North v. Williams

1961 OK 264, 366 P.2d 406, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 450
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 7, 1961
Docket39273
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1961 OK 264 (North v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North v. Williams, 1961 OK 264, 366 P.2d 406, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 450 (Okla. 1961).

Opinion

BERRY, Justice.

The parties who appear here in reverse order to their appearance in the trial court, will be referred to herein as they appeared in said court or by name.

From order denying defendants’ motion for new trial, which was directed to judgment on verdict for plaintiff in the amount of $3,000, defendants perfected this appeal.

For reversal, defendants contend that (1) the evidence was insufficient to show any negligence on their part; that (2) plaintiff was guilty of misconduct “in entering the jury box, going among the jurors, exhibiting her thumb to them and letting at least one juror feel her thumb”; that (3) counsel for plaintiff was guilty of misconduct in repeatedly asking witnesses “if the cab driver got out of the cab and opened the door for plaintiff when she got in and out of the cab and error of the court in admitting this evidence”; that (4) “the instructions of the court were erroneous, improper, misleading, and confusing”; that (S) “the verdict is grossly excessive and manifestly the result of prejudice which was designed, planned and executed”.

The contentions so made by defendants will be considered in the order that same are above stated.

The pertinent and undisputed evidence bearing upon defendants’ contention is that on the day of the alleged accident plaintiff telephoned defendants and requested that a cab be directed to her home; that upon entering the cab after it had arrived at her home, she directed the driver (Austin) to drive her to a residence north of Ardmore; that her purpose in going to said residence was to do housework; that enroute to the residence the cab driver accepted another person as a passenger; that upon reaching the residence she opened a rear door of the cab in order to alight therefrom; that she was wearing a loose-fitting coat; that upon alighting from the cab the lower portion of her coat caught upon the latch of the cab door; that this prevented the door from closing; that while she was undertaking to free her coat, the cab driver, from his position under the steering wheel of the cab, opened the door farther for the purpose of freeing her coat and then closed the door.

Plaintiff testified that at the time the driver opened the door to free her coat, she was attempting to extricate her coat with her right hand; that the driver closed the door on her right thumb; that this resulted in a painful and permanent injury to her thumb.

Plaintiff, on direct examination, testified in part as follows:

“A. Well,'I had on a coat that didn’t have any buttons on it, and it hung loose, and when I went to get out, why the coat hung on that thing, and I just turned around like this, and reached back like this, to loosen it, and when I did the cab driver didn’t look back, he just slammed the door shut, and I guess he didn’t slam it or something, but anyway, he opened it up and I jerked my coat, and I got it out, and he just slammed the door and went on, and he didn’t even know, I don’t guess, that my thumb was mashed.”

The defendants assert that the quoted evidence wholly fails to> show that they were negligent in any respect.

While the quoted testimony fails to either make clear the cause of the accident or that the cab driver was negligent, other testimony makes clear the cause of the accident and tends to show that the driver was negligent. On cross examination, plaintiff testified that “Yes, I was completely out, *408 but my coat was caught and it didn’t come on out with me, so I just reached back and taken it off the hook, and the cab driver reached back and shut the door”; that “Well, I just turned around to get it unhung, and when I stuck my thumb back up that way to unhang it, why he shut the door”. The cab driver testified that he “knew that she (plaintiff) got her coat hung in the door”; that he “opened the door and she got her coat out and I closed the door”; that he promptly drove away; that he did not know the postition of plaintiff’s hands at the time he closed the door.

At p. 1173, 34 A.L.R.2d, the annotator of notes beginning at p. 1172 of said volume, cites numerous cases as sustaining his note to the effect that “The owner or operator of a vehicle has been held liable in a number of cases for injury to the hand of a person in the vehicle door, on the theory that the owner or operator had failed to exercise that degree of care expected of a reasonable person under similar circumstances”.

The Court of Appeals of Kentucky held in Jordan v. Marsee, 256 S.W.2d 25, that the operator of an automobile owes a guest the duty of reasonable care to avoid injuring him; that said duty applies when the operator discharges the guest; that the operator must give a guest a reasonable time to alight from an automobile.

In Yellow Dime Cab Co., Inc. v. Pike, 195 Okl. 373, 158 P.2d 469, 470, we stated that “The defendant was a common carrier of passengers for hire. The law places upon common carriers the duty of exercising a very high degree of diligence for the safety of its passengers and the taxicab company is charged with the same degree of care.”

When the acts of Austin are considered in the light of the above quoted rule, it is apparent that a prima facie showing of negligence on the part of defendants was made. As heretofore pointed out, the cab driver knew before he closed the. door upon plaintiff’s thumb that a portion of her coat was not free of the cab. To our way of thinking the jury would have been justified in concluding that the driver should have anticipated that plaintiff in all probability would use her hands in attempting to free her coat and that in his closing the door some portion of her hand might be injured.

The evidence as to what was done by plaintiff and her counsel in exhibiting her injured thumb to the jury is conflicting. Defendants contend that plaintiff entered the jury box for the purpose of exhibiting her thumb; that her counsel invited the jurors to handle plaintiff’s thumb and that one or more of the jurors did so; that following examination of the thumb one juror remarked that “her thumb’s ruirnt”.

Defendants assert that affidavits attached to their motion for new trial and a subsequent motion to vacate the order denying their motion for new trial, clearly establish the above referred-to facts.

At the hearing on the motion for new trial, the trial judge stated that he was present throughout the trial and “that what is in these affidavits is not what took place”. He stated further that “an entire transcript by Gray Audograph was taken of this trial” and that the machine so used would have recorded statements allegedly made by plaintiff’s counsel and the juror if they had in fact been made.

The record shows that the only objection made by defendants’ counsel concerning or during the time that plaintiff exhibited her thumb to the jury was “We object to the demonstration, the length of time”. It thus appears that defendants waited until after the jury had returned a verdict against them before charging plaintiff, her counsel and possibly a juror with misconduct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1961 OK 264, 366 P.2d 406, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-v-williams-okla-1961.