OPINION OF THE COURT BY
WIRTZ, J.
This is an appeal from the judgment for the defendantappellee entered pursuant to the order granting the motion for a directed verdict made at the close of the evidence.
The plaintiffs-appellants are husband and wife. In the early hours of the morning of January 16, 1961, Mrs. Na[379]*379gata was driving the family automobile, with her husband sitting in the front seat on her right and their son on the back seat. She was on the way to drop their son off at school and her husband at work. She was familiar with the road having traveled the same route every morning during the previous four months ever since her son had been enrolled in school the previous September. After leaving their home on Kea Street in Kahului, Maui, she turned right at the intersection into Wakea Avenue, a two-lane road, the paved portion being twenty-four feet in width. She was traveling in a more or less easterly direction into the rising sun which at that time was very low in the sky and was quite bright. Upon rounding a bénd in Wakea Avenue the sun was squarely ahead. After the bend, the road ran almost directly east and the sun was off to the right, its position being at that time twenty-five degrees south of east. At this point, while Mrs. Nagata “was able to see the road,” the rays of the sun “blocked out quite a bit of the right side of the road,” despite the sun glasses she was wearing. Also she was “not completely” able to see the entire width of the road as “there were places where there were deep shadows” cast by kiawe trees bordering the southerly or right side of Wakea Avenue. She could see the oncoming traffic at the intersection of Wakea Avenue and Kamehameha Avenue some distance away. Despite her impairment of vision she proceeded along Wakea Avenue a,t the same rate of speed, which she estimated to be approximately twenty to twenty-five miles per hour, until her husband suddenly called out for her to “look out” at which time she removed her foot from the gas pedal. Almost instantaneously she crashed into the left rear end of a trailer which was partially off the road and parked at an angle so that seven feet of it extended onto the pavement. The trailer was not an inconsiderable object, being characterized as one of the largest trailers on [380]*380Maui, as it weighed ten tons and was forty-one feet in length and twenty and a half feet in width. It was of the “flat-bed” type, the bed being five or six inches thick, and stood four feet high in the front, tapering off to three feet in height at the rear with six or eight tires larger than those of the average automobile. It was parked at a distance in excess of two hundred feet from the intersection of Onehee Street with Wakea Avenue, which was the last intersection before the scene of the accident.1 The exact nature of the bend in Wakea Avenue and the location of Onehee Street are not reflected in the record.2 However, it does appear clearly from the testimony of plaintiffs’ own witnesses that the scene of the accident was visible from [381]*381the intersection of Onehee Street with Wakea Avenue3, at a distance ranging from two hundred to four hundred feet.
In explanation of why she did not see the parked tractor-trailer Mrs. Nagata testified to the effect that after she rounded the bend and when “the sun started obscuring the right side of the road” she was approximately forty-two feet, six inches (the depth of the courtroom) from the scene of the accident. Her counsel admitted during the argument in this court that, as is reflected by the record, the distance actually “was considerably more.” Mrs. Nagata also testified that, under normal conditions, the farthest away from the scene of the accident she could have first seen the parked vehicles was this same distance of forty-two feet, six inches,4 although she acquiesced in the characterization of the bend as being “gradual” and conceded that there Avas nothing to obstruct her view across the bend and along Wakea Avenue beyond the scene of the [382]*382accident to Kamehameha Avenue.5 Later in her testimony she admitted that she “was not very good at judging distances or the height of anything.” She felt that driving at a speed of twenty to twenty-five miles an hour she would have been able to stop her car within this same distance of the length of the courtroom (forty-two feet, six inches). It would thus appear that Mrs. Nagata would have been able to stop in time had not her vision been impaired by the sun for the whole distance in which the tractor-trailer [383]*383combination was visible under the conditions of the terrain,6 wbicb she estimated at forty-two feet, six inches, but which actually was more than two hundred feet.
The trial judge’s ruling that Mrs. Nagata was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law under the evidence is the only question raised under this appeal.7 This ruling by the trial judge was inherent in the granting of the motion for a directed verdict for the defendant.
[384]*384The test to be employed in deciding whether a directed verdict is proper is that the evidence and the inferences fairly drawn therefrom must be viewed in the light most favorable to the one against whom the motion is made. If reasonable minds might differ on the conclusions therefrom, the issue is one for the jury. If there is no conflict in the material evidence and but one inference can be drawn from the facts, it is the duty of the court to pass on the questions of contributory negligence and proximate cause as questions of law. Young v. Price, 47 Haw. 309, 313, 388 P.2d 203, 206, rehearing, 48 Haw. 22, 24, 395 P.2d 365, 367.
