Samson v. Nahulu.

363 P.3d 263, 136 Haw. 415, 2015 Haw. LEXIS 327
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 2015
DocketSCWC-10-0000102
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 363 P.3d 263 (Samson v. Nahulu.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samson v. Nahulu., 363 P.3d 263, 136 Haw. 415, 2015 Haw. LEXIS 327 (haw 2015).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

McKENNA, J.

I. Introduction

This appeal arises from a motor vehicle-pedestrian accident in which a vehicle operated by Respondenb-Defendant-Appellee Nola Ann Nahulu (“Nahulu”) struck a minor (“Minor”) as she crossed Farrington Highway on foot. At trial, the parties disputed Nahulu’s speed and whether Minor was in a crosswalk at the time she was hit. A jury returned a unanimous special verdict finding Nahulu not negligent.

Petitioners/Plaintiffs-Appellants N orman Samson and Francine Samson (hereinafter “the Samsons”), individually and as guardians prochein ami of their daughter, Minor, challenge (1) specific jury instructions, (2) the instructions as a whole, which allegedly misstated the standard of care in automobile- *418 pedestrian collisions, (3) the exclusion of certain testimony about Nahulu’s speed, and (4) the exclusion of a photograph with markings made or authorized by a witness during his deposition that placed Minor in a crosswalk. 1 The ICA affirmed the Circuit Court of the First Circuit’s (circuit court) judgment.

In this case, the jury instructions erroneously focused on a pedestrian’s obligation to obey all traffic laws rather than a driver’s obligation to avoid collisions. Instruction No. 6 (as modified) quotes from State v. Arena, 46 Haw. 315, 379 P.2d 594 (1963). That case was premised on the existence of contributory negligence, which was eliminated by the passage of Hawaii’s comparative fault statute, Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 663-31 (1993). Instruction No. 6 (as modified) incorrectly suggested that a driver need not look out for pedestrians violating the law and that civil recoveiy is not available to a contributorily negligent plaintiff. The giving of the instruction constitutes prejudicial error necessitating a new trial. In addition, the instructions as a whole were prejudicially erroneous.

We hold as follows: (1) Instruction No. 6 (as modified) is erroneous as a matter of law; (2) Arena is overruled to the extent that it is contrary to HRS § 291C-74 (2007) and gives the incorrect impression that a pedestrian forfeits a right to recover from a negligent driver if he or she does not strictly adhere to traffic rules; (3) the jury instructions as a whole misstated the law by improperly focusing on a pedestrian’s duties to obey all traffic laws and were prejudicially erroneous; (4) the circuit court erred in excluding certain testimony on Nahulu’s speed; and (5) the circuit court erred in excluding the photograph with markings made or authorized by the witness during his deposition.

Accordingly, we vacate the ICA’s May 2, 2014 Judgment on Appeal, entered pursuant to its March 31, 2014 Memorandum Opinion, which affirmed the circuit court’s August 9, 2010 Judgment and September 29, 2010 Order Denying Plaintiffs’ Motion for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict and/or, In the Alternative, for New Trial (“JNOV motion”), 2 and remand the case to the circuit court for a new trial and further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

II. Background

A. General Factual Background

On July 4, 2005, Nahulu’s Honolulu-bound SUV struck Minor in or near a crosswalk as she crossed Farrington Highway near the Jade Street intersection. Prior to the collision, Minor had waited with her friend at a bus stop on the Honolulu-bound side of the road. There is a bus cutout located on the outside of the Honolulu-bound lane for buses to service passengers. At the time of the accident, two buses had pulled into the cutout. The first bus operated by McKenna Benson (“Benson”) was forty feet long and the second bus was sixty feet long.

As she approached the intersection from behind the bus cutout in the Honolulu-bound direction, Nahulu saw one bus pull into the bus cutout and began to decelerate. After Benson pulled his bus all the way into the *419 cutout, he looked in his side view mirror to ensure that he had provided enough space for the second bus to pull in. Prom his perspective, both of the buses appeared as “one long bus” with no part of either bus blocking the lane of traffic; however, he could not recall whether the buses were completely off or partially on the road. Arthur Joao (“Mr. Joao”), 3 the driver of a pickup truck following behind Nahulu’s SUV, and his wife Betty Joao (“Mrs. Joao”), his passenger, stated that the bus was not completely off the road, but did not impede the flow of traffic. 4

According to Mrs. Joao, after the buses pulled over, the SUV and the Joaos’ truck gradually sped up. Nahulu stated that she had not seen anyone in front of the bus nor had she crossed the double solid line prior to impact. Mrs. Joao stated that she did not see anyone in the crosswalk, but could not remember where the crosswalk was located.

Minor’s friend was the last person to board Benson’s bus. According to Benson, who had an unobstructed view through the front windows of his bus, Minor said goodbye to her friend as she stood near the right front comer of the bumper with her hand on the bus.

Minor testified that she looked both ways before entering a crosswalk in front of the bus; other witnesses provided conflicting testimony. Nahulu testified that Minor entered the road quickly from right in front of the bus without looking, walked diagonally across the road, and was not in a crosswalk when she was hit. 5 Mrs. Joao stated that “[Minor] was looking back over her shoulder towards the bus” as she entered the road close to the front of the bus outside of a crosswalk, but could not remember which side of the crosswalk Minor was on. Mr. Joao stated that “the bus was still moving” when Minor entered the road, looking over her shoulder and yelling as she ran. Benson stated that Minor remained near the front of his stationary bus as she moved diagonally toward the intersection at a brisk pace. He saw Nahulu’s SUV approaching in his side view mirror near the left rear tire of his bus, and waved his arm out of the window and yelled in an attempt to stop the SUV. According to Paul Day (“Day”), the driver of a vehicle approaching the intersection in the opposing lane of traffic, Nahulu was “coming around the bus at a good speed[.]”

The witnesses provided conflicting testimony regarding Minor’s location at the point of impact. Benson estimated that Minor traveled approximately six to eight feet from the front of the bus before she and the SUV collided in the middle of the Honolulu-bound lane. Day testified that Minor was hit by Nahulu’s SUV when she made her way to the driver’s comer of the bus. Mr. Joao could not recall whether Minor was in or out of the crosswalk. Mrs. Joao stated that “[Minor] was over the yellow line [in the opposing lane of traffic] when she ran in[to] the [SUV].”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
363 P.3d 263, 136 Haw. 415, 2015 Haw. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samson-v-nahulu-haw-2015.