Smith v. Dunning

122 S.W.2d 781, 275 Ky. 733, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 6, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 122 S.W.2d 781 (Smith v. Dunning) 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
Smith v. Dunning, 122 S.W.2d 781, 275 Ky. 733, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 505 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

Mrs. Ollie Smith instituted this action in the Hardin circuit court against D. F. Dunning to recover damages for serious personal injuries, alleged to have been sustained by her as a consequence of his general and gross negligence in so operating his automobile as to run same into collision with her.

*735 The defendant filed answer, denying the charge of negligence and pleading plaintiff’s contributory negligence as a bar to the action.

Issues were joined by a reply, denying the plea of contributory negligence. Upon a jury trial, a verdict was rendered for defendant, when, the plaintiff having been denied a new trial, a judgment was entered thereon.

Plaintiff seeks a reversal of this judgment upon the following grounds: (1) That the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; (2) for alleged errors in the instructions given by the court; and (3) misconduct of counsel for defendant.

For convenience, the appellant and appellee will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff and defendant respectively, as it appears their positions were in the lower court.

The facts as disclosed by the record are, that Mr. Dunning, the defendant, is a man eighty-two years of age, who resides and does business in Grand Eapids, Michigan. On the morning of November 12, 1936, as he was driving alone in his coupe over the Dixie Highway, in Hardin county, en route to Florida, where it appears he is accustomed to spend his winters, his car came into collision with Mrs .Smith, painfully and seriously injuring her, and which she claims was caused by the careless and negligent manner in which he, at the time, was operating his automobile.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Smith, lives with her husband on a farm in Larue county, situated a short distance east of the Dixie Highway on a lane connecting it with the highway, which it intersects at a point, in its north and south course, in Hardin county. Further, it appears that on the west side and shoulder of the highway, extending some two and a half feet from its paved portion, and opposite the lane’s entrance into the highway, the plaintiff maintains a mail box.

Plaintiff states that at about half past nine of the morning of November. 12, 1936, the day on which this collision accident occurred, she had come from her home down the lane to the highway to get her mail from this mail box and that, upon reaching the highway but before attempting to cross over to her mail box, she had stopped and looked in each direction, both to the north and south, to discover if there were then any near ap *736 proaching cars; that she saw none approaching from the north, but did see three, then some 250 or 300 yards away, approaching from the south; that thereupon, the way being clear, she crossed over to the west side of the highway to her mail box, which she opened, found no mail, closed the box and was then about to return, when, before attempting to recross the highway, she again first looked up and down it, to see if the way were still clear, when she saw that not only were the three cars, before discovered approaching from the south, then near, but also another car, defendant’s, coming toward her from over the hill, some hundred and fifty yards to the north, travelling at a high rate of speed; that upon discovering such was the then dangerous traffic condition of the highway, she did not try to cross, but stepped to the south side of her mail box, and a few inches in front of it, where she stood with her left hand resting on the mail box and her right foot and leg slightly extended toward the road, in which position she awaited the passing of the approaching cars. She further testifies that while she was thus standing on the shoulder of the highway, some two and a half feet west of the travelled part of the road, and the approaching cars were about to meet and pass in front of her, with ample clearance between their paths on the paved surface of the road, and just as or before the defendant’s car came in front of her, he negligently swerved it to his right, from off the paved portion of the road, onto its shoulder where she was standing, causing it to run against her, its bumper striking and breaking her leg .below the knee and the collision otherwise so terribly injuring her as to cause her to lose consciousness, which she did not regain until later when in the hospital, to which she had been instantly carried after the accident; that she remained in the hospital for some three months for treatment of her injuries, thereby incurring heavy medical and hospital bills, amounting to more than $2,500.

To recover damages in the sum of $52,741.35 for these grievous and permanent injuries suffered and inflicted upon her, she claims as a consequence of the defendant’s negligent operation of his ear, this suit was brought.

Plaintiff’s version of the collision, and her testimony as to how it occurred, is corroborated by her eyewitness, Alfred Biglow, who testifies that he was driving nearby at the time when the accident occurred, and *737 saw it, and that the plaintiff did not, as testified by the defendant, rush headlong from where she was standing by the mail box into defendant’s ear, but on the contrary, that plaintiff had remained standing on the shoulder of the road by the mail box, as the defendant’s and the three other cars were meeting and passing almost in front of her, when, as testified by her, the defendant’s car had swerved to the right from its course and struck her.

The defendant, the only other of the three eyewitnesses to the collision, testifies that the plaintiff was standing to the side of the road as his car was approaching and passing the three cars meeting him, and at which he was looking as they passed, when suddenly he discovered the presence of the plaintiff in the highway some six feet ahead, as she, heedlessly and with head down, ran across the road into the side of his car, which he was driving on the west side, near the center, of the paved portion of the road and that appellant’s body by the impact was knocked to and laid altogether upon its paved portion.

Other witnesses, who at once gathered about the place of the accident, attempt to relate the physical facts found by them, evidencing the circumstances and cause of the collision. They testify, in contradiction of the testimony of defendant, that they found the plaintiff lying not on the travelled part, but mostly on the west shoulder of the road, with only her head and shoulders resting upon the paved portion; that the door handle of defendant’s car, broken by the impact, was found there, lying by her head; that her right slipper she was at the time wearing was torn by the blow and knocked some fifty feet beyond the point where she was struck. Further, they state that an indentation or scratch was made upon the shoulder of the road, as if by the heel of the slipper, due to the force with which her leg was struck.

The witness, Harold "Wooten, testifies for the plaintiff that he arrived at the place of the accident but a few minutes after its occurrence and that he inspected defendant’s car and detected only a small dent at the point of the right front fender, but that the door handle of the car was broken and gone and that there was no marks on the bumper indicating that it had struck anything.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W.2d 781, 275 Ky. 733, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-dunning-kyctapphigh-1938.