Parker v. Gunther

164 A.2d 152, 122 Vt. 68, 1960 Vt. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedSeptember 6, 1960
Docket1104
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 164 A.2d 152 (Parker v. Gunther) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Gunther, 164 A.2d 152, 122 Vt. 68, 1960 Vt. LEXIS 105 (Vt. 1960).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is an action of tort to recover damages on account of personal injuries sustained by the infant plaintiff, Richard Parker, as a result of his being involved in a motor vehicle accident with a tractor-trailer truck. The tractor-trailer truck was driven by the defendant Walter King while King was engaged in the duties of his employment for defendant John Gunther. A jury trial of the case in the Rutland County Court resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff against both defendants. The case is brought here by notice of appeal duly filed by the defendants.

The defendants, at the close of the evidence for the plaintiff, and again at the close of all the evidence in the case, moved the court to direct a verdict in their favor on two grounds. The first ground for the motion was that there was no evidence of failure on the part of the defendants to perform any legal duty, and that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendants which acted as a proximate cause of the accident. The other ground advanced on the motion for a directed verdct in favor of the defendants was that there was evidence of negligence as a matter of law on the part of the plaintiff, and that such negligence served as a proximate cause of the accident.

In considering the denial by the lower court of defendant’s motion we must take the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Callahan v. Disorda, 111 Vt. 331, 337, 16 A.2d 179.

On Jan. 29, 1953, the defendant, Walter King, was driving the tractor-trailer truck of the defendant, John G. Gunther. He was on a return trip from Boston, Mass., and, as he came into West Rutland, he stopped at Sevigny’s Drug Store. The route which he was following was Route 4, which runs in an easterly-westerly direction through West Rutland. He had travelled this route through West Rutland hundreds of times before, and was familiar with the fact that a school zone, so marked, existed a short distance ahead on his westerly journey from the drug store.

Leaving the store he resumed his journey westward, entering the school zone area at about ten minutes of nine in the morning. His *70 tractor-trailer truck was travelling at a speed of 15 to 18 mph. in the school zone, and he proceeded straight ahead on the extreme right, or northerly side of Route 4. There was no other traffic on Route 4 in that vicinity at that time.

At about this same time on the morning of January 29, 1953, the plaintiff, then a child of between six and seven years of age was on his way to school in the company of an older brother and sister. The children were walking westward on the north side of Route 4 on the sidewalk on that side of the street. This sidewalk, upon which the children were walking, is only three feet from the paved edge of Route 4. There is no curbing between walk and highway in that vicinity, merely a three foot strip of dirt or gravel between the walk and the highway.

The plaintiff was going on his way to school in a manner of progress peculiar to the very young. He was attempting to walk on the southerly edge of the sidewalk, which was the part of the walk nearest the road, by placing one foot directly in front of the other, a mode of travel described by a youthful witness as “catwalking.” Witnesses of more adult years described the plaintiff’s progress as “cantering back-ways and sideways,” “dogtrotting,” “cavorting” and “dancing along the edge of the sidewalk.”

The defendant King saw the plaintiff so playing when about two hundred feet ahead of him. He did not look that way again but kept his eyes only on the road ahead. The defendant continued on his same course at the edge of the road, at the same speed, and without a signal of any nature, until he was informed by a bystander that the boy had been hit by his truck at which time he stopped. It was only after the accident that he saw the plaintiff for a second time.

The accident actually happened when the plaintiff backed, fell or otherwise moved from his “catwalking” at the edge of the sidewalk, in such manner as to come into contact with the right rear wheel of the tractor-trailer, and was thrown to the ground between the edge of the sidewalk and the road.

It is the contention of the defendants that there was nothing that the driver, King, could have done to avoid the accident; that he was where he had a lawful right and duty to be on his own right hand side of the road, that his speed was lawful and reasonable under the cir *71 cumstances, and that the accident was caused solely by the contributory negligence of the infant plaintiff.

In the Maryland case of Ottenheimer v. Molohan, 146 Md. 175, 126 A. 97, the Court of Appeals of that state was confronted with a similar situation. The defendant in that case was travelling at a speed of 18 mph. on his own right hand side of the road. A boy of six and a half years of age was playing alongside the road some six or seven feet from the highway where he was observed by the defendant. The road was free from other traffic. As the defendant’s automobile came opposite the boy the youth jumped in front of it and was injured. On the matter of the defendant being free from negligence as a matter of law the Maryland court stated:

“It cannot be said as a matter of law that defendant was free from negligence in passing on the very edge of the road at a rapid rate of speed, small children playing at the roadside, when there was nothing to prevent him from turning to the middle or farther side of the road. The well known habit of children when playing to become oblivious to dangers of this character, should have been a warning to the defendant to slow down and turn as far away as practicable under the circumstances. The signs on every public road warning automobilists to ‘go slow’ recognize this characteristic of children.”

This Court, in the case of Callahan v. Disorda, supra, where the evidence disclosed that a three-year-old child was injured when the defendant backed her car into the child who suddenly dashed out behind her, said:

“Taking the evidence in the light most favorable for the plaintiff, as it must be taken, the jury would have been justified in finding that the defendant knew or ought to have known that the child was in the immediate neighborhood. She was charged with the common knowledge that very young children are erratic and likely to move quickly and without regard for their own safety.”

In the case at hand the accident happened within a school zone, which was so marked, and with which the defendant was familiar, and at a time when children were on their way to school. A motorist driving his vehicle near a schoolhouse or through a school zone is under duty to exercise a high or greater degree of caution, particularly *72 at the hour when children may be expected to be going to, or returning from school, keeping his car under such control that it can be stopped on as short as possible notice. He must anticipate childish conduct and drive with the knowledge that children of tender years may be expected to act upon childish impulses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 A.2d 152, 122 Vt. 68, 1960 Vt. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-gunther-vt-1960.