Sherry Ex Rel. Sherry v. Asing

531 P.2d 648, 56 Haw. 135, 1975 Haw. LEXIS 78
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1975
DocketNO. 5413
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 531 P.2d 648 (Sherry Ex Rel. Sherry v. Asing) 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
Sherry Ex Rel. Sherry v. Asing, 531 P.2d 648, 56 Haw. 135, 1975 Haw. LEXIS 78 (haw 1975).

Opinion

*138 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

OGATA, J.

Plaintiffs-appellants, Douglas J. Sherry, a minor, by his next friend Henry J. Sherry, and Henry J. Sherry and Marve-lyn J. Sherry, individually, brought this action in the First Circuit Court to recover damages for injuries sustained by plaintiff-appellant Douglas J. Sherry, 1 a mentally slow seventeen year old, and the son of plaintiffs-appellants Henry J. Sherry and Marvelyn J. Sherry, when he was struck by an automobile driven by defendant-appellee Kathleen L. Asing. 2 After a trial before a jury a special verdict was returned finding no negligence on the part of the defendant-appellee. Plaintiffs-appellants appeal from the judgment entered upon such a verdict.

This automobile-pedestrian collision occurred before sunrise, at about 6:30 a.m. on January 28, 1971, on Keolu Drive, a six-lane roadway .in Kailua, island of Oahu, approximately 105 feet north of its intersection with Akumu and lana *139 Streets. 3 Defendant-appellee was returning home from work when she was involved in this unfortunate accident. She had commenced working at Pan American Airlines as a dishwasher at 10:00 p.m. on January 27, 1971, and worked until the following morning when she punched out at 5:58 a.m. It was drizzling and still dark at the time she entered Keolu Drive. The street lighting along the portion of Keolu Drive north of Akumu and lana Streets was of the dim incandescent type, although the opposite section of Keolu Drive was illuminated by bright mercury vapor lights.

Plaintiff-appellant Douglas Sherry could not testify to the events just prior to the accident, or to the way in which the accident occurred, because he sustained head injuries, was rendered unconscious for two or three days and suffered retrograde amnesia due to the accident. He did, however, testify to his habitual pattern when en route to school. He further testified that he had started out along his accustomed route to school the morning of the accident; that he almost always crossed Keolu Drive at the crosswalk. In a portion of his deposition which was read into the record he stated, however, “[W]ell, you see, if I did cross the street without on the crosswalk, if I cross the street I look way far, I look both ways far when I cross the street; but if I did cross the street the lady probably came fast. If I did jaywalk, if the car was way, way far I would go. If it was close, I wouldn’t go, no way. ’ ’

Defendant-appellee was called as an adverse witness by the plaintiffs-appellants. She testified that she was travelling at a speed of about 20-25 miles per hour on Keolu Drive after she had crossed the intersection of Keolu Drive and Akumu Street; that she was driving her vehicle in the center lane of the three lanes for traffic proceeding in the northerly direction; that she did not see plaintiff-appellant Douglas Sherry until he was approximately ten feet in front of her vehicle, *140 although he had to cross the four lanes of Keolu Drive to the left of defendant-appellee before entering her lane. Defendant-appellee further testified to the effect that she could not stop in time to avoid striking the plaintiff-appellant; and that plaintiff-appellant was not crossing in the pedestrian crosswalk when her 1966 red Volkswagen vehicle struck him.

The physical evidence showed that plaintiff-appellant was found lying within the makai-most lane (outside lane for vehicle travelling north) of Keolu Drive 129 feet north of the intersection of Keolu Drive and lana Street after he was struck by defendant-appellee’s automobile. Plaintiff-appellant was thrown to the makai-most lane by the impact, according to defendant-appellee’s testimony, but it was not clear whether he was or was not pushed, thrown, or carried forward.

Plaintiff-appellant Douglas Sherry was chronologically seventeen years of age at the time of the accident. He was considered a slow learner and attended special classes all through school, including Kailua High School, which was the general direction in which he was going just prior to this accident. His mother, Mrs. Marvelyn J. Sherry, testified that Douglas had been slower than her other children since infancy. According to his own testimony, Douglas dressed himself each morning and walked to school alone.

There was an attempt made by plaintiffs-appellants to include the City and County of Honolulu (City) as a party-defendant in addition to defendant-appellee, after the defendant-appellee had indicated in her pre-trial deposition that the street illumination along the north side of Keolu Drive starting from Akumu Street was inadequate. Plaintiffs-appellants in their first amended complaint filed in the court below on November 17, 1971, alleged in a separate count (count II) that the City negligently maintained, constructed, placed and designed Keolu Drive, the areas adjacent thereto, and the street lights thereon in the vicinity where plaintiff-appellant was struck by an automobile operated by defendant-appellee, and that as a proximate cause of such negligence plaintiff-appellant was injured. Prior to trial, however, the trial court dismissed plaintiffs-appellants’ *141 claim against the City by granting a summary judgment in its favor and against the plaintiffs-appellants for failure to file a timely notice of claim against the City within six months of the accident.

The plaintiffs-appellants, the City, and the defendant-appellee have in their respective briefs classified and discussed all the alleged errors committed by the trial court and claimed by plaintiffs-appellants to be prejudicial into five separate basic groups: (1) whether the court erred in dismissing plaintiffs-appellants’ claim against the City because of plaintiffs-appellants’ non-compliance with the six-month statutory and charter notice requirements; (2) whether the court erred in refusing to give plaintiffs-appellants’ instructions Nos. 46 and 47, relative to the duty of drivers to exercise a right of way with due care; (3) whether the court erred in refusing to give plaintiffs-appellants’ instructions Nos. 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, and 22, in regard to the standard of care required of drivers and in giving plaintiffs-appellants’ instruction No. 20, as modified; (4) whether the court erred in refusing to give plaintiffs-appellants’ instructions NoS. 24, 25, 26, 48, and 50, relative to the standard of care required of a minor who is mentally retarded and suffering from amnesia and in giving plaintiffs-appellants’ instruction No. 15, as modified, as well as defendant-appellee’s instructions Nos. 2 and 3, and court’s instruction No. 16, as modified; and (5) whether the court erred in admitting into evidence the Uniform Table of Driver Stopping Distances over the objection of plaintiffs-appellants. We will dispose of the issues raised in this appeal based upon the subject outline set out above.

I.

In Salavea v. City and County of Honolulu, 55 Haw. 216, 517 P.2d 51

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Bluebook (online)
531 P.2d 648, 56 Haw. 135, 1975 Haw. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherry-ex-rel-sherry-v-asing-haw-1975.