McDowall v. Walters

360 P.2d 165, 1961 Wyo. LEXIS 83
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1961
Docket2964
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 360 P.2d 165 (McDowall v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDowall v. Walters, 360 P.2d 165, 1961 Wyo. LEXIS 83 (Wyo. 1961).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McINTYRE

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs, who are husband and wife, sued for damages resulting from personal injuries suffered by James McDowail, the husband, in an accident at Pine Bluffs, Wyoming, on the night of March 7, 1958. Trial was had to a jury. Defendant moved for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs’ case and again at the close of all the testimony. Said motion was granted, and; a verdict was directed in favor of defendant. From such directed verdict plaintiffs have appealed.

The parties on both sides, as indicated in their pleadings and the manner in which questions were asked of witnesses at the trial, have assumed that plaintiff James McDowail, a man about 75 years of age, was for some reason in a prone position at a driveway entrance leading into vacant lots owned by the defendant and her husband in connection with their home and place of business. To what extent this assumption arose from the fact that defendant and the lady with her did not see said plaintiff we cannot say. He himself has no recollection as to how the accident happened.

The defendant and a guest, Mrs. Avis McNamee, in defendant’s automobile and with defendant driving, drove to defendant’s home at about 8:30 p. m. The streets were slick from snow and ice. There had been a light snow one or two days previously. They were proceeding east on Third Street. At the driveway entrance to the Walters’ lots, which is in the middle of the block and immediately to the east of the alley entrance, defendant made a left turn from Third Street entering said lots. As she did so she struck McDowail, at a place where the sidewalk would normally be, and dragged or pushed him a distance of 32 feet. At about this point the automobile wheels spun, and her forward progress ceased. There was an incline up the-street and on into the lots. At first she backed a few feet and tried a second time, still without success. She then backed into the street again and drove up farther to *166 the right stopping the car where she intended to park it at the Walters’ home and place of business.

In the meantime Russell Jaramillo, 17 years of age, who had been crossing the alley in the middle of the block on a route which would have led across the Walters’ lots, had watched defendant’s maneuver and observed that she was in contact with some dark object. After she had passed on, he started to continue on his way when he noticed a leg move. Walking over to the object, he saw it was a man. He then ran over to defendant’s car and told Mrs. Walters and Mrs. McNamee that there was a man back there; and he thought they had run over him. At the trial his direct testimony as a witness for defendant more or less indicated he had not observed the dark object until about the time Mrs. Walters was having her difficulty in proceeding forward. On cross-examination, however, he claimed that he had seen the object about at the time and place where it was first struck, but he did not then realize it was a man. His explanation was that it could have been a chunk of ice or snow from a truck.

Defendant testified that her car, a 1951 'Chrysler Imperial, was in good condition and had good lights. She did not see McDowall and did not know she had struck or dragged him until told by Jaramillo. Her testimony was consistent on the point that she had not seen Mr. McDowall. On the point as to whether she had looked, it tended generally to indicate that she knew she had looked because it was her habit so to do and the thing which a person would just naturally do. On cross-examination she would not and did not admit that she had not looked, and several times when pressed on the matter would assert that she did look. On the whole, however, the jury would have been justified in attaching significance to the following portions of her testimony:

“Q. Did you give any signal you were going to make a left turn at all?
A. I probably put my turn light on which I always do.
“Q. Do you remember doing it that night? A. How would I? I always do.
“Q. Your policy because you always do you must have done it that night? A. Yes.
“Q. But you have no distinct recollection of the actual operation at the time of the accident, you don’t remember that definitely? A. No.
* ’ * * * * *
“Q. How far did you look to your left? A. As far as I could see I suppose.
⅝ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅝ ⅜
“Q. As you made this swing to your left how far to the left did you look with reference to the east boundary ■ of the alley where it intersects Third street, did you look over there? A. I would think so.
“Q. Did you do that ? A. .1 suspect I did.
“Q. You are not sure? A. Yes, I am pretty sure. When I drive I usually look.
“Q. Because yoú usually do you figure you must have that evening, is that right? A. Yes, sir.
⅜: ⅜ ⅝ ⅜ jjc ⅝
“Q. What part of Third street were you on? A. I presume approximately where a person usually drives to the right and the chances are — - * * * * ‡ *
“Q. What about the left hand side curb? A. Everything clear or probably wouldn’t have made a turn.
⅜ ⅜ ⅜ * ⅝ *
“Q. What part of the street did you see as you looked at that time? A. As a person looks you look before you get to the place you are going to. turn and you have a view ahead of you of whole street and you have a ce*-tain amount of view of the driveway where you are to turn.
*167 “Q. Including the place where the gutter is? A. Yes. I presume I would look there because there is an apron there to driveway.
⅝ ⅜⅞ ⅜ ⅝ # ⅝
“Q. Yesterday you were on this stand and we discussed this turn and as I recall your testimony I asked if you looked as you have indicated today in all directions and you said you must have looked because you always did look, is that still your testimony? A. Absolutely.
“Q. That is your only way of remembering just what you did on the night of March 7th ? A. I believe that is sufficient. It seems to me if you are wondering why I didn’t see him I might explain this way, have you ever had anybody try to point out an antelope in the field, perhaps, you couldn’t spot it at all until it started to move ? and my contention is he must have blended into the background, still he was there all the time even if we looked, we couldn’t see him.
⅜ ⅝ ⅜ ⅝ ⅜ 4»
“Q. You say in your answer here, you could not have seen him even if she had been looking at that particular spot because the lights of her car as she came around the curve, were pointing slightly upward. Do you say you couldn’t have seen him if you had looked right where he was because the lights were pointing up ? A. Evidently I couldn’t because I probably did look.

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Bluebook (online)
360 P.2d 165, 1961 Wyo. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdowall-v-walters-wyo-1961.