Mulich v. Graham Ship ex rel. Logan

174 P.2d 98, 162 Kan. 61, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 260
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 9, 1946
DocketNo. 36,609
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 174 P.2d 98 (Mulich v. Graham Ship ex rel. Logan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulich v. Graham Ship ex rel. Logan, 174 P.2d 98, 162 Kan. 61, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 260 (kan 1946).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, C. J.:

Plaintiff brought this action for damages for the death of her husband, and in the second cause of action for damages [62]*62to his truck, all alleged to have resulted from the negligence of defendants. The jury answered special questions and returned a verdict for plaintiff in both causes of action. Defendants have appealed. They do not complain of the amount of the verdicts if plaintiff is entitled to recover but contend a new trial should be granted upon the following grounds: That the court erred (1) in the admission of evidence; (2) in overruling their demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence; (3) in overruling their motion for a directed verdict; (4) in refusing to submit special questions requested; (5) in refusing to give instructions requested; (6) in the instructions given; (7) in overruling motions to set aside answers to certain special questions; (8) for judgment on the special findings notwithstanding the general verdict; and (9) for a new trial.

The general facts shown by the record may be summarized as follows:

Plaintiff, 57 years old, and her husband, Frank Mulich, 62,' were the parents of twelve children. The younger three of them made their home with the parents near Bethel, Kan., a few miles west of Kansas City. The other nine children, seven sons and two daughters, were married and had homes of their own. Frank Mulich was a painter and interior decorator of public and office buildings, the better class of residences, stores, churches, etc. He employed six to eight men, kept busy with the work, usually having four or five jobs going. His part of the work was supervision and the outlining of jobs, and taking material and equipment to the places where the work was to be done. In this work he used a three-fourths-ton truck with a pickup metal body on which there were upright stakes and cross bars for carrying ladders. The bed extended about eighteen inches back of the frame. Between the bed and frame wood blocks had been bolted in. In performing his part of the work and making his plans he frequently worked from eight o’clock in the morning to midnight. He was in good health, sober, industrious, and had a life expectancy of twelve and one-half years. His adult sons were employed by him. They worked on the regular union schedule of wages and hours.

The main highway west from Kansas City is U. S. 40, paved with cement, with four traffic lanes. The two north lanes are for westbound traffic and the two south lanes for eastbound traffic. As the highway leaves the city limits it is, level for a short distance, then down a 3.56 percent grade about 2,000 feet, at the bottom of which [63]*63is a drain under the pavement; then it is up a 5.48 percent grade past the place where it is intersected by a north and south highway known as Bradish Road, about a mile west of the city limits, near which is a port of entry.

The Graham Ship By Truck'Company, a Missouri corporation with headquarters in Kansas City, Mo., is engaged in operating a fleet of trucks transporting freight upon the highways of Missouri and Kansas, where it has the proper license for such operation. Kenneth D. Logan is one of its truck drivers and during all the time here in question was the agent, servant, and employee of the Graham Ship By Truck Company. On the night in question he was operating a truck consisting of a Ford tractor and Keystone trailer having a combined weight 6f 14,800 pounds and loaded with 18,000 pounds of meat to be transported from Kansas City to Topeka.

About five o’clock the morning of January 13, 1945, Logan, driving the Graham tractor and trailer with his cargo, started from Kansas City to Topeka. Near the city limits was a filling station at which there were two other trucks- which pulled in behind him. It was a foggy morning, the pavement was wet. Logan had all the lights on his truck burning, including the fog lights. The other lights would not penetrate the fog. He moved in the north lane of traffic down the grade to the drain, which he crossed and was driving up the steeper grade when he collided with the Mulich truck. Frank Mulich was killed, his truck was seriously damaged, as were the ladders and other paraphernalia and paint with which his truck was loaded.

In plaintiff’s petition the above matters were alleged more in detail than here and it was further alleged that Mulich was driving west in the north lane of traffic and that defendant’s truck was driven into his with disastrous results. Defendant’s negligence was alleged in detail. The unverified answer admitted allegations of the petition, describing the parties, but alleged that Frank Mulich was driving east and that he negligently drove his truck onto the north side of the highway, and that this negligence, which was detailed, was the real cause of the collision and resulting injury. The reply was a general denial. Further facts will be stated in discussing the questions raised by appellants.

The evidence disclosed that being notified promptly of the collision two deputy sheriffs and two highway patrolmen soon reached the scene. Their testimony disclosed that about forty feet west of [64]*64the drain under the pavement and in the north lane of traffic, not far from the north edge of the pavement, there was broken glass and debris indicating th,e place of collision. The chassis of the Mulich truck was on its side on the south side of the -pavement perhaps thirty feet west of the point of collision and about that distance farther west was the body of the Mulich truck. The truck had been smashed up and parts of it and its load were scattered over the pavement. The rear bumper had been broken off, also the left front light. The right front light was burning and the left side was crushed, the most damage being toward the left center and front. Frank Mulich was found lying on the pavement in the third lane north from the south, about 168 feet west from the point of collision. He was dead. -His body and clothing were mangled. The Graham truck had moved in a circle.to the west and southwest, left the south edge of the pavement about even with Mulich’s body and traveled southwest about 450 feet and across the Bradish Road into a yard and up an embankment where the ground had been plowed or prepared for seeding, partially up -an embankment that rose twelve and one-half feet in a forty-foot distance, with its front bumper against a tree 6 inches or more in diameter. The radiator and right front fender had been damaged, and sticking to a part of the radiator was the wooden block from the rear left' corner of the Mulich truck. Someone passing in a Ford car had taken Logan from the ground near the Graham truck to the port of entry. There Logan made to a deputy sheriff a written report of the collision. This fixes the time of the accident at 5:55 a. m., its location, describes the trucks involved and the names of the drivers, and a statement by Logan which reads:

“I was going west. I saw a light. I thought it was across the road,— thought it was headed south. I turned to go behind the light. Looked like a stake bed. That’s the last thing I remember. I came to beside my truck.”

The deputy sheriff who took this report testified that the statement was voluntary, made without any questions being asked.

Some one took Logan to his home. Later on one of the officers swore to a complaint charging him with reckless driving. He was arrested on that complaint and taken to the justice of the peace, and from there to jail.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.2d 98, 162 Kan. 61, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulich-v-graham-ship-ex-rel-logan-kan-1946.