In considering whether the material evidence is conflicting, and the inferences to be drawn therefrom, the standard of care for an automobile driver whose vision has been impaired must initially be determined. In view of the realities of modern driving and traffic conditions, it may not be required of a driver whose vision has been impaired to come to a complete stop, but it is generally still required that a motorist whose vision has been impaired must either stop (if his vision is cut off completely) or proceed at such a rate of speed and with such control of his vehicle as to be able to stop in time to avoid any discernible object in the road ahead. See Annot., 22 A.L.R. 2d 292, 300.
The phrase “discernible object” has been explained as the contrast between an object such as a man, cow, horse or vehicle and one such as a thin wire or small stick (see Lindquist v. Thierman, 216 Iowa 170, 248 N.W. 504), or between seeability and a situation creating a trap by virtue of the conduct of the other party. See Schildnecht v. Follmer Trucking Co., 330 Pa. 550, 199 Atl. 220, 222.
Most courts have liberally applied the rule by subjecting it to a number of qualifications, depending upon traffic conditions, the nature of visibility of the object obstructing [385]*385the road and the suddenness of the visual impairment. Gaiennie v. Cooperative Produce Co., 196 La. 417, 199 So. 377; Broussard v. Krause & Managan, Inc. (1939 La. App.), 186 So. 384; Thomas v.
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OPINION OF THE COURT BY
WIRTZ, J.
This is an appeal from the judgment for the defendantappellee entered pursuant to the order granting the motion for a directed verdict made at the close of the evidence.
The plaintiffs-appellants are husband and wife. In the early hours of the morning of January 16, 1961, Mrs. Na[379]*379gata was driving the family automobile, with her husband sitting in the front seat on her right and their son on the back seat. She was on the way to drop their son off at school and her husband at work. She was familiar with the road having traveled the same route every morning during the previous four months ever since her son had been enrolled in school the previous September. After leaving their home on Kea Street in Kahului, Maui, she turned right at the intersection into Wakea Avenue, a two-lane road, the paved portion being twenty-four feet in width. She was traveling in a more or less easterly direction into the rising sun which at that time was very low in the sky and was quite bright. Upon rounding a bénd in Wakea Avenue the sun was squarely ahead. After the bend, the road ran almost directly east and the sun was off to the right, its position being at that time twenty-five degrees south of east. At this point, while Mrs. Nagata “was able to see the road,” the rays of the sun “blocked out quite a bit of the right side of the road,” despite the sun glasses she was wearing. Also she was “not completely” able to see the entire width of the road as “there were places where there were deep shadows” cast by kiawe trees bordering the southerly or right side of Wakea Avenue. She could see the oncoming traffic at the intersection of Wakea Avenue and Kamehameha Avenue some distance away. Despite her impairment of vision she proceeded along Wakea Avenue a,t the same rate of speed, which she estimated to be approximately twenty to twenty-five miles per hour, until her husband suddenly called out for her to “look out” at which time she removed her foot from the gas pedal. Almost instantaneously she crashed into the left rear end of a trailer which was partially off the road and parked at an angle so that seven feet of it extended onto the pavement. The trailer was not an inconsiderable object, being characterized as one of the largest trailers on [380]*380Maui, as it weighed ten tons and was forty-one feet in length and twenty and a half feet in width. It was of the “flat-bed” type, the bed being five or six inches thick, and stood four feet high in the front, tapering off to three feet in height at the rear with six or eight tires larger than those of the average automobile. It was parked at a distance in excess of two hundred feet from the intersection of Onehee Street with Wakea Avenue, which was the last intersection before the scene of the accident.1 The exact nature of the bend in Wakea Avenue and the location of Onehee Street are not reflected in the record.2 However, it does appear clearly from the testimony of plaintiffs’ own witnesses that the scene of the accident was visible from [381]*381the intersection of Onehee Street with Wakea Avenue3, at a distance ranging from two hundred to four hundred feet.
In explanation of why she did not see the parked tractor-trailer Mrs. Nagata testified to the effect that after she rounded the bend and when “the sun started obscuring the right side of the road” she was approximately forty-two feet, six inches (the depth of the courtroom) from the scene of the accident. Her counsel admitted during the argument in this court that, as is reflected by the record, the distance actually “was considerably more.” Mrs. Nagata also testified that, under normal conditions, the farthest away from the scene of the accident she could have first seen the parked vehicles was this same distance of forty-two feet, six inches,4 although she acquiesced in the characterization of the bend as being “gradual” and conceded that there Avas nothing to obstruct her view across the bend and along Wakea Avenue beyond the scene of the [382]*382accident to Kamehameha Avenue.5 Later in her testimony she admitted that she “was not very good at judging distances or the height of anything.” She felt that driving at a speed of twenty to twenty-five miles an hour she would have been able to stop her car within this same distance of the length of the courtroom (forty-two feet, six inches). It would thus appear that Mrs. Nagata would have been able to stop in time had not her vision been impaired by the sun for the whole distance in which the tractor-trailer [383]*383combination was visible under the conditions of the terrain,6 wbicb she estimated at forty-two feet, six inches, but which actually was more than two hundred feet.
