Rainbo Baking Co. v. S & S Trucking Co.

459 S.W.2d 155, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 30, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 459 S.W.2d 155 (Rainbo Baking Co. v. S & S Trucking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rainbo Baking Co. v. S & S Trucking Co., 459 S.W.2d 155, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 126 (Ky. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

At about 1:45 A.M. on a clear night in October of 1967 a truck-trailer unit owned by Rainbo Baking Company and driven by its employe, Herbert Tye, collided with the rear end of a disabled truck-trailer unit owned by S & S Trucking Company and operated by its employe, Dewey Davis, under lease to Sharpe Motor Lines, Inc. In the ensuing litigation Davis and S & S obtained a verdict and judgment against Tye and Rainbo for personal injuries and property damages and the claims of Tye and Rainbo against Davis, S & S and Sharpe were dismissed. Tye and Rainbo appealed, and Tye having since died, the administratrix of his estate has been substituted as a party.

The appellants contend that Davis was negligent as a matter of law, for which reason a verdict should have been directed on the claims of Davis and S & S against Tye and Rainbo, and that the instruction relating to Davis’ duties was erroneous. Both contentions center on the subject of setting out warning flares or signals when a truck becomes disabled on a highway.

The collision took place in the west or southbound portion of U.S. 127, a 4-lane divided highway, about a mile and a half north of Harrodsburg. Davis, carrying a load of furniture from North Carolina, had been traveling northward, but after passing through Harrodsburg he began to have engine trouble and turned back toward town in order to find a mechanic. As he proceeded southward his motor stalled and he was unable to start it again. He did the best he could to get the truck-trailer unit onto the shoulder, but when it came to rest it extended about six feet onto the main traveled portion of the southbound highway, which at this point was 23 feet wide with a broken white line marking the center. According to Davis, all of his lights, including headlights, clearance lights, and 4-way blinkers, were burning. Eight of the clearance lights were located on the rear end of the trailer and were visible to traffic coming from that direction.

[157]*157At a distance of .6 miles north of the point where Davis stopped the highway tops the crest of a small hill. Between these two points it is straight and there is nothing to obstruct the view of a driver approaching from the north.

At about the time Davis got out of his truck another truck moving in the same direction stopped alongside and its driver offered help, but Davis asked him to go on into town and send a wrecker or a mechanic. This driver then gave Davis two fusee-type flares and went on. Davis had several more of the same type flares on hand, and he proceeded at once to place and ignite three of them along the highway to the rear at distances of 30 feet, 100 feet and 600 feet north of his trailer.

After Davis had lighted the flares a southbound stake truck operated by a man named Patterson stopped in front of Davis’ vehicle and Patterson offered help. According to Davis, Patterson also left his clearance lights and 4-way blinkers burning. Patterson professed to have had some experience with truck engines, so he and Davis jacked up the cab of Davis’ truck in order to inspect under the hood. Patterson then suggested tightening the cable connecting the starter with the battery, and returned to his own truck for a screwdriver. While Patterson was on this mission the Rainbo truck collided with the rear end of Davis’ unit and knocked it a distance of 44 feet. Meanwhile, Davis says, several other southbound vehicles had passed by without incident. Both Davis and Patterson were hit by the Davis truck as it was propelled forward by the force of the impact.

Patterson did not testify. Davis could not say whether the flares were still burning as of the moment of the collision, because from his position in front of his tractor-trailer he could not see the highway behind it and to the north. He estimated, however, that at the time of the accident his unit had been stopped for 15 to 20 minutes and that the kind of fusees he had put out ordinarily burn for 15 to 20 minutes.

The first or second southbound vehicle approaching after the collision was a Kil-lion truck. Its driver did not testify, but his affidavit was read in behalf of Tye and Rainbo. He did not notice any lights or signals and was unaware of the wreck ahead until his headlights disclosed the presence of the vehicles involved in it. He applied his brakes, cut to the left and stopped in the inner southbound lane of the highway just beyond the Patterson truck.

The other southbound vehicle that appeared on the scene very closely after the accident was a truck driven by James Douglas Arthur, who testified for Davis and S & S. Whether Arthur’s truck or the Killion vehicle was the first to arrive is not clear, but anyway, Arthur said that as he topped the crest of the hill he saw “a red light burning and it burned for just a second or so and went right out, and it attracted my attention.” We continue with pertinent quotations from his testimony as follows:

Q. “Where was this?”
A. “North of where the wreck was, as I topped the little rise there.”
Q. “Do you know what that red light was ?”
A. “No, sir, I don’t know. It appeared to be a flare, but I wouldn’t swear one way or the other whether it was or not.”
Q. “You have been driving trucks for seven, eight or nine years?”
A. “Yes, sir.”
Q. “You have seen many truck flares on the highway in that time, haven’t you ?”
A. “Yes, sir, I have.”
Q. “What did you do after you had seen the flare and then your headlights, a quarter of a mile away, picked up the trucks — what did you then do ?”
[158]*158A. “I was running on low beam — but back before I even got to the rise — there is something I didn’t say — I had met a car or truck one — I don’t remember which it was — but it flashed its lights like there might be a state policeman ahead with radar, like they do sometimes, or a wreck ahead or something, so I flipped my lights on bright and didn’t see anything, and then I topped this little rise and I noticed this red light and I flipped them on bright when it went out and I could see a faint something up there, and I flipped my road lights on and that brightened things up almost like daylight, and I could see the wreckage up there. I flipped my clearance lights at the traffic behind me and turned on my 4-way flashers, and seen a guy running across there with a light in his hand from out in the middle of the grass there.”
Q. “Who was that — did you find out?”
A. “It was the man driving the S & S truck.”
* * * * * *
(On cross-examination:)
Q. “And then as you went over the rise, I believe you said you saw a red light of some variety and then it went out the minute you saw it — in fact, I believe you said in your statement that that was what made you notice it, because you saw it — first, it was there and then it wasn’t there?”
A. “And then it wasn’t.”
* * * * * *
Q. “Did you see any flares out when you got out of your truck?”
A. “I didn’t look for any.”
Q.

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Bluebook (online)
459 S.W.2d 155, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rainbo-baking-co-v-s-s-trucking-co-kyctapp-1970.