McFadden v. Winters and Merchant, Inc.

603 N.W.2d 31, 8 Neb. Ct. App. 870, 1999 Neb. App. LEXIS 327
CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1999
DocketA-98-1025
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 603 N.W.2d 31 (McFadden v. Winters and Merchant, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFadden v. Winters and Merchant, Inc., 603 N.W.2d 31, 8 Neb. Ct. App. 870, 1999 Neb. App. LEXIS 327 (Neb. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Inbody, Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

This case involves a suit for personal injuries sustained by Timothy C. McFadden when the 1979 Ford pickup he was driving collided with the rear end of a large cylindrical trailer owned by Winters and Merchant, Inc. (Winters). The trailer had been left by Winters in the northbound lane of a 20-foot-wide private road owned by the Nebraska Public Power District (NPPD), which had been designated by NPPD as the route for all employees to use to enter the Hallam, Nebraska, powerplant on September 20, 1993. The action was tried to a jury which *872 returned a verdict for Winters. McFadden appeals, assigning various errors which he alleges occurred at trial.

II. STATEMENT OF FACTS

In 1993, McFadden, age 35, was employed as a maintenance mechanic at the NPPD powerplant at Hallam. His shift ran from 6 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday.

On Friday, September 17, 1993, all employees of the Hallam plant were notified pursuant to a bulletin that the main entrance to the plant, located at the southwest comer of the property, would be closed for resurfacing from Friday night through the following Monday. The bulletin advised employees that when they came to the plant on Monday morning, they would be required to enter the plant through the entrance on the southeast perimeter of the property. McFadden knew from the instructions given on Friday that he was required to take that road into the plant and that this road would be the only way to enter the plant.

On Monday, September 20, 1993, at approximately 5:45 a.m., McFadden was driving his pickup to work at the Hallam plant. At this time of the morning, in McFadden’s words, it was “pitch black” out. The headlights on McFadden’s pickup were in good working order and were turned on high beam. McFadden was wearing his seatbelt.

After turning left onto the east-west county road immediately south of the plant that led to the plant’s main gate, McFadden turned north toward the plant on an old dirt road covered with bottom ash, which is unbumt coal. The bottom-ash road then intersects with a cement curbed road located immediately south of the perimeter fence of the plant. This road runs generally east, until it reaches the southeast comer of the plant and then curves to the northeast, and then eventually straightens out at a gate. After passing through the gate, the northbound road is straight and downhill toward the plant.

As McFadden entered the curve south of the perimeter fence, he was traveling in the northbound lane at 20 to 25 miles per hour. Approximately 30 yards from the gate, McFadden observed fog or condensation from the plant. As McFadden approached the two swinging gates, he observed that the east gate was closed over the northbound lane, so he had to use the *873 southbound lane in order to bypass the partially closed gate. Two sets of 1,000-watt lights, 50 feet high, located over the railroad tracks approximately 714 feet north of the gate, shone directly south, complicating McFadden’s vision.

As McFadden approached and passed through the gate, he slowed down to 15 to 20 miles per hour. After he passed through the gate, the combination of fog and dust in the air caused total darkness except for the light from the headlights on his pickup, allowing him to see 15 to 20 feet in front of the pickup. After McFadden passed through the gate, he increased his speed to 20 to 25 miles per hour and maneuvered his pickup back into the northbound lane. It was at this point that he first saw the outline of some cylindrical object in the northbound lane. McFadden estimated that he was two car lengths from the object when he first saw it. Although McFadden grabbed the steering wheel and started to swerve left, the right front fender of McFadden’s pickup collided with the left rear of the object.

The object that McFadden’s pickup struck was a white or gray cylindrical trailer owned by Winters, who was contracted by NPPD to clean its precipitators, which are pollution control devices that remove particulate from the flue gas. The process is designed to maintain clean stack emission. The impact from the collision caused personal injuries to McFadden and property damage to his pickup.

McFadden testified at trial that “[t]here was no warning. The trailer was dusty, it was dirty, and the fog was there and I hit it.” McFadden further testified that his headlights shone on the trailer “[j]ust momentarily before I hit it” and that “[tjhe main reason why I couldn’t see that trailer was because it wasn’t marked.” The trailer had no orange cones behind it, no reflectors, and no flares.

David Schores, who was following McFadden in his own vehicle, was the only other eyewitness to the accident. He testified at trial that at the time of McFadden’s accident, “[tjhe sun hadn’t come up yet, it was fairly dark, it was completely dark, and the roads were dusty from the earlier shift leaving, and there was moisture in the air, so the dust was kind of — was hanging in the air.” Schores believed the fog was caused by moisture coming off the plant’s cooling towers which were located at the *874 north end of the plant. The fog limited Schores’ ability to see in front of him.

Schores testified that

as we were going down the road, all I could see, from two and a half to three car lengths, was [McFadden’s] taillights go up in the air, and I proceeded behind him until I got within another car length and then I realized there was something in the road then, but until that point vision was very obstructed.

It was not until Schores stopped his vehicle, got out and started walking toward McFadden’s truck that he could see that the object in the road was a trailer. Schores testified that all he could determine was that there was a gray, dusty, dirty, cylindrical object in the road until he got really close to it. The trailer was so dirty that Schores could not make out the trailer’s license plates or taillights.

McFadden filed a petition in Lancaster County District Court alleging that Winters was negligent in leaving the trailer in the road and in failing to provide any warning of the existence of the trailer in the road and that such negligence was the proximate cause of serious personal injuries to McFadden. Winters filed an answer denying negligence and asserting that McFadden was contributorily negligent.

A jury trial was held on August 17 through 21, and 24, 1998. In addition to the facts set forth above, McFadden introduced testimony by Roger Koch, who was the maintenance manager at the plant on the date of the accident. Koch testified that he received first-hand and second-hand reports that other people had come close to hitting the trailer that morning and that when Koch investigated the accident that morning, there were no warning devices, including orange cones, around the trailer. Further, Koch testified that although Winters had permission to park its trailer in that location in the past, Winters had not received permission to park the trailer there on this particular occasion. Following the close of McFadden’s evidence, Winters moved for a directed verdict based upon the applicability of the range of vision rule. This motion was overruled by the trial court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
603 N.W.2d 31, 8 Neb. Ct. App. 870, 1999 Neb. App. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfadden-v-winters-and-merchant-inc-nebctapp-1999.