Roh v. Opocensky

251 N.W. 102, 125 Neb. 551, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 240
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1933
DocketNo. 28605
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 251 N.W. 102 (Roh v. Opocensky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roh v. Opocensky, 251 N.W. 102, 125 Neb. 551, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 240 (Neb. 1933).

Opinion

Goss, C. J.

This is an action for damages to plaintiff as a guest in defendant’s automobile, driven by his wife. Defendant appeals from a judgment against him.

The injury occurred June 29, 1931. The driver owed the guest the duty of ordinary care. Garrotto v. Butera, 123 Neb. 682. It should be noted that the action did not come under the guest statute approved May 1, 1931 (without an emergency section), exempting the owner or operator from liability unless guilty of gross negligence. Laws 1931, ch. 105. The legislature adjourned May 2, 1931. The act did not take effect until three calendar months thereafter. Const, art. Ill, sec. 27.

Plaintiff, 46, is the wife of a farmer living about two miles east of Abie in Butler county. Defendant is a Willys automobile distributor in South Omaha. The families had been friends since 1921. On June 29, 1931, the Bishop [552]*552was to be at the-. Abie church at 2 o’clock to confirm children. Several of the Roh children were to be confirmed. Anna Roh, 13,.daughter of plaintiff, wrote to Josephine Opocensky, 39, wife of defendant, requesting her to be ' sponsor for her on this occasion. Mrs. Opocensky accepted and invited Helen Stava, married daughter of plaintiff living in Omaha, to accompany her. She accepted and went to the home of defendant to start. For the trip- defendant provided a nearly new sedan, used for demonstration purposes', and Mrs. Opocensky drove it to the Roh home on the morning, of .June 29. . Mrs. Stava testified she had previously heard her brother, 26, ask defendant to bring out a demonstrator as his father was in the market for a new car; that when witness called his attention- to the fact they were to take the Willys car, defendant informed her he wanted his wife to show it to the folks and if she sold it she would get a fat commission. After a midday dinner, Mrs. Opocensky started to drive her car to church 'with Anna, the daughter, in the front seat and with Mrs. Roh, Mrs. Stava, and two other of her children in the rear seat. Mr. Roh and other children followed in their . family car. The road west to the. village was a dirt road with some hills on the way. Mrs. Opocensky had driven a car steadily for the past two years and had driven intermittently before that. She testified that she drove over a hill' or two, took a start for the next one “and as I got on top of the hill going down, why my car started swaying, I. held it and did all I could to keep it in the road, and I don’t know what happened; all at once I was out and all of a sudden it was turned upside down and I didn’t know what happened.”

The evidence shows that the car finally turned rather sharply to the right and then turned over toward the left just off the traveled part of the roadway at a point where there was no ditch but where it was practically on a level with the roadway. It turned only half way over so it rested on its top with its wheels in the air. The left front tiré was partly off the rim in the vicinity of the stem. [553]*553The casing was not injured, so it was not what is called a blowout. But the inner tube was deflated: with a .rip rum ning each way from the stem. There was-also some tes-, timony that the tracks of the car as it came down, the hill' did not differ from the ordinary. From this evidence it might be inferred that the inner tube was torn and deflated in the last movement of the car just before it turned ovér, but from the swerving of the car as it went down the hill, the jury might infer that the tire became deflated at some distance before it stopped. Both, theories are presented in the evidence and arguments.

•- Helen Stava, when asked what happened at the hill before the car upset, testified: “Mrs; Opocensky was driving. quite fast, and I remarked to her, ‘Josie, you máy be going about forty but, I says, back here it seems.like we are sailing;’ and she says, ‘Don’t worry, Helen, I.am all right.’ ” ¡

Stanley Stava, husband of Helen, employed by defendant in his garage, testified that, after the accident, he, and defendant drove to the Roh home, arriving that afternoon; Mrs. Opocensky was waiting for them at the house gate when they arrived; defendant asked her, “ ‘How fast were you going?’ she says, ‘Well, I wasn’t going so fast, until the second hill before we came to this place, I was. going to give the. car a run so we could go up the next hill,, and give the folks a thrill like a roller coaster, and when we got on that next hill the car began to give a weave, and it went so fast I don’t know what happened after that.’ ”

. ..In the petition :the acts of negligence of the driver of the automobile are charged in narrative form' in one long sentence; so in the. first instruction the court abstracted the ‘charges -from -the -petition and in his own words particularly stated the negligence charged against the driver as‘follows: - "

•j:“(a) That she-operated said automobile., at- a high .and dangerous rate- of speed; without having .the same' under proper control:;, ■■ •

[554]*554“(b) That she so operated said automobile without attempting to stop or decrease the speed thereof, when one of the tires became deflated;

“(c) That she negligently operated said automobile so that it swayed first to one side and then to the other, for. a distance of about 100 yards, and then swerved to the right side of the highway and fell on its left side.”

A later instruction, giving the elements required to be estáblished by a preponderance of the evidence, contained one element to the effect that the negligence of the driver must be so established in one or more of the particulars set out in the first instruction and that such negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.

Defendant argues that the court erred in giving the instruction (a), just quoted, and in giving, in connection therewith, an instruction outlining the statute prohibiting driving on a highway “at a rate of speed greater than is reasonable and proper, having regard for the traffic and use of the road and the condition of the road, nor at a rate of speed such as to endanger the life or limb of any person, nor in any case at a rate of speed exceeding forty-five miles per hour.” Comp. St. 1929, sec. 39-1102. After quoting the foregoing provisions, the instruction advised the jury that, while a failure to observe the provisions of the statute was not conclusive evidence of negligence, yet, if they found it had been violated in any particular, such evidence of violation might be considered, in connection with all the other evidence and circumstances proved, in determining whether or not the violator was guilty of negligence in the premises. Defendant argues that there was no evidence of a speed of over 40 miles an hour and that such speed over a “level and dry country road” is not evidence of negligence. That was the limit of speed in miles per hour testified to by any witness. It must be admitted that this evidence of speed from witnesses who were inside the car and did not testify from the indication of the speedometer is not of the highest value. Yet it was for the jury to consider. Moreover, Anna Roh, the daughter who sat with Mrs. [555]*555Opocensky, when asked what she noticed, if anything, about whether she used the brakes, answered, “She didn’t use the brakes, she stepped on the gas, because we would go faster.”

Defendant cites Kelly v. Gagnon, 121 Neb. 113, as an authority that all negligence as to speed should have been withdrawn from the jury.

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Related

Peacock v. JL Brandeis & Sons
60 N.W.2d 643 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1953)
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Roh ex rel. Roh v. Opocensky
253 N.W. 680 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
251 N.W. 102, 125 Neb. 551, 1933 Neb. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roh-v-opocensky-neb-1933.