Meyst v. East Fifth Avenue Service, Inc.

401 P.2d 430, 1965 Alas. LEXIS 123
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1965
Docket470, 471
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 401 P.2d 430 (Meyst v. East Fifth Avenue Service, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyst v. East Fifth Avenue Service, Inc., 401 P.2d 430, 1965 Alas. LEXIS 123 (Ala. 1965).

Opinion

DIMOND, Justice.

This is an action for personal injuries and property damage arising from an automobile collision. A car driven by Sheryl Hewitt stopped two car lengths from a parked wrecker which completely blocked Hewitt’s lane of traffic while pulling another car out of a ditch. A car driven by Fred Selkregg was behind the Hewitt vehicle. As Selkregg passed the crest of a hill he observed the situation before him and hit his brakes as he was going about 25 to 30 miles per hour. It first appeared to Selkregg that the Hewitt car was going to go around the wrecker to the left, so Selkregg let off his brakes, then traveling about 15 to 20 miles an hour. Suddenly Selkregg observed the brake lights of the Hewitt car go on, indicating that it was stopping. He was then about 60 to 75 feet away. Selkregg started to swing out to the left to pass the Hewitt car and the wrecker, and then saw the lights of a car approaching him from the opposite direction. Realizing then that he could not pass on the left, Selkregg tried to drive to the right of the Hewitt car. His car went out of control, skidded on the icy road, and struck the Hewitt car in the right rear. At the time of the impact, the Hewitt car had been stopped for about five seconds.

The passengers in the Hewitt car brought this action for damages for personal injuries against Selkregg and East Fifth Avenue Service, Inc., the wrecker owner. Selkregg cross complained against the owner of the wrecker, on the ground that the wrecker was the proximate cause of the personal injuries sustained and of the damage to Selkregg’s car.

A jury returned a verdict against Sel-kregg for the injuries suffered by the passengers in the Hewitt car. Recovery against the wrecker owner was denied. The passengers in the Hewitt car have appealed regarding the verdict denying recovery against the wrecker owner, and Selkregg has appealed as to the verdict awarding $20,000 damages to Mrs. Meyst, one of the passengers in the Hewitt car. We shall consider the Selkregg appeal first.

The Selkregg Appeal

Selkregg’s first point is that the trial court erred in refusing to give his proposed instruction. No. 8 on sudden emergency, which read as follows:

“A person who, without negligence on his part, is suddenly and unexpectedly confronted with peril arising from either the actual presence or the appearance of imminent danger to himself or to others, is not expected nor required to use the same judgment and prudence that are required of him in the exercise of ordinary care in calmer and more deliberate moments. His duty is to exercise only the care that an ordinarily prudent person would exercise in the same situation.
“If, at that moment, he does what appears to him to be the best thing to do, and if his choice and manner of action are the same as might have been followed by any ordinarily prudent person under the same conditions, he does all the law requires of him, although in the light of after-events, it should appear that a different course would have been better and safer.”

In the court’s instruction No. 12 the jury was told what negligence consisted of. The court said that in determining whether or not Selkregg was negligent on the occasion in question, the jury had to determine whether Selkregg had exercised ordinary care in what he was doing or attempting to do at or immediately before the time of the accident. Ordinary care was defined as such care as a reasonable and prudent per *433 son would have exercised under like circumstances.

In the light of this standard instruction on negligence, the proposed instruction on sudden emergency was superfluous. Under instruction No. 12, the jury had to rely upon their experience in human affairs and determine what a reasonably prudent person would have done if confronted with the situation that Selkregg was confronted with when he passed the crest of the hill and saw the wrecker and the Hewitt car before him. The jury had to judge Selkregg’s behavior by the circumstances that existed at that time, as shown by the evidence. The jury was clearly told that those circumstances, which the jury might well have thought called for a quick decision because of sudden and unexpected peril, were to serve as a basis for the judgment they reached. Being so instructed, there was no reason to believe that a body of reasonable and intelligent persons was going to judge Selkregg’s actions under different conditions that might have existed but did not, such as “calmer and more deliberate moments”, to use some of the language from the requested instruction.

The requested instruction would have informed the jury in effect that one’s duty was to exercise only the care that an ordinarily prudent person would exercise in the same situation, and that what one chose to do in such a situation was to be judged by the choice that might have been made by an ordinarily prudent person under the same conditions. In substance, this is what the jury was told by instruction No. 12. Proposed instruction No. 8 was unnecessary, and there was no error in not giving it to the jury.

Selkregg’s second point on this appeal is that the court erred in denying his motion to strike the testimony of Dr. Rodman Wilson.

Dr. Wilson testified that Mrs. Meyst, one of the passengers in the Hewitt car, had suffered from a heart disease for a period of approximately eight years prior to the accident. He described her condition as “ischemic heart disease due to arteriosclerosis of the coronary arteries.” Dr. Wilson said that there was very minor change in the direction of worsening of Mrs. Meyst’s condition between electrocardiograms taken in 1953 and those taken after the accident in 1961; that he considered such minor changes to be the result of the natural progress of the disease over the eight-year period; that he was certain an electrocardiogram taken just before the accident would have been identical with one taken immediately following the accident; that the slight increase in chest pain that Mrs. Meyst experienced after the accident could have been caused by the emotional stress of the accident or it could have been the “natural up and downs of this type of heart disease”; and that there was no certain evidence that the injuries Mrs. Meyst sustained in the accident aggravated her heart condition.

We are not informed in Selkregg’s brief what exclusionary rule of evidence is pertinent and should have been applied by the court in ruling on his motion to strike Dr. Wilson’s testimony. Nor are we shown that the failure to grant the motion prejudiced his case. On this latter point we doubt that prejudice in the admission of such testimony could be established, because if the jury took Dr. Wilson at his word, it is more likely than not that they would conclude that the accident did not result in any damage to Mrs. Meyst’s heart.

It is stated in Selkregg’s brief that the evidence as to Mrs. Meyst’s heart condition should have been struck because it was not shown by legally sufficient evidence that the heart condition was either caused or aggravated by the accident. What Selkregg appears to be arguing is, not that the evidence was irrelevant or otherwise inadmissible, but that it was insufficient to permit the issue of aggravation of the heart condition to go to the jury. 1 *434

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
401 P.2d 430, 1965 Alas. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyst-v-east-fifth-avenue-service-inc-alaska-1965.