Parrish v. De Remer

187 P.2d 597, 117 Colo. 256, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 3, 1947
DocketNo. 15,573.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 187 P.2d 597 (Parrish v. De Remer) 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
Parrish v. De Remer, 187 P.2d 597, 117 Colo. 256, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 241 (Colo. 1947).

Opinion

*258 Mr. Justice Alter

delivered the opinion of the court.

E. F. Parrish and Commercial Standard Insurance Company, plaintiffs in error, will herein be mentioned as plaintiffs or by name, and we will refer to De Remer and Atchison," a partnership, L. L. De Remer, A. P. Atchison, Ida Mae Atchison, and Standard Accident Insurance Company, a corporation, defendants in error, as defendants or by name.

Plaintiffs began an action in the district court against defendants to recover judgment for an amount which they had expended in connection with the litigation and satisfaction of judgments obtained against them by reason of personal injuries sustained by J. H. Smith and E. E. Fey in an automobile collision involving Parrish’s truck and a Ford automobile operated by Fey, in which Smith was a passenger. Defendants interposed a motion for summary judgment, which was granted, and judgment was entered dismissing the action at plaintiffs’ costs. Plaintiffs by writ of error seek a reversal of the judgment.

It, is alleged in the amended complaint that: “Commercial Standard Insurance Company, one of the plaintiffs, issued to E. F. Parrish, the other plaintiff, its policy of insurance whereby it insured said E. F. Parrish against loss and expense arising or resulting from claims against him for damages resulting from or caused by the operation of a certain White truck hereinafter mentioned, and agreed to investigate accidents and defend suits brought against him by reason of any accident resulting from the use of said truck. That under the terms of said policy of insurance, the plaintiff Commercial Standard Insurance Company became and is subrogated, to the extent of its payments for loss, damage, claim and expense, to all rights of recovery against third persons by the plaintiff E. F. Parrish; that E. F. Parrish has authorized said Commercial Standard In *259 surance Company to prosecute its claims against the defendants herein set forth.”

It is further alleged that defendants De Remer and Atchison were, on September 14, 1936, awarded a contract designated as Anticipation Warrant Project No. 5005, which contract concerned the construction of a highway which at places crossed and coincided with a well-traveled highway in Colorado known and designated as Highway No. 24.

It is further alleged: “That it was the duty of said defendants in the conduct of construction operations under the aforesaid contract to provide a safe and adequate roadbed over which vehicles traveling on Highway No. 24 could pass by and through its construction work without inconvenience and without danger, and adequately and properly to warn drivers of approaching vehicles of any dangers to be incurred by reason of such construction work.”

It is further alleged that defendants, in conducting their contract operations: “Carelessly and negligently dug away and excavated a portion of said Highway 24 at a place in said Teller County where said highway coincided with the aforesaid project No. 5005; and thereafter to and on said day [November 3, 1936] permitted said portion of said highway to remain dug away and excavated; that on said day said defendants carelessly, unlawfully, and negligently obstructed said Highway No. 24 by directing and forcing vehicles traveling through the area under construction to travel over a narrow and unfinished portion of said contruction project which was dangerous and unsafe for travel; that said unfinished portion consisted of an unexcavated bench in a cut which had been, by said defendants, excavated through a hill immediately adjacent to and to the south and west of the place where said Highway No. 24 had been dug away as aforesaid; that said unexca-vated portion of said cut formed a bench or ramp extending from the highway under construction to High *260 way No. 24; that said bench or ramp was about 150 feet in length and about ten to twelve feet in width; that said ramp was of insufficient width to allow vehicles to pass; that said defendants erected and maintained barricades and barriers across said Highway No. 24 at the place where a portion of the same had been excavated as aforesaid, for the purpose of directing and forcing all west-bound vehicles to travel downward over the aforesaid ramp, and also in said cut at a point about 150 feet west from the place where the portion of said highway had been excavated as aforesaid, erected and maintained barricades and barriers for the purpose of directing and forcing eastbound vehicles to travel upward over the aforesaid ramp; that by reason of the location of said ramp along the wall of said cut, the drivers of vehicles going in an easterly direction on said ramp could not see vehicles approaching from the east on Highway No. 24; that prior to November 3, 1942 [1936], and on said day vehicles traveling over said ramp had caused ruts to be formed therein of such depth that trucks and automobiles driven thereon could not be turned out of said ruts; that on said day, November 3, 1942 [1936], said defendants permitted said ruts to be and remain unfilled; that the said defendants failed to provide warning signs, or any other means to warn the drivers of approaching vehicles that they were about to enter a road too narrow to permit the passing of vehicles; that the defendants failed to employ and post watchmen to guide and control traffic and to inform and warn drivers of approaching vehicles that they were about to enter a place of danger; that the defendants erected and maintained signs indicating that the way through their construction operations was safe for two-way travel; that said defendants erected and maintained the aforesaid barriers and barricades in such manner and in such places that drivers of vehicles could not drive elsewhere than on the aforesaid ramp and in the aforesaid ruts, al *261 though, except for said barriers and barricades, vehicles could have driven through the area in which said construction work was conducted, without danger and without inconvenience; that the defendants at said time knew or should have known that the means provided by them for passing traffic through their construction work was unsafe and was in fact dangerous, in that vehicles being driven in opposite directions would necessarily collide.”

It is further alleged that on November 3, 1936, Parrish’s truck, insured as hereinbefore stated, was being operated in an easterly direction at or near where Highway No. 24 coincided with the construction under Project No. 5005, and, while on the bench or ramp herein-before mentioned, collided with the above-mentioned Ford automobile, and “that by reason of the aforesaid carelessness and negligence of the said defendants * * * a collision occurred between said automobile and the said truck owned by defendant E. F. Parrish; that said collision occurred at the intersection of the Highway No. 24 with said bench; that by said collision the said automobile was demolished and the occupants thereof, E. E. Fey and J. H. Smith, suffered great personal injuries and the truck of said E. F. Parrish was greatly damaged; that the aforesaid collision and the injuries suffered by said E. E. Fey and J. H. Smith, and the damage to said Ford automobile, and the damage to said White truck were all solely, primarily and proximately caused by the negligence ¡of the defendants as aforesaid.” (Italics ours)

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Bluebook (online)
187 P.2d 597, 117 Colo. 256, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parrish-v-de-remer-colo-1947.