Parker v. Plympton

273 P. 1030, 85 Colo. 87, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 406
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 24, 1928
DocketNo. 11,900.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 273 P. 1030 (Parker v. Plympton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Plympton, 273 P. 1030, 85 Colo. 87, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 406 (Colo. 1928).

Opinions

ANNA Plympton, defendant in error, is the widow of Hercules Plympton, deceased. She recovered judgment on a directed verdict against Paul Parker and John M. Beckman, on the account of the death of her husband, caused by the negligence of defendants. Parker brings the case here to obtain a reversal, but Beckman has not come to this court. When not otherwise designated, we shall refer to the parties as aligned at the trial, Mrs. Plympton as plaintiff and Parker as defendant.

Hercules Plympton was a passenger in the rear seat of an automobile driven by defendant Beckman. Parker, the other defendant, owned and drove another car. The cars collided at the intersection of two streets in Colorado Springs, and the Beckman car was overturned. As a result, Plympton received injuries from which he died a few days later. It was the same collision in which one Ullom was killed, by reason of which his widow recovered judgment against the same defendants, reported inParker v. Ullom, 84 Colo. 433, 271 Pac. 187, opinion by Mr. Justice Butler. Both cases were tried at the same term of court, and before the same trial judge. The same attorneys appear in both cases. The record in each case shows that the defendant Parker admitted his negligence, before either suit was brought. This fact was not mentioned in our opinion in the Ullom case. It was affirmed on other grounds, but it is a fact of importance, especially here. Because of such admission, and because the same acts of negligence gave rise to both causes, details that otherwise might be stated, will be omitted. *Page 90

The evidence concerning defendant's admission of negligence appears from the testimony of Thomas L. Reasoner, a witness for plaintiff, and from defendant's cross-examination. Reasoner was a juror at a coroner's inquest over the body of Hercules Plympton, deceased. Reasoner testified to effect that he had had a conversation with Parker shortly after the inquest; that he (Reasoner) made the statement that the coroner's jury brought in a verdict against both of them (meaning Parker and Beckman), on account of Parker's own statement of the speed that he was maintaining, also that he had gone on the highway with the vision obstructed. The witness further said that Parker made the statement that he thought he was driving "excessive," that he could not see to the left, and that he was perfectly satisfied with the verdict of the coroner's jury. At the trial in this case, Parker testified that he "might have said" that he was negligent or careless but "did not think" he was careless, but he also said (found in another place in the record), that he "did not think" he said that which Reasoner declared he (Parker) said.

Plaintiff's proof of damages shows that she is the widow of deceased; that decedent was an able bodied man, forty years of age, in good health, a laborer working for the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad at ninety dollars per month. He left surviving him, his widow, and three small children, aged twelve, eleven and six, respectively. At the time of the trial, the widow was working in a laundry, and two of the children were with relatives. This evidence was uncontradicted.

1. First, as to defendant's negligence: His culpability appears conclusively from the evidence. Reasoner's testimony, above referred to, is positive and unequivocal, and defendant admits that "he might have said it." This is enough. We do not consider the force of the admission weakened by his statement in another place, that he "did not think" he said it. It merely showed evasion, and at best, from his own standpoint, an attempt to weaken his *Page 91 previous admission by further lack of positiveness, but Reasoner was positive and convincing. We remark on the appalling consequences of the collision, the death of two men. Defendant's admissions were made after the coroner's inquest, and after he had had time to think the matter over. In a matter of such grim fatality, and after time for reflection, it is incredible that he should not know whether he said it or not. His failure to deny, when pressed for an answer, was equivalent to an admission. If the case had gone to the jury, and if they had found him guiltless in the face of his half-hearted, but nevertheless convincing admissions, we should unhesitatingly direct that the verdict be set aside. The verdict inParker v. Ullom, supra, is of course not binding on him here, but we refer to it as an additional corroboration, whether required or not, that his acts were such that the judgment of men cannot reasonably differ as to the fact of his negligence. The details of such negligence were related by other witnesses for plaintiff. The evidence is such that it is impossible to see how any reasonable man could doubt defendant's guilt, or reach a different conclusion. Defendant's admission was not overshadowed in the slightest by the evidence of his other witnesses, even if it should be conceded that an attempt thereat was allowable.

Speaking of directed verdicts in Neal v. Wilson CountyBank, 83 Colo. 118, 122, 263 Pac. 18, we said: "It may be the duty of the court to take such a step, and it was so here. The facts in this case were such that reasonable men could draw but one inference from them. It became a matter of law for the court." The same language is applicable to this case.

2. As to damage: Defendant assigns error on the ground that "The verdict is unsustained by any evidence of actual pecuniary damage to defendant in error." We have stated above the material parts of the evidence as to the domestic relations of deceased. In support of the above assignment, defendant's counsel urge that the *Page 92 evidence does not show how much of Hercules Plympton's wages, if any, he contributed to the support of his family, but if he gave them nothing, he could have been compelled to support them if he were alive, but now the family's future sustenance from his wages is gone forever. It does not require the calculation of a jury to determine how long ninety dollars per month for a wife and three small children would last, if the full amount had been brought home. Under the table in section 6537, C. L. 1921, deceased had an expectation of 28.18 years more of life. We think that the statutory limitation of five thousand dollars was not too much. The evidence of plaintiff's damage was ample, and being uncontradicted, it became a matter of law for the court.

3. Plaintiff and defendant each moved for a directed verdict. The court thereupon took the case from the jury, and directed judgment for plaintiff. Was this reversible error? We give the answer in the language of the last eight decisions of this court on the point.

In McGhee Inv. Co. v. Kirsher, 71 Colo. 137, 139,204 Pac. 891, we said: "The next contention is stated as follows: `In any event there were certain clear cut questions of fact for the determination of the jury.'

"The conflict in the evidence was upon immaterial matters, but if the situation were otherwise, which may be assumed, there was no error of which plaintiff can complain. Both parties moved for a directed verdict, and neither can now insist, that the case should have gone to the jury."

Cascade Auto Co. v. Petter, 72 Colo. 570, 572,212 Pac. 823

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Bluebook (online)
273 P. 1030, 85 Colo. 87, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-plympton-colo-1928.