Mitchell v. Randall (Two Cases)

179 S.W.2d 868, 297 Ky. 302, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 706
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 22, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 179 S.W.2d 868 (Mitchell v. Randall (Two Cases)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Randall (Two Cases), 179 S.W.2d 868, 297 Ky. 302, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 706 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

Reversing in the first ease, and affirming in the second.

The two captioned appeals have been ordered heard together on the record filed in the first styled case. We *304 have had before us heretofore the first captioned appeal; see Randall v. Mitchell, 283 Ky. 501, 142 S. W. (2d) 124. Reference thereto discloses that on the first trial Mrs. Mitchell recovered damages against Randall in the sum of $2,000 due to injuries received in a collision between the car in which she was riding and the taxi owned by Randall. We reversed the judgment on two grounds; one, a defective instruction, and the other error in counsel’s interjection of the idea that Randall was insured.

We shall take the two cases up separately dealing with Mrs. Mitchell’s appeal first. Following the filing of the mandate the case was tried at the November 1940 term, the jury returning a verdict in favor of Mrs. Mitchell for $2,500, which was set aside and new trial granted. At this point we deem it proper to note certain proceedings which did not appear in our first opinion.

Following the collision Randall instituted suit against Mr. Mitchell charging that by his negligence he had caused damage to his taxi, for which he sought recovery. Mr. Mitchell filed counterclaim for damages by reason of personal injury and damage to his car. These two suits were in abeyance until after the judgment on the second trial was set aside. When the cases were later called the court on his own motion directed that they be heard together; both Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell objected and excepted. The consolidated cases were then heard together, with the result that the jury returned in Mrs. Mitchell’s case a verdict for the defendant, and in the Randall v. Mitchell case a verdict for neither party. On these verdicts judgments were entered dismissing Mrs. Mitchell’s petition, the petition of Randall and the counterclaim of Mr. Mitchell, to which judgments Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell excepted and prayed appeal.

When the court granted new trial following the second trial, Mrs. Mitchell'excepted and prayed an appeal; this was on October 4, 1941, and she was then given until the last day of the next November term to file bill of exceptions. Following the last trial (Dec. 1941) it was pointed out to the court that the stenographer who had reported the second trial had died before transcribing notes; the court directed transcription by another stenographer, and this properly endorsed by the court composes the bill of exception's filed.

*305 At the same term Mrs. Mitchell moved for new trial, and set np among other grounds the court’s refusal to sustain the motion to substitute the former verdict for the verdict lastly rendered, because the court had erroneously granted a new trial. We do not find the motion, but the ruling thereon is incorporated in the bill of exceptions filed on the last trial.

In her motion for new trial seven or more grounds were set out, but on appeal it is contended mnly that the court committed prejudicial error in, (1) sustaining the motion for a new trial following the second trial; (2) in directing the consolidation of the two cases over the objections of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell, and (3) the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence. We shall take up the last contention first since our conclusion reached on the whole case will obviate the necessity of discussing the other grounds at any length, one perhaps being common in consideration of Mr. Mitchell’s appeal.

On the first appeal we did not find it necessary to give more than a brief statement of the manner of the collision. We referred to the ordinance which established 13th Street as a boulevard, requiring the driver of a car on Park Avenue to stop before crossing the intersection, and the situation with regard to the absence of the stop light which had been put out of commission by the 1937 flood. The trend of* the proof on this third trial did not materially vary from the proof on the first trial, except as to personal injuries. Mr. Mitchell did not testify on the first or second trials, but did on the third. The collision occurred near midnight of April 27,1937. Mr. Mitchell was driving his car eastwardly on Park Avenue intending to turn into 11th Street. Watson was driving the taxi southwardly on Park Avenue. The collision occurred a few feet from the center line of 13th Street.

Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell both testify that Mr. Mitchell brought his car to a stop when he reached the intersection and that they looked in both directions and saw no car approaching; Mr. Mitchell then proceeded at a rate not to exceed eight miles per hour; that without warning or knowledge the taxi was approaching, running squarely into the side of the Mitchell car, striking it about the middle, turning it over, it coming to rest on the northwest corner of the intersection. The taxi was damaged, but apparently the driver was not injured. At *306 a point about 145 feet north of Park Avenue, as shown by proof and drawings, there is a curve in 13th Street. which would prevent a driver from observing anything at or near the intersection, or one on Park Avenue from seeing a car approaching from that direction until it had rounded the curve. There is also a drug store on one corner which it seems would interfere with the vision of drivers approaching the intersection, as these drivers were proceeding. From the curve to the line of intersection the street is straightaway. Watson, says as he approached the curve he was driving about thirty miles per hour; slowed up for the curve and then resumed about the same rate of speed, “-watching for other traffic.” He did not see the Mitchell car until it got within five feet of him, when he applied his brakes, swerving his car to the left, thinking the other car would pull to the right and thus avoid collision.

It was shown by officers, who came up shortly after the accident, that Watson had been drinking; this he denied and offered other proof to counter the charge. There was some intimation that.Mr. Mitchell’s lights were not burning, and Watson could not say whether the Mitchell car stopped at the intersection or not. Watson testified that following the accident Mr. Mitchell had said that he did not stop at the intersection and that he was driving without lights. This was denied by both Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell. Mrs. Mitchell’s testimony corroborated that of Mr. Mitchell, she saying that the car came to a full stop, and that she looked in both directions before proceeding and there was no car in sight.

For the purpose of discussing the legal point involved, the recitation of proof thus far is sufficient to show the issues of fact, adding, however, that there is no proof tending to show negligence on the part of Mrs. Mitchell. The contention is that in the absence of proof showing negligence on her part, she was entitled to a verdict since in the companion case the jury returned a verdict which undoubtedly was based on the conclusion that both drivers were guilty of negligence.

In Mrs. Mitchell’s case the court instructed the jury that the negligence of the driver of the Mitchell car, if any, could not be imputed to her unless it was the sole cause of the injury occasioned by the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W.2d 868, 297 Ky. 302, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-randall-two-cases-kyctapphigh-1944.