Meadows v. Bailey

350 S.W.2d 630
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 27, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 350 S.W.2d 630 (Meadows v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meadows v. Bailey, 350 S.W.2d 630 (Ky. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

Bobby Bailey, while driving an automobile, was fatally injured in a sideswipe collision with a truck driven by Earl Meadows, a 17-year old boy. In this wrongful death action Bailey’s administrator recovered judgment on a $5,000. jury verdict rendered jointly and severally against Meadows and against Earl Bowling and wife, Ethel Bowling. The case against the Bowlings rests on the theory that they owned the truck, permitted Meadows to use it, and are liable under KRS 186.590(3). All three defendants appeal.

[632]*632The accident happened on Kentucky Highway 30 a mile or so east of East Bern-stadt in Laurel County. It was late afternoon, “right at the edge of dark.” The road was a two-lane pavement with a broken white line marking its center. It was dry. Bailey, driving east, was either rounding or emerging out of a slight curve to his right when he met the Meadows truck coming west. The left front portions of the two vehicles collided. Evidently both spun counterclockwise, the truck coming to rest off the highway on the north, headed back toward the east, and the car crosswise in the road, headed slightly northwest. There were no tire marks.' Dirt and debris were deposited all over the pavement. Some of the witnesses said that “most” of it was in the south or east-bound lane. A piece of Bailey’s clothing was found on the left front corner of the truck bed. These are the physical facts.

There were four passengers in the Bailey car, one of whom apparently had passed out drunk in a pool room at East Bernstadt and was being driven home by Bailey. Of the occupants of this car the only one to testify was Charley Houston, who was sitting in the back seat directly behind Bailey, the driver. He said that there was whiskey in the car but he had not drunk any, nor, so far as he knew, had Bailey. According to his account the Bailey car was going 35 to 40 m. p. h. and remained within the right-hand lane at all times. Admittedly, however, he could not see the center line but “was just kindly judging.” He first noticed the truck when it was 40 to 50 feet away and “it looked like he was coming right at us,” whereupon he called out a warning to “watch it” and Bailey swerved to the right, but to no avail. Houston was knocked out and remembered no more about the accident. This witness had been twice convicted of felonies.

The only other eyewitnesses were Meadows, who was driving the truck, and Charles Gurley, who was riding with him. They were following a car driven by Charles’ half brother, Herschel Ward. Both Meadows and Gurley testified that the truck was on its right side of the road. According to Meadows, the Bailey car nearly crowded Ward off the road before it hit the truck, and Ward testified to the same effect. Ward heard the crash, stopped his car and ran back to the scene of the accident. Meadows and Gurley got out of the truck, evidently unhurt, and proceeded to leave the scene in Ward’s automobile before any other witnesses arrived. It was claimed that the purpose of Meadows and Gurley in leaving was to call the police. Ward stayed behind and pretended to have been driving the truck himself. Since all of the occupants of the Bailey car had been rendered insensible, either by the force of the collision or by extraneous influences, this ruse had an early success. However, the truth was unearthed through the diligence of the state trooper who investigated the accident, and Meadows, after denying it for several days, finally pleaded guilty in county court to a charge of driving without an operator’s license. His explanation was that he did not have permission from the Bowlings to drive the truck and did not want them to know it.

The facts summarized thus far are sufficient for decision of whether the evidence supports a finding of negligence against Meadows. We think it does.

To nullify the testimony of Charley Houston appellants cite the rule expressed in Davis v. Bennett’s Adm’r, 1942, 289 Ky. 516, 159 S.W.2d 39, that when the physical facts point so unerringly to the truth that there is no room for a reasonable difference of opinion they will override testimony to the contrary. But in this case there was no such physical evidence. Certainly the relative positions of the two vehicles afterward do not, of themselves, tell us where they were with respect to the center of the road when they met. Steely v. Hancock, Ky.1960, 340 S.W.2d 467, 470. Therefore, the question is whether there was enough credible evidence to sustain the burden of proof.

[633]*633 On this point the plaintiff’s case consists of the testimony of Houston, the testimony that “most” of the debris was deposited in the east-bound traffic lane, and the conduct of Meadows following the accident. When a collision has occurred near the middle of a highway, evidence that a preponderance of the debris fell on one side or the other of the center line has little or no probative force. For example, it may well indicate no more than which of the vehicles was the dirtier, or the more easily shattered. Nor do we attach any great significance to the conduct of Meadows following the accident. Ordinarily a party’s attempt to conceal or suppress a relevant fact has probative value, and is thus admissible, because it is in the nature of an admission of the weakness of his case. See II Wigmore on Evidence § 278, p. 118. But quite aside from the matter of who was at fault in the accident, there were other circumstances furnishing so much more probable a motivation for the attempted concealment that it would hardly be fair to give his equivocal conduct much weight on the question of negligence. So we come to the testimony of Houston as the real basis for the verdict.

Some of the witnesses said that Houston was drunk or had been drinking. Fie denied it. That was for the jury to decide. He had been convicted of felony, but again it was the jury’s prerogative to judge his credibility. That he could not actually see the center line of the road reflects upon the exactitude of his judgment, yet we are loath to say that the occupant of an automobile cannot judge whether it is or is not wholly within its proper lane of traffic simply because he does not see the center stripe. That too falls in the jury’s province. We hold that the eyewitness testimony of Houston was enough to take the case to the jury and permit a finding of negligence.

'There was a conflict in the evidence as to whether Bobby Bailey had been drinking just before the accident. Among the instructions offered by the appellants were the following:

“9-A ‘Negligence’ as used in these instructions means the failure to exercise ordinary care. ‘Ordinary care’ as used in these instructions means that degree of care that an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under the conditions and circumstances similar to those proven in this case, and if you believe either driver was intoxicated, the phrase ‘ordinary care’ means that degree of care which ordinarily prudent persons, if sober, usually exercise under the same or similar circumstances to those proven in this case.”

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Bluebook (online)
350 S.W.2d 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meadows-v-bailey-kyctapp-1961.