Rodi v. Florida Greyhound Lines

62 So. 2d 355, 1952 Fla. LEXIS 1908
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 22, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 62 So. 2d 355 (Rodi v. Florida Greyhound Lines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodi v. Florida Greyhound Lines, 62 So. 2d 355, 1952 Fla. LEXIS 1908 (Fla. 1952).

Opinion

62 So.2d 355 (1952)

RODI et al.
v.
FLORIDA GREYHOUND LINES, Inc.

Supreme Court of Florida, en Banc.

December 22, 1952.
Rehearing Denied January 16, 1953.

*356 John R. Parkhill and W.N. Burnside, Tampa, for appellants.

Shackleford, Farrior, Shannon & Stallings, Tampa, for appellee.

ROBERTS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment on a verdict directed in defendant's favor by the trial judge in a personal injuries case instituted by the plaintiff-appellant in the court below, in which the principal issue is whether the trial judge erred in directing such verdict. In determining such question, this court is required to consider the testimony adduced in the cause in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Conflicts will be disregarded, and every reasonable intendment deducible from the evidence must be indulged in plaintiff's favor. With this rule in mind, we will relate only that portion of the testimony most favorable to the plaintiff, and will not unduly lengthen this opinion by recounting in detail the many inconsistencies and conflicts in the evidence, except as necessary. The parties will be referred to as they were in the court below.

The accident in which plaintiff was injured occurred at about 10 o'clock at night, on the crest of a small hill about 2.4 miles south of the City of Lake Wales. A bus owned by defendant and being driven by its agent on its regular run was proceeding in a northerly direction when its motor stalled. The driver brought the bus to a stop with all four wheels on the pavement at a point about 105 feet short of the crest of the hill on the south, or upgrade, side thereof. The driver then alighted from the bus and proceeded to the rear of the bus, where the engine was located. One of the passengers testified that she heard a tapping at the rear of the bus. No flares or fusees had been put out by the driver at the time of the accident in question, but all the lights on the bus were left burning. There is evidence that as much as five minutes may have elapsed between the time the driver got out of the bus and the time that the accident occurred. The bus driver testified that after the accident he placed the flares at the proper places and that this took him "two or three minutes."

The plaintiff, who was also proceeding in a northerly direction, approached the bus from the rear and was signaled to stop his car by the bus driver. The plaintiff, according to his testimony, then stopped his car in the right-hand lane directly behind the bus and offered his assistance. The driver declined such assistance and signalled the plaintiff to go on around the bus. The plaintiff then turned out into the left-hand lane to go around the bus and had proceeded approximately one-half the length of the bus (which was 35 feet long) when his car was struck by a car driven by one Ward and proceeding in the opposite, or southerly direction. The plaintiff testified that he did not see the lights of the on-coming Ward car; that "the minute I turned the car to the left and then straight, then I was directly in front, and that's when I got hit, just like a flash."

The bus driver testified that he saw the lights of the Ward car, but his testimony is in conflict with that of the plaintiff as to the exact position of the plaintiff's car when the driver directed him to go around the bus. The driver testified that, when the motor failed, "* * * I looked and seen some lights quite a distance off coming from the front of the bus, and I looked and seen a car coming from the back. I walks back to the back of the bus, walks around back and flags that car coming on my side of the road behind me. Then as he pulls up he acknowledges, blinks his lights, and pulls up to about twenty feet of the bus and stops. I starts to go on around the bus to my flare box and he pulls up to the side of me and he asked if he could help me. I told him, `No, fellow. There's not a thing you can do, but you better get out of the road.' Then the crash occurred. The cars — the on-coming car, coming the other way, hit this car there, the one that was stopped in the road."

From the driver's testimony, the implication is that the lights of the car seen by the driver approaching from the front of the bus were those of the Ward *357 car; but another of defendant's witnesses testified that he was expecting to meet one of the passengers on the bus at Lake Wales; that he learned there that the bus was running late, due to engine trouble; that he went out to meet the bus; that he passed the bus after it was stalled on the hill; that the bus driver signalled to him with his flashlight; that he went on past the bus and met the plaintiff's car travelling at a slow rate of speed some 200 or 300 feet behind the bus; that he proceeded about 600 feet on down the road and turned around; that just as he was straightened out good, he heard the crash of the collision of plaintiff's and Ward's cars. This testimony is corroborated by that of a passenger on the bus, who testified that the witness was waiting for her when she got off the bus after the accident, and is significant on the question of whether the bus driver had had time to place a fusee or flares before the accident occurred. It is also sufficient, when considered in connection with other testimony, that it may have been five minutes between the time of the accident and the time when the driver alighted from the bus, to present a jury question as to whether the driver had, in fact, had time to put out the flares, as required by law.

A passenger in the Ward car (Ward did not testify) stated that they were travelling about 45 or 50 miles per hour, and that "As we came over the crest of the hill there was the bus and the other car in the middle of the road. You couldn't tell, to begin with, if the bus was moving or not, right in the split second." He also stated that, after they came over the crest, "We noticed the bus was still and this other car was coming around it and we swerved to miss it and didn't." His explanation for not seeing the lights until they reached the top of the hill was that there was a curve on the side of the hill from which they were approaching.

The defendant offered the testimony of an engineer to the effect that the hill had an average grade of two and one-half percent and that, on such a grade, the headlights of Ward's and the plaintiff's cars should have been visible, each to the other, a distance of 465 feet. The trial judge, in ruling on defendant's motion for a directed verdict, relied entirely on this evidence as an incontrovertible "physical fact," and rejected the testimony of the plaintiff and Ward's passenger respecting the visibility of the other's headlights. He also disregarded the testimony of a highway patrolman, offered by defendant, to the effect that the lights of on-coming cars approaching from the north were visible "just before they came over the crest of the hill," when standing at the point of impact, which was some 122 feet below the crest of the hill.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 2d 355, 1952 Fla. LEXIS 1908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodi-v-florida-greyhound-lines-fla-1952.