Shufelberger v. Worden

369 P.2d 382, 189 Kan. 379, 1962 Kan. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 3, 1962
Docket42,553
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 369 P.2d 382 (Shufelberger v. Worden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shufelberger v. Worden, 369 P.2d 382, 189 Kan. 379, 1962 Kan. LEXIS 278 (kan 1962).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

The plaintiff (appellee) Walter Shufelberger brought this action against Jim Worden, sometimes known as W. A. Worden, defendant (appellant), to recover for personal injuries sustained, by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendant. The allegations of the pleadings will not be narrated. Suffice it to say that plaintiff charged defendant with negligence in certain specified particulars. Defendant answered, charging plaintiff with contributory negligence and assumption of risk. Replies denying the charges were filed by the respective parties. On the issues as joined the cause proceeded to trial to a jury.

The following is a very brief summary of the pertinent facts, as *380 supported by the pleadings and the evidence. The defendant purchased an upright piano from an Augusta resident and borrowed a half-ton pickup truck with Fordomatic drive, and in A1 condition, for the purpose of hauling the piano' to his home. Defendant requested plaintiff to assist him in moving the piano to defendant’s residence, a distance of approximately one mile. Plaintiff consented. Plaintiff was to receive no compensation; this was merely a service rendered to accommodate defendant.

Both plaintiff and defendant were experienced truck drivers. By way of a rough surface, deep-rutted alley at the rear of the lot they drove onto the premises where the piano was located, backed the truck up to the porch at the rear of the house, and loaded the piano, which weighed 600 to 700 pounds. One of the casters was missing from the piano and the piano was supported at that end by a board. This prevented the piano from being rolled, resulting in the piano’s having to be pushed onto the bed of the. truck. Plaintiff got into the back of the pickup truck for the purpose of steadying the piano, plaintiff being on the right side and the piano on the left side, and the defendant got into the cab of the truck and proceeded to drive away from the porch toward the alley. The distance between the alley and the point where the piano was loaded was about forty-five to fifty-five feet, and the terrain between the house and the alley was rough. Defendant drove about thirty feet, then when he was approximately twenty feet from the alley he “gunned,” or accelerated, the speed of the truck to fifteen or twenty miles an hour. As they approached the alley the plaintiff yelled, “Take it easy!” About that same time, while defendant was in the process of executing a right turn, the truck hit a rut, or ruts, ranging from four to' seven inches deep. The defendant jammed on the brakes, the plaintiff and the piano were thrown out of the truck and the piano landed on plaintiff’s face and head causing him considerable physical injury and the loss of the industrial use of his eyes.

James R. Garrison, an Augusta policeman, called as a witness for the plaintiff, testified that upon receiving word of the injury he proceeded to the location and there found a pickup truck in the alley, the truck was facing northwest, and a piano was lying six feet or more to the southwest of the pickup truck bed; that there was a considerable amount of blood on top of the piano; that in the alley there were ruts approximately four inches deep. Garrison’s testimony was corroborated by another policeman and by a Mr. and *381 Mrs. Lietzke who lived immediately west of the place of the accident. All testified that the ruts were four to seven inches deep, plainly observable to anyone. The evidence disclosed that when the defendant came to pick up the piano he drove into the alley on the east side of the ruts, and it was not necessary, as he left, to drive either into or across the ruts.

The ambulance driver testified when he arrived at the scene there was no eyeball in one of the plaintiff’s orbital cavities, that he could see the openings of the nose where the nose had been and that the nose and facial skin and flesh were hanging loose below plaintiff’s chin.

Lewis Howerter testified on behalf of plaintiff that the defendant admitted to him on the evening after the accident that, “I feel like it was my fault,” and on cross-examination Howerter reiterated the statement made to him by the defendant. Another witness for the plaintiff, Frank Hoover, testified he had been driving the pickup truck and was familiar with the way it performed; that the brakes were in excellent condition and if the brakes were locked the wheels would either stop or slide; that it was a Ford pickup with Fordomatic drive and when the accelerator was stepped on “it really took out.” Hoover had a conversation with defendant relative to how the accident occurred, and defendant told Hoover he guessed he was driving a little bit fast when it happened and that he hit a , ditch. The record revealed that two other witnesses for the plaintiff also had conversations with the defendant in which he told them he threw plaintiff out of the truck and the piano hit him.

The plaintiff testified:

“The defendant accelerated the pickup truck pretty hard. He gunned it up to about 15 or 20 miles per hour. He gunned it out to the alley.”

The record further disclosed that as they approached the alley plaintiff yelled, “Take it easy!” Then the defendant applied the brakes. He applied the brakes right after plaintiff yelled, “Take it easy!”

Plaintiff further testified, and quoted the defendant as saying,

“I guess I was going too fast when you hallooed, ‘Take it easy!’ I jammed on the brakes.”

Defendant also said that he was going too fast when he jammed on the brakes.

Defendant testified that in his opinion á piano would not have *382 fallen out under the circumstances if the rate of speed were from three to four miles per hour.

Plaintiff, having had prior experience in hauling pianos, testified he did not consider he occupied a dangerous position while riding in the back of the pickup truck and thought he was perfectly safe.

The jury returned a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff and at the same time, in answer to special questions submitted to them by the court, found the defendant was guilty of negligence in driving without due regard, to the condition of the roadway and without due regard to the safety of the plaintiff; that the minimum speed of defendant’s truck immediately prior to and at the time of the accident was ten miles an hour; and that the plaintiff was free from negligence. From an order overruling defendant’s post-trial motions he appeals.

Defendant first contends that the verdict and the answers to the special questions were not supported by substantial evidence. Defendant concedes that he is familiar with the many decisions to the effect that this court will not invade the province of a jury and set aside answers to the special questions, and likewise a general verdict, where there is any substantial evidence to support them; however, defendant contends that the verdict and the answers to the special questions in the instant case were based upon mere conjecture. No useful purpose would be served in reiterating the mentioned facts or narrating other evidence contained in the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
369 P.2d 382, 189 Kan. 379, 1962 Kan. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shufelberger-v-worden-kan-1962.