Safeway Cab Service Co. v. Minor

1937 OK 376, 70 P.2d 76, 180 Okla. 448, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 459
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 8, 1937
DocketNo. 27116.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1937 OK 376 (Safeway Cab Service Co. v. Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safeway Cab Service Co. v. Minor, 1937 OK 376, 70 P.2d 76, 180 Okla. 448, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 459 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

BAYLESS, V. C. J.

Mrs. F. E. Minor recovered a judgment in the district court of Oklahoma county against Safeway Cab Service Company, and the company appeals.

The plaintiff’s cause of action is for *449 damages for personal injuries sustained as the result of being struck by one of the defendant’s cabs. The plaintiff was her only witness as to the accident, and the cab driver was the defendant’s only witness thereto. The plaintiff alighted from her dar, which was headed south and on the west side of the street, and proceeded east and in front of defendant’s cab, which she saw parked by the curb on the east side of the street headed north. This was 'about the middle of the block. She says the cab was stopped, but started up suddenly when she stepped in front of it, and knocked her down. She saw and observed the cab at all times. The driver testified he had stopped the cab and had unloaded his passengers, and had the engine in low gear, and had barely put the cab in motion when he observed plaintiff running-in front of his cab. He testified, further, that he stopped his dab before striking her, and that she became confused and alarmed and fell to the pavement.

One of the contentions of defendant is that there was no evidence of primary negligence on its part, faking into consideration the plaintiff’s testimony in its most favorable light. This is indeed a close question. In many respects it is similar to the case of White Line, etc., Co. v. Waterman, 150 Okla. 277, 3 P. (2d) 839, cited and relied upon by defendant. After a careful comparison of that case with the one before us, we are of the opinion there is one controlling difference. In that case the injured party stepped in front of a moving vehicle at a point where pedestrians were forbidden to cross streets. In this dase, taking plaintiff’s testimony to be true, as we must in the face of a demurrer, she stepped in front of a standing vehicle, although it was at a point where she was forbidden to cross the street. The question whether the driver of the defendant’s cab was negligent under these circumstances is one of sufficient doubt to prevent the court from determining the matter, but on the contrary to require its submission to the jury.

Another contention of the defendant concerns the questions asked prospective jurors by attorney for plaintiff about their connection with public liability companies. Specifically, the question asked is very similar to the one approved by us in Beasley v. Bond, 173 Okla. 355, 48 P. (2d) 299, provided it was asked in good faith. Defendant contends the plaintiff’s attorney was not in good faith in asking the question, and cites statements made by said attorney concerning his intentions. These statements evinced an intention to ask such questions of every juror called, and it appears they were so asked. We are doubtful of the propriety of this attitude on the part of plaintiff’s attorney.

This is becoming one of the most perplexing problems this court is dalled upon to consider. It is not necessary for us to repeat herein what we said in Beasley v. Bond, supra. The cases from the courts of the various states in the Union show how they have met the situation. The plaintiff has the right to elicit information concerning the business connections of prospective jurors. Yet we have s'aid, and still recognize, that a jury is likely to be swayed in finding against defendant and in fixing the amount of the recovery by knowledge that the defendant is indemnified. Our problem is to say how far the plaintiff m'ay go in eliciting information in good faith, and when the effect of such questioning is to convey expressly or by inference to the jury information that the defendant is indemnified, which is bad faith. However, since much of the determination of the propriety of such questions is left to the trial judge, and we seldom if ever have more than the printed record before us, the matter of determining good or bad faith is intensified.

We cannot lay down a hard and fast pattern for the attorneys to follow, but can only outline what we think is proper procedure and le'ave the application of the rule or its analogous aspects to the fair discretion of the trial judges. There certainly are methods of approaching the issue in a fair manner and in keeping with the rule of liaw we have announced, as opposed to an arbitrary and indiscriminate question of prospective jurors irrespective of the needs of the occasion.

The attorneys should ask preliminary questions which might eliminate further questions. For instance, if a juror is asked if he owns stock in any corporation or is employed- by one, and answers in the negative, further questions are unnecessary. If the juror answers in the affirmative, inquiry as to the type of corporation is proper. If fhe answer discloses that it is a corporation other than one engaged in insurance business, further questions are unnecessary. If the answer discloses that it is an insurance corporation, then pertinent and specific questions 'are proper in order to establish the prospective jurors’ partiality, etc. By this method of approach the information may be elicited without laying stress upon one particular type of company. The questions proper in the course of the examina *450 tion then will develop the one type or the particular company. This method used under proper supervision by the trial court will eliminate much of the difficulty of this problem.

Reversal is also sought because of the giving of certain instructions.

Instruction No. 18, submitted to the jury, mead:

“You are further instructed that it is further provided by the ordinance of the city of Oklahoma City as follows:
“ ‘Pedestrians shall cross highways within the business loop at sidewalks extending only, provided that persons alighting from railway cars shall proceed to the nearest (Curb.’
“To cross' a street at la place not designated by the ordinances is a violation of the same and would be negligence on the ¡part of the one so crossing the street ordinarily, but in this case if you find that the plaintiff had crossed the street and was at or near the curb while the defendant’s cab was standing at the curb on the east side of Hudson street and he saw or could have seen the plaintiff there by the use of ordinary care and diligence and then started his cab at that time and struck the plaintiff, it would make no difference whether or not the plaintiff violated the law in crossing the street.”

The evidence of the plaintiff is that the car started up after she stepped in front of it. The evidence of the driver is that just as he started up — just the instant he put the car in motion — the plaintiff ran in front of the car. The jury had the duty of determining which was true — that is, whether plaintiff was in front of the car, and the driver started it and struck her, when he would have seen her there had he been looking ahead; or whether her approach from the side was co-incidental with the starting of the car and sudden, 'and whether the driver was guilty of negligence thereafter under the last clear chance doctrine. The law is that a driver of a vehicle, under such circumstances, is not bound to anticipate the approach of pedestrians at such point in the street. Owens v. Tisdale (La. App.) 153 So. 564, Instruction No. 19 is a proper statement of the duty the driver owed to the public. To us the part of instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 376, 70 P.2d 76, 180 Okla. 448, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safeway-cab-service-co-v-minor-okla-1937.