Phillips v. Tooele City Corporation

500 P.2d 669, 28 Utah 2d 223, 1972 Utah LEXIS 835
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1972
Docket12740
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 500 P.2d 669 (Phillips v. Tooele City Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Tooele City Corporation, 500 P.2d 669, 28 Utah 2d 223, 1972 Utah LEXIS 835 (Utah 1972).

Opinion

CALLISTER, Chief Justice:

Plaintiffs initiated this action to recover property damages, which were incurred when their jointly owned automobile collided in an intersection with a garbage truck operated by defendant’s agent in Tooele, Utah. The plaintiffs’ vehicle was being operated by Ruby Phillips’ sixteen-year-old married daughter, Phyllis Perkins, pursuant to permission granted by her mother. Plaintiff Luke Phillips was not the father of said driver and had never granted her permission to operate the vehicle. Mr. Phillips was at work at the time of the incident. The jointly owned automobile had been acquired with funds derived from a family business, where both plaintiffs worked alternate shifts. Ruby Phillips had signed her daughter’s application for a driver’s license, and pursuant to Section 41-2-10(2), U.C.A.1953, she was the person declared by the legislature to “be jointly and severally liable with such minor for any damages caused by such negligence or willful misconduct.”

At the conclusion of the presentation of plaintiffs’ evidence, the defendant moved to dismiss the action, which was granted. The trial court determined as a matter of law that Phyllis Perkins was negligent in that she failed to keep a proper lookout regarding defendant’s truck and that she failed to yield the right of way to the truck; said negligence was a proximate contributing cause to the resulting collision. The trial court held that the driver’s negligence was imputed to plaintiffs by virtue of law, i.e., plaintiffs provided the vehicle to the minor driver, Section 41-2-22, U.C.A.1953, and Ruby Phillips signed *226 the minor’s driver’s license application, Section 41-2-10(2), U.C.A.19S3.

On December 18, 1970, Phyllis Perkins was proceeding westerly on Utah Avenue towards the intersection at 5th Street in Tooele, Utah. The roadway was completely covered in snow, and Phyllis was driving at a speed of approximately 15 m. p.h. (22 feet per second). Approximately one-half block prior to the intersection (at a point identified by the investigating police officer as approximately 200 or 250 feet), the driver observed a garbage truck, which appeared stopped at the north edge of the intersection near the center of 5th Street. ' After this initial observation, Phyllis proceeded slowly, and was unaware of the truck until it appeared at her right side, and the collision occurred, in the northwest quarter of the intersection near the center line. The point of impact on the automobile was approximately 24 inches behind the right front headlight, and the force of the collision pushed the vehicle into the southwest corner of the intersection. The investigating police officer testified that the garbage truck driver related that as he approached the intersection he looked to the right but failed to look to the left until he was too close to the intersection to stop and avoid hitting the oncoming car from the left. There were no other vehicles on the roadway or any other obstructions to Mrs. Perkins’ vision, which would have distracted her or prevented her from seeing the truck in the interim between her initial observation and the time of collision. There were no traffic control devices at the intersection, and defendant’s southbound truck on 5th Street had the right of way over plaintiffs’ westbound vehicle.

On appeal, plaintiffs urge that the trial court erred in its determination that Phyllis Perkins was contributorily negligent as a matter of law and that this issue should have been submitted to the trier of facts.

The trial court may properly take the issue from the jury and rule as a matter of law that plaintiff was contributorily negligent only if the evidence demonstated that fact with sufficient certainty that all reasonable minds would so find. 1

Plaintiffs argue that by defendant’s driver having stopped at the open intersection, he waived the right of way and that as the disfavored driver when he entered the intersection, without looking, his negligence was the sole proximate cause of the accident or so the jury could have found.

The emphasis upon the preferred status of either driver will not resolve the issue, for this right is not absolute, and one who has the right of way may not *227 claim it in the face of a danger, which one exercising due care would see and avoid. The rights and duties of drivers approaching intersections are questions dealing with the standard of conduct to he expected of a reasonably prudent man. 2

In Martin v. Stevens 3 this court observed that in each of the cited cases wherein a driver was held contributorily negligent as a matter of law, the negligence, or manner of driving of the other driver was such that the driver appraising the situation was alerted to it or by using due care would have been so alerted in time so that by the exercise of ordinary precaution he could have avoided the collision.

Hickok v. Skinner 4 is particularly applicable to the instant action.' In that case this court affirmed the determination of the trial court that plaintiff was contribu-torily negligent as a matter of law. This court observed that even if the defendant should have yielded the right of way, plaintiff was not absolved of his negligence for his prolonged inattention to approaching traffic. The evidence failed to establish a traffic situation which required the attention of a reasonably careful driver to be so restricted as to prevent a second observation towards the approaching vehicle. The time element, even if it were less than was shown by the evidence, was such that a reasonably prudent and careful person would have glanced several times towards the approaching car, while traversing the distance from the point of initial observation to the point of collision.

In the Hickok case, this court refuted the assertion of plaintiff that since he had looked once and concluded that he had time to clear the intersection, he was not negligent in his failing to look again. This court pointed out that plaintiff had disregarded two factors of controlling significance, first, he was uninformed of the speed of defendant’s approaching vehicle; second, the speed at which plaintiff was traveling and the distance that he had to travel before he entered defendant’s path of travel permitted him time to look and to reappraise the relative positions of the cars and permitted him ample opportunity to correct his first conclusion, if he had erroneously estimated the distance the defendant’s car was from the intersection. 5 This court concluded that both drivers have the duties of being heedful and of maintaining a proper lookout and that plaintiff was neglectful in both particulars and no jury could reasonably find that he was not negligent.

In the instant action, when Phyllis Perkins, at a distance of one-half block, ini *228 tially observed the truck, it was already in the intersection and by its location had the preferred driver status.

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Bluebook (online)
500 P.2d 669, 28 Utah 2d 223, 1972 Utah LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-tooele-city-corporation-utah-1972.