The trial judge’s ruling that Mrs. Nagata was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law under the evidence is the only question raised under this appeal.7 This ruling by the trial judge was inherent in the granting of the motion for a directed verdict for the defendant.
[384]*384The test to be employed in deciding whether a directed verdict is proper is that the evidence and the inferences fairly drawn therefrom must be viewed in the light most favorable to the one against whom the motion is made. If reasonable minds might differ on the conclusions therefrom, the issue is one for the jury. If there is no conflict in the material evidence and but one inference can be drawn from the facts, it is the duty of the court to pass on the questions of contributory negligence and proximate cause as questions of law. Young v. Price, 47 Haw. 309, 313, 388 P.2d 203, 206, rehearing, 48 Haw. 22, 24, 395 P.2d 365, 367.
In considering whether the material evidence is conflicting, and the inferences to be drawn therefrom, the standard of care for an automobile driver whose vision has been impaired must initially be determined. In view of the realities of modern driving and traffic conditions, it may not be required of a driver whose vision has been impaired to come to a complete stop, but it is generally still required that a motorist whose vision has been impaired must either stop (if his vision is cut off completely) or proceed at such a rate of speed and with such control of his vehicle as to be able to stop in time to avoid any discernible object in the road ahead. See Annot., 22 A.L.R. 2d 292, 300.
The phrase “discernible object” has been explained as the contrast between an object such as a man, cow, horse or vehicle and one such as a thin wire or small stick (see Lindquist v. Thierman, 216 Iowa 170, 248 N.W. 504), or between seeability and a situation creating a trap by virtue of the conduct of the other party. See Schildnecht v. Follmer Trucking Co., 330 Pa. 550, 199 Atl. 220, 222.
Most courts have liberally applied the rule by subjecting it to a number of qualifications, depending upon traffic conditions, the nature of visibility of the object obstructing [385]*385the road and the suddenness of the visual impairment. Gaiennie v. Cooperative Produce Co., 196 La. 417, 199 So. 377; Broussard v. Krause & Managan, Inc. (1939 La. App.), 186 So. 384; Thomas v. Thurston Motor Lines, Inc., 230 N.C. 122, 52 S.E.2d 377; B. Kullman & Co. v. Samuels, 148 Miss. 871, 114 So. 807; Fullerton v. Kansas City (1950 Mo. App.), 236 S.W.2d 364; see Annot., 22 A.L.R. 2d 292, 299, 304-310. Other jurisdictions have rejected the general rule above for the rule of reasonable care under such qualifying circumstances. Hill v. Peres, 136 Cal. App. 132, 28 P.2d 946; Shields v. Oxnard Harbor Dist., 46 Cal. App. 2d 477, 116 P.2d 121; Schassen v. Columbia George Motor Coach System, 126 Or. 363, 270 Pac. 530. See Annot., 22 A.L.R. 2d 292, 298, 310-322.
The suddenness of the condition causing impairment of vision has materiality as to the opportunity given the driver to appreciate his situation and to react accordingly. A motorist who proceeds when his vision has been impaired, after having had time to adjust to the situation but failing to do so, is chargeable with contributory negligence as a matter of law. Cf., Henderson v. National Mutual Gas. Co., 164 Kan. 109, 187 P.2d 508, 513. And it has been held that proceeding without reduced speed after visual impairment upon rounding a curve was ground for a directed verdict for the other party, the court noting that the lack of a warning light on the back of the other vehicle was immaterial because the driver would not have seen it. Burr v. Fall River News Co., 75 R.I. 476, 67 A.2d 694, 696. Accord, Mickens v. F. Strauss & Son, Inc. (1946 La. App.), 28 So. 2d 84. Cf., Lexington-Hazard Express Co. v. Umberger, 243 Ky. 419, 48 S.W.2d 1066.
