Roberts v. Gray

122 A.2d 855, 119 Vt. 153, 1956 Vt. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 1, 1956
Docket1831
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 122 A.2d 855 (Roberts v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Gray, 122 A.2d 855, 119 Vt. 153, 1956 Vt. LEXIS 94 (Vt. 1956).

Opinion

Jeffords, C. J.

This is an action of tort arising out of an automobile accident. There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff and the case is here on exceptions of the defendant.

*155 The one which we first will consider is to the refusal of the trial court to grant his motion for a directed verdict. This motion was based on three grounds which were [1] that the defendant was not guilty of negligence which was a part of the proximate cause of the accident, [2] that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and [3] that the plaintiff is barred from recovery under the doctrine of assumption of risk.

There was a sharp dispute in the testimony as to several material facts, but from the evidence taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, as it must be in determining whether error was committed in not granting the motion on any of the three grounds, the jury reasonably could have found the following material facts: The accident happened in a parking lot adjacent to a dance pavilion in the town of Barre shortly after the end of the dance. There were a large number of cars parked in the lot, 60 or more. Most if not all of them were parked in rows. The defendant’s car, a panel truck, was parked in the front row facing the highway. There were several rows of cars behind his. There was only one exit from the lot and that was from its front. There was a space of about ten feet between the rows of cars.

Shortly before the end of the dance the plaintiff had cramps in his stomach and left the dance hall. These cramps were brought on by dysentery which he had suffered for some time. He went into a lane between the cars and stood three or four feet behind the defendant’s car in a stooping position with his head about four feet from the ground, as he thought he "might throw up.” As he stood there he was concerned about how the cars were parked and his stomach.

While he was standing there, and for a few minutes before, people were leaving the dance hall and there was quite a bit of activity in the parking lot. Cars were starting and were leaving from the "top” of the lot and going to the main entrance. None of these cars backed up before leaving and the plaintiff did not expect that any would back into the lane where he was standing. There was no car in front of the defendant’s.

*156 The plaintiff had been standing in the lane behind the defendant’s car about a minute when the defendant backed his car and hit and injured the plaintiff. The plaintiff did not hear the motor in defendant’s car start and he received no warning that the car was going to back.

The ground in the parking lot was quite rough. There were lights on in certain parts of the pavilion but it was rather dark in the parking area. The plaintiff had drunk from two to four bottles of beer during the time he was at the dance but showed no signs of being intoxicated. The defendant had drunk some intoxicating liquor during the intermission of the dance. When he came from the pavilion to leave and got to his car he looked but did not see anything behind it. He got into his car, turned on the lights and started to back and while backing he looked out the side window and the back window and saw nothing. The bottom of his rear-view mirror was about five feet from the ground.

The grounds of the motion will be considered in the order that they are above set forth. The case was tried on the theory, acquiesced in by the court and counsel, that the parking lot, so far as the case was concerned, was to be treated as a public highway. The theory thus adopted whether right or wrong became the law of the trial. Perkins v. Vt. Hydro-Electric Co., 106 Vt 367, 417, 418, 177 A 631.

V. S. 47, § 10,219 [XI] provides, "A person shall not turn or back a vehicle of any kind in a public highway without taking due and reasonable care to avoid injury to other users of the highway in so doing.” Under this statute it was the duty of the defendant to make such use of his eyes and ears before and while backing as a careful and prudent man would make in like circumstances; and, since the backing of any vehicle entails more or less limitation of the view by the driver of the area to be traversed, it requires corresponding vigilance on his part to avoid causing injury to persons who are known to be or likely to be there. It was also his duty to take any other precautions that a prudent man would take under like circumstances. If, in the exercise of ordinary prudence, a signal was necessary to warn them that he was about to back *157 up, there was an obligation to give it. Mc Kale v. Weeks, 115 Vt 155, 156, 55 A2d 199, and cases cited. The jury well could have found that a prudent person would have signaled that he was about to back his car by the sounding of its horn and that the defendant in failing so to do was negligent. They also would have been warranted in finding either that the defendant did not look behind his car as he claimed, or if he did, that he did not look as effectively as a prudent person in like circumstances would have done and for this reason he was negligent.

It is not negligence to fail to take precautionary measures to prevent accidents or injuries resulting from a peculiar, unusual, and unexpected occurrence which could not have been reasonably anticipated. 65 CJS 592. For cases with holdings to the same effect see Botticelli v. Winters, 125 Conn 537, 7 A2d 443, 445, and Prue v. Goodrich Oil Co., 49 RI 120, 140 A 665.

From the evidence tending to show that the defendant’s car was in the front row of the parked cars with no car in front of it; that all of the cars which were leaving were going out through the only exit from the lot which was at its front and none of these backed before leaving, the jury well could have found that the backing of defendant’s car was an unusual and unexpected occurrence which the plaintiff could not be charged with a reasonable anticipation of happening. For this reason it cannot be held as a matter of law that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.

The doctrine of assumption of risk is founded upon the maxim volenti non fit injuria and implies that the person against whom it is invoked voluntarily, that is, by the exercise of free will and intelligent choice, has put himself in the way of a danger which he knew and comprehended, or was so obvious that he must be taken to have known and comprehended it. Watterlund v. Billings, 112 Vt 256, 261, 23 A2d 540, and cases cited. From the evidence just above set forth it is apparent that it cannot here be said, as a matter of law, that the risk was assumed by the plaintiff, within the rule above set forth. There was no error in the denial of the motion for a verdict on this or either of the other two grounds.

*158 The defendant made a binding request for an instruction to the jury of non-liability because of the doctrine of assumption of risk and also excepted to the court’s failure to so charge. There is no need to recite the request or the wording of the exception to the failure to charge.

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Bluebook (online)
122 A.2d 855, 119 Vt. 153, 1956 Vt. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-gray-vt-1956.