Mooney v. Chapdelaine

10 A.2d 220, 90 N.H. 415, 1939 N.H. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1939
DocketNo. 3102.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 A.2d 220 (Mooney v. Chapdelaine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mooney v. Chapdelaine, 10 A.2d 220, 90 N.H. 415, 1939 N.H. LEXIS 90 (N.H. 1939).

Opinions

Page, J.

The accident happened upon the road between Derry and Lawrence on the evening of February 19, 1934. The highway was practically straight and afforded a view for many hundred feet. It was snowing a little, and there was a sprinkling of snow upon the surface. The concrete pavement was twenty feet wide, flanked by a tar shoulder of two feet and a further shoulder of gravel, three feet at the narrowest, but averaging nearly four feet.

The defendant was driving southerly, on his own right-hand lane. McDonald was driving northerly, came over onto the same lane, and the collision ensued. It was the claim of the plaintiffs that the dangerous course of the McDonald car was, or should have been, known to the defendant early enough so that he could have avoided the accident by the exercise of due care. It would have been enough to make a case for them if the exercise of due care would have decreased the force of the impact sufficiently to have avoided or lessened Mrs. Mooney’s injuries. Giguere v. Railroad, 86 N. H. 294, 296.

As to the motions for nonsuits and directed verdicts, the defendant relies upon the supposed incredibility of the testimony of Mrs. Mooney and other passengers in the defendant’s car. But if their testimony were totally disregarded, there was still evidence to support the verdicts. Without reliance upon the “incredible” testimony, it could be found that McDonald’s tire-marks crossed the middle line of the road at a point four hundred feet southerly of the point of collision; that these tire-marks were perfectly straight and gave no indication of a skid or of a blown-out tire.

The defendant’s own testimony tended to make a case for the plaintiffs. He said at the trial that he was driving at the rate of thirty to thirty-five miles an hour when he first saw the lights of the McDonald car at a distance of 350 to 400 feet. He admitted having said in his deposition that the distance was 400 to 500 feet, and the jury would have been justified in accepting the greatest. The defendant further testified that upon seeing the lights he immediately took his foot from the accelerator and reduced his speed to about twenty miles an hour. He declared that the reason for his action *417 was the snowy condition of the road and a slight down-grade. He further said that he did not realize that McDonald’s lights were on the wrong side of the road until the cars were 100 to 150 feet apart, when he braked his car and brought it practically to a stop before the collision occurred.

The jury might reasonably infer, however, that his reduction of speed was motivated by knowledge that McDonald’s car was in an improper position. With such brakes as he had, and under existing conditions, the defendant admitted that he could have come to a full stop within forty feet. If the operation of the brakes had begun when the cars were 150 feet apart, the defendant would have been at a full stop before the collision occurred, for all the witnesses agreed that McDonald’s speed was only fifteen to twenty miles an hour. The defendant’s car weighed 3100 pounds and contained six people averaging 140 to 150 pounds. The McDonald car weighed 2400 to 2500 pounds and contained two persons totalling about 400 pounds. The jury could conclude that the defendant had sufficient warning of McDonald’s position so that by reasonably prudent action he could at least have stopped completely before the collision occurred. If he had, it would have been proper to infer that the impact of a slow-moving light car upon a stationary heavier car would have greatly lessened Mrs. Mooney’s injuries, even if they had not been wholly avoided.

One of the claims of the plaintiffs was that McDonald involuntarily got on the wrong side of the road. McDonald testified that a blowout of his left front tire caused his car to skid suddenly into the south-bound lane. But there was evidence that he said soon after the accident that he was blinded and did not know that he was on the wrong side. If not proof of the fact declared, it tended strongly to impeach his testimony. Further, McDonald admitted that he had pleaded guilty to a charge of reckless driving in connection with this accident. Moreover, the nature of his tire-marks made his testimony regarding a blow-out well-nigh impossible of acceptance. The jury would have been justified in rejecting his testimony and in inferring that he did not know that he was on the wrong side of the road. He had not been drinking. The long straight lines showing his departure from the true course might have implied ignorance of where he was. It was snowing. A photograph of his car, taken within a few minutes after the accident, indicated that it lacked a wind-shield wiper. This might be thought to have been a condition accounting for ignorance.

*418 It was the position of the plaintiffs that the defendant should have sounded his horn as a warning to McDonald. The defendant argues that he was not chargeable with notice that McDonald’s car had no wiper, or that he was possibly blinded. The argument is not conclusive. McDonald’s car was admittedly on the wrong side of the road. Whatever the reason for its presence there, the defendant was bound to recognize its situation as soon as average care required and to take appropriate action. There was testimony by the defendant (even if Mrs. Mooney were not to be believed) that he actually saw McDonald’s lights when they were 500 feet away. The jury could have found (independently of her testimony and her supposed remarks of warning) that the defendant, if in the exercise of due care, would even then have realized that McDonald’s car was on the wrong side of the road and that McDonald might be inattentive or ignorant of his position. If so, it might also be found that due care required the defendant to try to arouse McDonald by sounding his horn. If the horn had been sounded, it could not be conclusively found that McDonald could not or would not have swung to his right in season to avoid the collision. The probability that he would have done so in the course of hundreds of feet at his slow speed cannot be said to be conjectural. Conclusive effect could not be given to McDonald’s statement that a signal would not have permitted him to do so, for that inference was based upon McDonald’s testimony (which the jury could reject) that a blow-out caused his car to skid across the middle line and go out of control so close to the defendant’s car that he had no time for action.

Totally ignoring the “incredible” testimony of Mrs. Mooney and other passengers, it could be found that a driver of average prudence in the defendant’s position would have realized, before the defendant did, that there was a situation calling for action earlier than what was taken, or of a different character, and that his failure to act was at least a contributing cause of Mrs. Mooney’s injuries. The motions for nonsuits and directed verdicts were properly denied. There was no error in denying the motions to set the verdicts aside. Wisutskie v. Malouin, 88 N. H. 242.

Since the exceptions to evidence were neither briefed nor argued, they are assumed to have been waived.

In the course of argument, counsel for the plaintiffs said: “If Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.2d 220, 90 N.H. 415, 1939 N.H. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mooney-v-chapdelaine-nh-1939.