Riddle v. Dorough

187 So. 2d 568, 279 Ala. 527, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1063
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 2, 1966
Docket1 Div. 338
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 187 So. 2d 568 (Riddle v. Dorough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riddle v. Dorough, 187 So. 2d 568, 279 Ala. 527, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1063 (Ala. 1966).

Opinion

HARWOOD, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of the appellee, defendant below, in the Circuit Court of Baldwin County.

Appellant sued appellee for $25,000 for bodily injuries received when he was struck by the appellee’s automobile while attempting to cross a public highway near Bay *530 Minette. The appellant, who had been declared non-compos mentis, sued by his legal guardian, his wife, Gladys Riddle.

Count 1 alleged simple negligence and Count 2 charged wanton misconduct. The appellee plead the general issue and contributory negligence to Count 1 and the general issue to Count 2.

Upon conclusion of the testimony, the court gave the affirmative charge as to Count 2, the wanton count. The case was submitted to the jury on Count 1, and verdict was for the defendant. Judgment was entered pursuant to the verdict. No motion for a new trial was filed.

The plaintiff is a middle aged male who lives south of Bay Minette with his family. TIis residence is located approximately a half mile to the west of U. S. Highway 31 which runs from Bay Minette to Mobile. On the morning of the accident the appellant, around 8:30 o’clock, walked from his house to the highway to get mail from a mailbox which is located on the opposite or east side of the highway. The appellant’s general health is poor and his eyesight is limited to some extent. He uses a walking cane to assist him in his movements.

The testimony establishes that the appellant went to the highway unaccompanied and crossed the highway to the mailbox. Upon removing the mail from the mailbox he turned and started walking in a northerly direction toward Bay Minette. After having walked a short distance, he turned and started back toward the mailbox. He was walking on the east shoulder of the highway.

The appellee was driving her automobile in a northerly direction toward Bay Minette. The appellee’s four children and her father were passengers in her automobile. Apparently it had rained earlier that morning though the rain had ceased at the time of the accident. The appellee had been driving approximately forty to fifty miles per hour but she had just passed a sign indicating a speed limit of forty miles per hour and she decreased her speed to approximately thirty to thirty-five miles per hour. The appellee testified she observed the appellant walking on the shoulder of the road approximately “a block or two” away and that he was walking on the side of the highway facing the approaching traffic. She testified that when the distance had closed to approximately fifteen feet the appellant made an abrupt turn and walked onto the highway directly in front of her vehicle. When he stepped in front of her automobile, he waved a walking stick in her direction.

The appellee applied her brakes and swerved her automobile to the right in an attempt to avoid hitting the appellant who was now nearly in the center of the highway. The appellee testified that she was unable to avoid striking the appellant despite all efforts to do so and the left front of her automobile struck him.

Two witnesses who were in an automobile directly behind the automobile of the appellee gave similar testimony. The substance of their testimony is that they had been following the appellee’s automobile for a number of miles. The driver of this following vehicle testified that she observed the appellant when he was approximately four car lengths or a little more ahead of her. She was following- some three car lengths behind the appellee’s vehicle. When the appellee’s vehicle was only some two car lengths away from the appellant, he started across the highway. The passenger in the following automobile testified he observed the appellant when he was approximately four or five car lengths away and that nearly at the same time he saw the appellant, he stepped in- front of the appellee’s vehicle. This witness estimated that the appellee was within a car length or two of the appellant when he left the shoulder of the highway.

The appellee’s father testified he observed the appellant about “a block or a block and a half” away as he was walking *531 in a southerly direction along the shoulder and was facing the approaching traffic. The witness further testified that when they were within two car lengths the appellant suddenly turned to his right and started across the highway waving his cane as he did so.

The appellant was found competent to testify. The substance of the appellant’s testimony on direct examination was that after he had removed the mail from the box, he looked in both directions before attempting to cross the highway. To the north he observed a “van truck” which was proceeding in a southerly direction toward him. The truck was some 200 to 300 feet away from him at this time. He then looked to the south and observed two automobiles traveling toward Bay Minette. These vehicles were “500 feet or more” away.' The appellant waited until the truck passed and then started to cross the highway. The appellant testified that when the track passed the wind “sagged” him a little, but he felt he had time to get across and he attempted to cross the highway. The appellee’s car struck him when he had nearly reached the center line of the highway. The appellant testified that just before the automobile struck him he waved his cane and hands in that direction.

On cross examination the appellant testified that after he removed the mail he walked up the highway for a short distance and then turned and started back. He observed the truck approaching from one direction and the two cars from the other. The appellant then testified that when the track passed he felt that he had time to get across. The approaching automobiles were still approximately 200 feet away. The appellant testified that he took some five or six steps and had nearly reached the center line of the highway when he looked in the direction of the approaching vehicles and realized that the automobile was within one car length of him. He waved his walking stick and then the automobile struck him. The appellant was later asked on cross examination if it wasn’t true that when he stepped out onto the paved portion of the highway that the approaching automobile was only one or two car lengths away from him. The appellant answered in the affirmative.

The appellee, her father, and the two witnesses traveling in the automobile following the appellee all denied that there was a track approaching from the opposite direction just prior to the accident.

Testimony was submitted by the investigating officer and other witnesses establishing that the appellant, after being struck by the appellee’s vehicle, was found to be lying in a position some 22 steps north of the mail box and nearly in the center of the highway.

The appellant argues some fourteen assignments of error in brief.

The appellant urges under assignment number 1 that the trial court erred in allowing, over appellant’s objection, a city policeman to testify on cross examination that he had warned the appellant, because of his physical infirmities, not to ever get out on the highway unaccompanied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 So. 2d 568, 279 Ala. 527, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riddle-v-dorough-ala-1966.