Silver Fleet Motor Express v. Wilson

165 S.W.2d 48, 291 Ky. 509, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 275
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 9, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 165 S.W.2d 48 (Silver Fleet Motor Express v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silver Fleet Motor Express v. Wilson, 165 S.W.2d 48, 291 Ky. 509, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 275 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Tilford

— Reversing.

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding appellee $4,000 damages for injuries sustained in a collision between an automobile owned and driven by her husband and a truck owned and operated by appellant. The collision occurred about 6:30 o ’clock on the morning of August 14, 1940, on a curve while the automobile was ascending a mountain known as “Gillian Hill” about seven miles east of Corbin, to which City, Wilson, his wife, and four guests were returning from a pleasure ride which started after midnight from Wilson’s restaurant and tourist camp in South Corbin. The original destination after leaving Corbin had been “The Pinnacle” the peak of a high-mountain overlooking Cumberland Gap, some fifty-five miles distant; but because of a drizzling rain and the consequent danger of ascending so high a peak, the party stopped at a restaurant and dance hall near Middlesboro, and started back home about 3:30 o’clock. Occupying the front seat between Wilson and his wife was a waitress employed at his restaurant. In the rear, and immediately behind Wilson were a night club proprietor, one of the latter’s waitresses, and another waitress of Wilson’s.

*510 Of the six occupants of the car only five testified, and of these, only Wilson attempted to give a coherent account of the accident, although all five stated that the automobile was on the right side of the road and proceeding at a moderate speed. The male guest who did not testify was “leaning up over the back seat” talking to Wilson, and the latter admitted that he approached the curve at a speed of from thirty to thirty-five miles an hour. According to Wilson, he first saw the truck when he was “practically right on the curve, when I rounded the curve. The tractor was headed across the center line and the trailer was still on the right side with the tractor headed across this way when I rounded the curve, and it caught my car in front and jerked it down, the left side of my car came on by the tractor and stopped about eight feet, I imagine, above the truck, and the truck continued on into the hillside on my side of the road. ’ ’ He claimed that his car was struck by the left front wheel of the tractor, and the evidence showed that this was the point of contact. The tire of the left front wheel of the tractor was slit, the wheel and axle knocked back, and the fender turned up against the hood. The damage to the car was confined to its left front and side, •and the left front wheel was knocked back under it and ■so demolished that in the opinion of appellee’s wrecking-expert and mechanic, T. H. King, the car could not have traveled forward afterward. The appellee produced no witness to the collision, other than the. car’s occupants, the majority if not all of whom, have similar suits pend-ind; and, with the exception of E. W. Asher, who arrived ■on the scene an indeterminate period thereafter, all of the witnesses who studied the positions of the colliding vehicles and the marks and debris on the road and its shoulders, testified that the front end of the Wilson car, with its left front wheel crushed, was from twelve to eighteen inches beyond the center line dividing its proper path from the path of the- truck. The rear of the car was on its right side of the road headed toward Corbin, and the front end of the tractor was burrowed into the hill on the left side of the road leading in the opposite direction. The tractor and loaded trailer weighed approximately 16,000 pounds and their combined length was nearly 30 feet. Its driver testified that in descending the mountain in third gear, he first saw the Wilson car as it was coming around the curve at a speed of about forty miles an hour. The car was sliding on the curve, *511 and was on the wrong side of the road. He tried to stop, sounded Ms horn, and pulled as far as he could to Ms right against the posts guarding the outer edge of the curve. Immediately afterward, the Wilson car struck the tractor, inflicting the damage to the tractor’s left front wheel, tire, and fender. In addition, the impact threw Ms brake lock, and broke Ms “booster” and air hose, causing the truck, without steering or brake control, to angle across the road to the left bank beyond the point of collision. The testimony of the truck driver is fully corroborated by two disinterested witnesses, E. H. Taylor, a lawyer of Morristown, Tennessee, and Allen Smith, an automobile salesman of the same place. They were driving separate cars down the mountain, Smith leading, a short distance behind the truck. Taylor did not see the actual collision but heard the noise made by the impact, and immediately thereafter saw the truck “going diagonally across the road and into the bank on its left side of the road.” When it started across “it was on its right side of the road, and I would say probably off the shoulder on its right side.” A moment later when he reached the scene, “the left front of the car was over the black line, the center line of the highway, not so very far from a foot to 18 inches of the left front part of the automobile across the highway and on the left of the highway going up the mountain.” We quote the following from Ms testimony:

“I examined the tracks, such tracks are left by a double wheel truck. I mean two wheels together, and these tracks lead from the double wheel on the truck where it had stopped to the wreck. In going down that mountain at that curve just this side of where the accident occurred I noticed those tracks were there on the right side of the road going down the mountain, and going up to about 20 to 30 feet from where the accident must have happened the tracks started off the road on the shoulder.
“Q. On which side? A. Eight side; and, right at the point of the accident the tracks became somewhat blurred as if the brakes had been applied and the truck went abruptly off the road, and the tracks left abruptly off the road. To the right, almost against the guard rail; they continued that way for ten (10) feet, and then went angling across the road into the bank.
*512 ‘ ‘ Q. Did you notice the effect, if any, that had been produced on the cable attached to the posts? ” A. One of the cables on one of the posts had been pulled aloose like as if it had just bent down.
“Q. Notice any glass or debris there? A. Yes sir, some glass and quite a bit of black mud like it had been mixed with grease.
“Q. Dry? A. Of course, the road was wet but the mud was dry.
“Q. Where was the greasy mud? A. On the righthand side of the road going down the mountain. That is, the most of it. Some little on the other, but the great amount on the otherside.
“Q. You have had occasion to investigate automobile accidents ? A. Yes sir.
“Q. From that have you become familiar of evidences as to the point where the collisions occur? A. I think I have.
“Q. Can you tell what effect these findings of this mud and these shakings off of cars have as to indicating where the collision occurs? A. The mud and dirt from the bottom of a car usually will fall where the impact takes place because that is what shakes loose.
‘ ‘ Q. That on the right side of the center line of the road? A.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.2d 48, 291 Ky. 509, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silver-fleet-motor-express-v-wilson-kyctapphigh-1942.