLean, when your father was in the center of the street, hollered, ‘Look out for the car,’ and at that time it was three hundred and fifty to four hundred feet away from him: is that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. What did your father do then?
A. He quickened his pace, trying to get out of the way.
Q. What had he been doing, or what was he doing just before McLean hollered this warning to him?
A. Walking across the road.
$ 3* &
Q. When he quickened his pace, after Mr. McLean shouted this warning to him, about how fast would you say he was going? '
A. He didn’t go very far.
[437]*437Q. Did he start to run ?
A. Yes.
Q. In other words, he was walking before the warning was shouted to him, and, when he heard the warning, he started to run: is that correct ?
A. Yes.
Q. And he ran from the center portion of the highway over to a point three to four feet away from the ditch?
A. Yes.
Q. When he was hit ?
A. Yes, about that.”
Mr. McLean testified as follows:
“Q. Now, after you yelled this warning, ‘Look out for the car,’ did Mr. McDonald start to run?
A. No ; I should say that he stopped for a second.
Q. Then what did he do ?
A. He dashed across the street.”

Both witnesses seem to agree that at the time he was hit Mr. MacDonald had nearly crossed the travelled part of the highway and was near the ditch on the farther side of it.

It appears that just prior to the accident a car with four young ladies in it passed in the opposite direction. Mr. MacDonald was at that time on the sidewalk preparing to cross, and one of the occupants of this car testified that they passed so close to him that the branches which he was carrying brushed against her. It is significant as showing the deceptive shadows which this brush must have thrown that she did not realize that a man was carrying it. Another of the passengers merely saw what she at first thought was a shadow, but on coming nearer discerned the pile of brush and a man’s hat and shoes.

The defendant’s version is that shortly after passing the car with the young ladies in it, while he was travelling toward Medway on his right-hand side of the road at a moderate rate of speed, he noticed the McLean child directly in front of his car and but a few feet away. He rose up to be able better to see the little child, put on his brake, veered about three feet to the left and cleared the child, but, as he did so, a clump of bushes with Mr. MacDonald’s [438]*438face peering through them loomed up in front of his windshield on the left-hand side of his car. The left side of the windshield struck the man and he fell to the street. The defendant drove his car ahead and to the right-hand side of the road, went back and found MacDonald lying about in the center of the road.

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Bluebook (online)
152 A. 532, 129 Me. 434, 1930 Me. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-pratt-me-1930.