Neumann v. Apter

112 A. 350, 95 Conn. 695, 21 A.L.R. 970, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 1, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 112 A. 350 (Neumann v. Apter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neumann v. Apter, 112 A. 350, 95 Conn. 695, 21 A.L.R. 970, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 34 (Colo. 1921).

Opinion

Curtis, J.

The defendant’s first complaint is of the refusal of the trial court to grant his motion in each case to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial. Under the conflicting evidence the jury could reasonably have rendered the verdict given in each case.

The defendant claims, further, that the court erred as to each case in its charge relating to the duty of the plaintiff to observe the following statutory rule of conduct (Public Acts of 1919, Chapter 202, § 2), in view of the facts which the plaintiffs claimed to have proved: ‘ ‘ Every driver and operator of a vehicle approaching the intersection of a street or public highway shall grant the right of way at such intersection to any vehicle approaching from his right, provided such vehicles are arriving at such intersection at approximately the same instant.”

The plaintiffs claimed to have proved these facts: Otto A. P. Neumann was driving his automobile northerly on Franklin Avenue in Hartford on September 15th, 1919, at about 9:30 p. m. He sat on the left side of the front seat, his wife, Anna Neumann, on the right side of the same seat, and their child was between them. A light rain was falling, the road was wet and slippery, and it was dark. The plaintiff proposed turning westerly into Preston Street, which ran easterly and westerly intersecting Franklin Avenue at right angles. As he was about to turn into Preston Street he slowed his car to about six miles per hour and turned to the left, keeping to the right of the intersection of the centers of the two streets.

Franklin Avenue is about fifty feet wide, and near its middle are the tracks of a double-track street railway, leaving a clear space of seventeen and one half feet between the outer rail and the street curb on either side. *698 As Neumann was turning to his left to enter Preston Street, he and his wife saw the lights of the defendant’s automobile when about three hundred or three hundred and fifty feet away approaching from the north on the westerly side of Franklin Avenue, but he could not see that the car was coming fast, and could not discover that it was going at a high speed until it was only a few feet away and just before the collision. The defendant’s automobile was then running at a speed of about forty miles an hour, and that speed was maintained to the time of the collision.

When the rear wheels of the plaintiff’s automobile were midway between the rails of the westerly trolley-tracks, the plaintiff saw the defendant’s automobile approaching at high speed and only a few feet away. The defendant's automobile did not sound a horn at any time. It did not turn to the right or left to avoid striking the plaintiff’s automobile, as it might have done, but struck the plaintiff’s automobile a square blow in the middle, severely injuring the plaintiff’s wife and his automobile.

The plaintiff Otto A. P. Neumann was operating his car in a careful and reasonable manner and in accordance with the rules of the road when he turned from Franklin Avenue to enter Preston Street.

In the light of these claimed facts the court charged the jury as follows, as to the above-quoted statutory rule of conduct: “There is not in this complaint an allegation upon which can fairly be placed one feature in this case, which I think is very important, and which counsel on both sides have seemed to regard as an element to be considered in reaching the conclusion concerning the conduct of these several parties, and, although, strictly, according to the rules which I have described to you, that might be called outside of your consideration, I think it i's fair, in view of the way the case has been presented, to call your attention to another *699 law which we have, a statute in this State. And that provides, in effect, that when any person approaches an intersecting highway he must give the right of way to any vehicle approaching from his right, providing the vehicles are arriving at the intersection at approximately the same instant.

“Now, you will recall that in this case these motor vehicles were undoubtedly approaching the intersection of these roads at approximately the same instant. The plaintiff’s automobile, coming up Franklin Avenue, and being about to turn into Preston Street, in the manner in which the evidence has disclosed to you, would have' a motor vehicle coming down Franklin Avenue from Hartford upon his right hand. Therefore, this provision of law would apply to the plaintiff in this case. And it was his duty to grant the right of way to any vehicle approaching from his right. It was the duty, therefore, of Mr. Neumann, as he turned his car on Preston Street, to give the right of way to any vehicle approaching him from the direction in which this defendant’s automobile was coming. Or, to cut it down, in the circumstances before you, it was Neumann’s duty to give Apter the right of way. Now, of course, he must do so with due respect to the circumstances surrounding him. What does it mean by giving him the right of way? Of course, it does not mean that every driver of an automobile in such a position must stop his car always, or remain at a standstill always. He has a right to proceed, and would be considered to be giving an approaching automobile the right of way if he gives them, in the exercise of reasonable care, acting as a prudent man would act, — if he gives the approaching automobile a reasonable opportunity to get by him, to go in front of him.

“Perhaps it may be said that if the person making the turn, or having the approaching automobile on his right, seos another automobile approaching at a considerable *700 distance on the street, he is called upon to exercise the care of a reasonably prudent man, either to stop short or to slow up, or do anything else that is necessary to give that approching automobile the opportunity to go ahead of him, providing a reasonably prudent man would act in that way.

“If the distance was so great that a reasonably prudent man would say that £ the approaching automobile cannot reach this intersecting point until I have passed it,’ then it is for the jury to decide whether or not that was the conduct of a reasonably prudent man.”

The defendant seems to urge that from the moment the plaintiff Otto A. P. Neumann was aware that the defendant’s automobile was approaching Preston Street from the north on the westerly side of Franklin Avenue, it was his duty to stop or slow his automobile until the automobile approaching on his right had passed in front of him.

The statute does not require such conduct. It was Neumann’s duty to await the passing of the defendant’s automobile when he was about to pass to the right of the intersection of the centers of Franklin Avenue and Preston Street in order to turn into Preston Street on his left, if a man of ordinary prudence, in the situation of the plaintiff, in the exercise of due care, would believe that the approaching car of the defendant would arrive at the intersection of such streets at approximately the same instant as the plaintiff’s automobile would turn into the westerly half of Franklin Avenue. If, on the contrary, aman

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Bluebook (online)
112 A. 350, 95 Conn. 695, 21 A.L.R. 970, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neumann-v-apter-conn-1921.