. While not necessarily required to bring his vehicle to an immediate and complete stop, a motorist whose vision is impaired may proceed only if he ascertains that it is safe to do so. James v. Edwards, 68 Wash. 2d 174, 412 [386]*386P.2d 123. And, see Moan v. Aasen, 225 Minn. 504, 31 N.W.2d 265,266, where a motorist was held not to be negligent as a matter of law because he had ascertained that his lane of travel was free from obstruction and stayed in it, the question of contributory negligence there being a jury question.
As in the last cited case, most of the cases holding the conduct of a motorist whose vision is impaired to be a jury question do so on the ground, expressed or implied, among others, that such a motorist took some action, at least in those situations where he had an opportunity to do so, the action most often taking the form of slowing down in response to the impairment of vision. See generally, Annot., 22 A.L.R. 2d 292, 300-322; see also, Fullerton v. Kansas City, supra (1950 Mo. App.), 236 S.W.2d 364, 365; Planters Wholesale Grocery v. Kincade, 210 Miss. 712, 50 So. 2d 578, 581; Wilson v. Dalton’s Adm’r., 311 Ky. 285, 223 S.W.2d 978, 981. On the other hand failure to immediately reduce speed when suffering from visual impairment so as to bring the car under control and continuing on for two hundred and twenty feet at the same speed while still visually impaired has led to a finding of contributory negligence on the part of the motorist as a matter of law. Piland v. Maryland Gas. Co., 85 F. Supp. 31, 34 (E.D. La. 1949), affirmed, 179 F.2d 678 (5th Cir. 1950). Accord, Darling v. Browning, 120 W.Va. 666, 200 S.E. 737; Woodley & Collins v. Schusters’ Wholesale Produce Co., 170 La. 527,128 So. 469; Safety Tire Service, Inc. v. Murov, 19 La. App. 663, 140 So. 879; Mickens v. F. Strauss A Son, Inc., supra; Albright v. Tatum (1948 La. App.), 37 So. 2d 888; Schaller v. Bjornstad, 77 N.D. 51, 40 N.W.2d 59; Wosoba v. Kenyon, 215 Iowa 226, 243 N.W. 569.
The standard of care has been generally held to be the same whether the impairment of vision is caused by sun[387]*387light or oncoming headlights. It would seem, however, that sunlight is inherently a pervasive condition as to which greater foreseeability and hence greater opportunity to take precautions is afforded. Annot., 22 A.L.R. 2d 292, 408. Further the character of sunlight per se in a context of sunrise and sunset yields an inference of a more inclusive visual impairment, and expectably so, than that resulting from oncoming headlights. Consequently, impairment of vision caused by sunlight should require an even greater degree of care on the part of the driver as more opportunity to react and adjust to the adverse visual conditions is present than when one’s vision is suddenly and momentarily impaired by oncoming headlights.
Drivers who failed to reduce their speed when sunlight impairs their vision have been held contributorily negligent as a matter of law. Havens v. Loebel, 103 Cal. App. 209, 284 Pac. 676; Toenges v. Schleihauf, 368 Pa. 247, 82 A.2d 15; Paquin v. St. Johnsbury Trucking Co., 116 Vt. 466, 78 A.2d 683, rehearing denied, 116 Vt. 474, 80 A.2d 669. Cf., Ulrikson v. Chicago, M., St. P. & P. Ry., 64 S.D. 476, 268 N.W. 369.
In Ball v. Sears, Roebuck And Co., 223 F.2d 695 at 696 (5th Cir. 1955), a case differing from the present one in that it was an intersection case, the court stated:
“* * * ‘when the vision of a driver of a motor vehicle is so obstructed or so obscured by sunlight, direct sunlight striking his eyes, to the extent that he could not see things on the road or the street ahead of him, it was the duty of the driver of the * * * truck to exercise all ordinary and reasonable care and diligence to avoid an injury to anyone who might rightfully be on the street in front of him, even to the extent, if need be, of stopping his truck, if he couldn’t see ahead of him because of the bright sunlight in his eyes.’
“* * * testified that when he first became blinded [388]*388he ‘started to apply the brakes at that time lightly/ and the uncontradicted proof is that he then went on, to all intents and purposes, blind, until too late to stop, it seems clear that there is no finding the jury could possibly make on the element of negligence other than that the defendant was guilty.”8
With the foregoing standard of care in mind, the applicable evidence must be considered to determine whether there was a factual question for the jury. The issue before us on appeal is simply, whether or not from the applicable evidence it could possibly be concluded that Mrs. Nagata exercised the “care, caution and prudence required of a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances.”
