Oddo v. Cardi

218 A.2d 373, 100 R.I. 578, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 481
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 28, 1966
DocketEx. Nos. 10778, 10779
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 218 A.2d 373 (Oddo v. Cardi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oddo v. Cardi, 218 A.2d 373, 100 R.I. 578, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 481 (R.I. 1966).

Opinion

*579 Roberts, C. J.

These actions of trespass on the case for negligence were brought to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiffs as a result of a motor vehicle collision. The cases were tried together to a justice of the superior court sitting with a jury, and a verdict in each case was returned for the plaintiff. The defendant’s motion for a new trial in each case was denied, and the defendant is now in this court prosecuting her bills of exceptions.

;. It is not disputed that plaintiffs, who are man and wife, were passengers in an automobile owned by defendant and operated by her on South County Trail, so called, in the town of North 'Kingstown. The defendant’s motor vehicle *580 was proceeding south in the southbound lanes of said highway and came into collision with a motor vehicle operated by Warren H. Stutts, which had been proceeding in a northerly direction in the northbound lanes of said highway. It is conceded that the Stutts car swerved out of control and crossed from the northbound lanes into the southbound lanes of said highway where it came into collision with the ■motor vehicle of defendant.

Turning first to defendant’s contention that the trial justice erred in denying her motion for a directed verdict, we are constrained to conclude that it is without merit. She argues that the evidence discloses a situation in which she was under no legal duty to anticipate that the Stutts car would leave the northbound lane and cross over to the southbound lane of the highway. It is true that the operator of a motor vehicle is under no duty to anticipate that the operator of a vehicle approaching from the opposite direction may suddenly turn and cross over to the side of the highway upon which he is operating.

The rule is well stated in Rawding v. Lonsdale Bakery Co., 71 R. I. 50, at page 54: “Until it became reasonably apparent that the automobile was going to cross the center line of the highway, the defendant had the right to assume that its driver would observe the rules of the road and that he would not act in disregard of his own safety and the ■safety of others by cutting across the path of the truck, which was in plain view and but a relatively short distance away.” There the court held that a motion to nonsuit was properly granted, the evidence disclosing that the plaintiff’s automobile turned and crossed the highway in front of the defendant’s truck when they were about 50 feet apart. See also Lamarque v. Masse, 76 R. I. 382.

The defendant testified that she saw the Stutts car spin across the road into the southbound lanes, slammed on her brakes, and that the impact occurred after her car had come to a stop or at least after its speed had been reduced to *581 about 5 miles an hour. If this testimony stood uncontradicted, the trial court might well have been required to grant her motion for a directed verdict. However, the testimony of Dr. Oddo is in conflict with this version as to what happened and put before the jury testimony that the Stutts car began to spin across the highway when defendant’s car was still about 600 feet away from it and that some five, six, or seven seconds elapsed before impact.

The jury obviously could have accepted the version so testified to by Dr. Oddo and, if it did so, the cases, in our opinion, would differ completely from Rawding v. Lonsdale Bakery Co., supra. In this state of the evidence there was a clear question for the jury as to whether defendant in all the circumstances was in the exercise of due care after having observed the erratic change in direction of the Stutts car.

On the issue of the duty to exercise due care in a sudden emergency, the court charged in part: “On the other hand, leaving aside the question of whether or not she should turn left or right, we come to the problem of applying the brakes. Now, that is not a matter of choice. You don’t have a choice within this rule of applying or not applying the brakes because if you don’t apply the brakes, there is going to be a collision, obviously you are not excused by the latter part of the rule of applying or not applying the brakes.” The defendant construed this as an instruction to the jury that a failure to apply the brakes in the emergency that confronted this defendant would constitute negligence on her part as a matter of law and argues that such is an erroneous statement of the law and is prejudicial error in the circumstances.

If we concede the quoted instruction to be erroneous, it was followed immediately by an instruction of the test for negligence in sudden emergencies, which defendant concedes was a correct instruction on that doctrine. What she argues fundamentally is that in Rossi v. Ronci, 59 R. I. 307, *582 an erroneous instruction is not to be rendered harmless by the fact that in another part of the charge the law is stated correctly absent some effective cautionary instruction by the court as to the invalidity of the erroneous portion of the instruction.

The real question raised here-, in our opinion, is whether the incorrect instruction was in fact inconsistent with the instruction that is conceded to state the rule correctly. It is obvious that a patent inconsistency between the two instructions would leave this court unable to ascertain on which -of them the jury made its finding of negligence or, as we said in Rossi v. Ronci, supra, at page 316: “* * * this requested -part of the charge was not given to the jury in such a way as to show that it superseded previous- parts of the charge that were inconsistent with it, and we cannot tell which of the two inconsistent sets of instructions the jury followed.”

We are unable .to agree that the jury was instructed so clearly that defendant’s failure to have applied the brakes of her car would constitute negligence as a matter of law as to be manifestly inconsistent with the correct instruction which was given immediately thereafter. In this the court instructed the jury very -clearly as to when defendant became obligated to exercise reasonable care to avoid a collision after observing the erratic course of the Stutts car and as to- -the character of conduct required to discharge that duty. The trial justice then went on to instruct the jury that it was for it to- find that such conduct on her part was, in the circumstances, negligence, that is, the conduct was not that of a reasonably prudent person in the circumstances with which she was confronted when the Stutts car swerved into the southbound lanes. We do not perceive that the court’s reference to a possible failure on defendant’s part to make any application of the brakes of her car, when viewed in the context of the whole charge, *583 was so inconsistent with the correct instruction as to constitute prejudice.

We see no merit in exceptions taken to that portion of the charge wherein the court instructed the jury, in substance, that violations of the statutory rules of the road “may” be taken as evidence of negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
218 A.2d 373, 100 R.I. 578, 1966 R.I. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oddo-v-cardi-ri-1966.