McMillin v. Bearden

376 S.W.2d 665, 237 Ark. 673, 1964 Ark. LEXIS 340
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1964
Docket5-3181
StatusPublished

This text of 376 S.W.2d 665 (McMillin v. Bearden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMillin v. Bearden, 376 S.W.2d 665, 237 Ark. 673, 1964 Ark. LEXIS 340 (Ark. 1964).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

Appellant, George Morehead, on May 1, 1962, was operating a caterpillar motor grader along a portion of what is known as the Boyd Boad, located in Miller County. The grader was the property of appellant, McMillin-Burkett Construction Company, by whom Morehead was employed. The part of the Boyd Boad pertinent to this cause was approximately ten or eleven miles in length, and was being used by gravel trucks to haul gravel from a pit near Genoa to O’. S. Highway 71, where construction work was in progress. Accordingly, this portion of the Boyd Boad was being subjected to heavy traffic, and Morehead was operating the motor grader up and down the heavily traveled portion as a matter of keeping the road in as good condition as possible. Some thirty or thirty-five gravel trucks were being operated on the day in question.

At about 8:00 o’clock A.M., appellee, Henry Bearden, twenty years of age, was driving a loaded gravel truck, and proceeding on the Boyd Road toward its intersection with Highwaj7' .71. The truck was owned by his stepfather, Roy Byrd. Morehead, with his grader traveling toward the pit, was blading the road on his (Morehead’s) left-hand side. Bearden, traveling on his right side of the road, collided almost head-on with the motor grader, the truck striking the right front part of the grader. Suit was instituted by Morehead and McMillin-Burkett, seeking to recover damages for alleged personal injuries, and damage to the grader, respectively. Bearden and Byrd answered, denying liability, and both likewise filed a cross-complaint against appellants, seeking, respectively, damages for alleged personal injuries, and damage to the truck. The parties waived trial by jury, and the cause was tried before the court, sitting as a jury. Thereafter, the court filed a memorandum .opinion, finding, as follows :

“The Court finds without hesitation that there was an abundance of negligence on the part of both George M. Morehead and Henry Ellis Bearden. The evidence preponderantly shows the involved road to have been winding, rolling, rough and very dusty. On this stretch of approximately ten miles, thirty to thirty-five gravel trucks were operating back and forth from the pit. One can reasonably assume that there was also some public traffic on this road, it being of course open to the public and habitated. It is undisputed that when the road was di'3r this batteiy of trucks threw up dense clouds of dust which were bound to seriously hamper the vision of the drivers for some distance ahead. Under these conditions George M. Morehead was operating the grader on the wrong side of the road, in clear violation of a well-known rule of the road. An operator of his 3rears experience should certainty be aware of the probable danger to himself and to others. This fact is especially true in view of Ms operating the grader on the side of the road which belonged to traffic approaching him.

“Sheriff Birtcher estimated the road to be 18 feet wide at the point of impact, and Morehead estimated it to be approximately 20 feet in width. With the grader consuming a¡)proximately 10 feet of the traveled portion, at least the larger trucks would have fairly tight squeeze in passing him at points similar to the point of impact.

“When all of the above recited facts are considered as a whole, it is clearly convincing that Morehead was negligent and that his negligence was certainly a proximate cause of the involved impact.

“Henry Ellis Bearden, by his own testimony establishes his negligence. He was an experienced driver and had been on this particular haul for several weeks. Approaching him was a 10-yard trailer truck and which he says stirred up a terrific amount of dust. As an experienced driver he was bound to know that for some little distance after meeting and passing the other truck he would, for all practical purposes, be blinded to any reasonable vision ahead. In fact he stated that in situations of this kind a driver could tell he was in the road only by the feel of the wheel. In the face of this approaching hazard known to him he estimates his speed to have been approximately 40 miles per hour. Such speed in the face of blinding conditions violated not only the reasonable maximum speed law of the road, it furthermore violated the law requiring drivers to keep their vehicle under such control as to be able to check the speed or stop the vehicle when danger is reasonably to be expected. His approximation of speed is verified by the distance his truck traveled with the wheel assembly knocked out and by the severe damage done the heavy maintainer.

“It is the finding of the Court that both operators were culpably negligent and there is no difference in degree of negligence committed by the two drivers.

“George M. Morehead was the agent, servant and employee of McMillin-Burkett Construction Company and acting within the course of his employment at the time of the impact. The same status existed between Buy Byrd and Henry Ellis Bearden. Therefore the negligence of each driver is chargeable respectively to their employer. None of the parties are entitled to recover in this case. Each of the litigants are chargeable with the Court costs initiated by them.

“Allegations of negligence are based on the facts that (1) the road ivas not kept watered by McMillin-Burkett, and (2) that no warning signs—such as flags, placards or lights—were utilized by the contractor to protect others against the operation of the road maintainer. These contentions are not helpful to Byrd and/or Bear-den. Both had been on the haul several weeks and Avere aware (1) that sprinkling operations had been confined to stretches of road in front of houses and (2) that the maintainer was being used up and doAvn the road to facilitate the haul. They are not in the category of some member of the traveling public Avho might traverse the road AAdiolly unaAvare of the operations then being carried out. The actionable negligence in this case is shown to liaise been confined to Morehead and Bearden.”

Judgment was then entered, denying recoAmry to all parties. Prom the judgment, appellants bring this appeal, and appellees have cross-appealed. Appellants content that the court erred in finding Morehead guilty of negligence, or, if guilty.of negligence, to the same degree as Bearden, and like contentions are presented by appellees.

It is certain that, in holding Morehead guilty of negligence, the court reached one erroneous conclusion, hereafter italicized, namely, that appellant driller “Avas operating the grader on the Avrong side of the road, and in clear violation of a well-known rule of the road.” Ark. Stat. Ann. § 75-423, Sub-section (d), Repl. 1957, proAddes as follows:

‘ ‘ The proAdsions of this act [Act 300 of 1937, regulating traffic on highways, including the so-called ‘Bailes of the Road’] shall not apply to persons, teams, motor ATe-hides and other equipment while actually engaged in work upon the surface of a highway but shall apply to such persons and vehicles when traveling to or from such work. ’ ’

Apparently this provision, or one substantially the same, is contained in the motor vehicle statutes of a large number of the states,1 and several cases are found relative to some phase of the provision. In McNabb v. De-Launay, 354 P. 2d 290, the Oregon Supreme Court had occasion to comment upon an almost identical statute, as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sturgeon v. Clark
364 P.2d 757 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1961)
McNabb v. DeLAUNAY
354 P.2d 290 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1960)
Mathis v. Nelson
54 S.E.2d 710 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1949)
Johnson v. Bergquist
239 N.W. 772 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
376 S.W.2d 665, 237 Ark. 673, 1964 Ark. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillin-v-bearden-ark-1964.