The conflict in the evidence is as to the conduct of the defendant’s employees at the scene of the accident. This relates to the use or non-use of a warning light and the presence or non-presence of one of the employees with flags to guide oncoming traffic. Also the color of the trailer, whether it was yellow or dark and dirty in color or grayish, is disputed. However, this evidence relates primarily to the negligence of the defendant — which is not in issue here as such negligence is assumed — rather than to the contributory negligence of Mrs. Nagata. In any event the conflict is to be resolved in favor of the plaintiffs. Even though there were no warning lights or signalman and the trailer was dark and dull in appearance, it certainly becomes immaterial on the issue of contributory negligence in view of the testimony of Mrs. Nagata of her visual impairment as to her lane of traffic.9 There is no substantial [389]*389conflict between the testimony as to what occurred of the four witnesses wbo were at tbe scene of the accident. Our focal point becomes Mrs. Nagata’s conduct, which is substantially reflected in the above statement of facts, and in assaying her conduct her own testimony is all important. Where her testimony is inconsistent and inconclusive in the matter of distances the testimony of the witnesses on her behalf, considered most favorably to her case, resolves the matter. The fact remains, and her testimony is conclusive on this point, that her vision was impaired because of the sun’s rays. When confronted with this condition as she rounded the bend on Wakea Avenue she did nothing. She continued on at the same rate of speed (twenty to twenty-five miles per hour) and in the same fashion as she had before until warned by her husband immediately prior to the crash.
[390]*390Her testimony estimating the distance of forty-two feet, six inches as the distance from which she could have first seen the parked trailer and tractor under normal conditions and also as the distance from which she could have seen the scene of the accident after rounding the bend in Wakea Avenue, is confusing and inconclusive. She herself admitted that nothing obstructed her view across the “gradual bend” along Wakea Avenue and that she was not good at judging distances. Not only was her judgment of distances inconsistent under her own testimony but it was at variance with the testimony of her own witnesses (the investigating police officers and the driver of the tractor) taken in conjunction with the physical evidence. These witnesses all testified that the scene of the accident was visible approaching along Wakea Avenue from the intersection of Onehee Street, a distance ranging from two hundred to four hundred feet. Under these circumstances, even though the exact location of Onehee Street and nature of the curve in Wakea Avenue are not reflected in the record, no reasonable jury could fail to find that under normal conditions she could have seen the parked trailer and tractor from, at least, a distance of two hundred feet away. This was more than ample distance within which to have brought her vehicle to a complete stop if needs be. She testified that she could have stopped if she had seen the trailer, even within her estimated distance of forty-two and one-half feet. Her explanation for not slowing down or stopping was that she did not see the trailer because of the sun.
This was not a case of a sudden impairment of vision since she was aware of this condition of sunlight when she began her journey and even employed sun glasses to minimize its effect, the sun’s rays becoming more direct as she came around the gradual curve on Wakea Avenue. She knew of the effect of the sunlight on her visibility and [391]*391did nothing about it even when it expectably became more severe.
Plaintiffs contend that in view of the shadows cast across the road by the sun and the “dull” coloring of the trailer, together with the lack of any warning signal light or flagman, a situation of entrapment was created rendering the trailer under the circumstances an indiscernible object. This theory of entrapment by shadow is inappropriate in view of Mrs. Nagata’s testimony of almost complete visual impairment as to the right side of the road and her failure to take any positive action as a result of her condition.10 In this connection it might be recalled that Mr. Nagata, who since he was not driving was not paying attention to the road but averted the glare of the sun by turning his head sideways, still saw the trailer out of the corner of his eye at the time he gave his warning which unfortunately was too late to avert the accident. [392]*392However, Mrs. Nagata never did see the trailer until after she had crashed into it.
Meyer M. Ueoka (Ogata & Ueoka of counsel) for plaintiffs-appellants.
Roy A. Vitousek, Jr. (Pratt, Moore, Ports £ Vitousek of counsel) for defendant-appellee.
Since Mrs. Nagata’s vision was impaired she should have slowed down and even stopped if visibility was insufficient for her to proceed and still be able to stop in time to avoid a discernible object in her path. Had she been maintaining a lookout she would have seen the trailer, hardly an indiscernible object, as her husband did without “paying too much attention to the road.”
Nothing contradicts Mrs. Nagata’s testimony that she was unable to see along her own side of the road, either expectably so or for a long enough time that she should have, taken some action to enable her to determine if anything was in front of her. Her conduct was not that of the ordinarily prudent person under the circumstances; her negligence was a proximate cause of the accident though not necessarily the sole proximate cause; and reasonable men could not, under the applicable standard of law, come to a different conclusion.
The issue of contributory negligence was therefore properly one of law for the trial judge. The judgment is affirmed.