Southern Oxygen Co. v. Martin

163 S.W.2d 459, 291 Ky. 238, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 459 (Southern Oxygen Co. v. Martin) 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
Southern Oxygen Co. v. Martin, 163 S.W.2d 459, 291 Ky. 238, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 202 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Sims, Commissioner

— Reversing.

This appeal grows out of an automobile accident where two persons were killed and two were injured. The four cases were consolidated in the circuit court for the purpose of trial, likewise they have been heard to *239 gether here. Verdicts were rendered for the same amount, $1,500, in favor of each plaintiff. To reverse the judgments entered thereon, appellant, Southern Oxygen Company, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, mainly relies upon three errors: (1) The verdicts are flagrantly against the evidence; (2) incompetent evidence was admitted; (3) proper instructions offered by defendant were rejected.

The accident happened about 4:20 o’clock on the afternoon of August 14, 1939, at a curve on the highway between Jenkins and Pikeville. It was raining at the time and the highway, which was black-top, was slippery. Defendant’s truck, driven by Howard T. Hensley, was proceeding in a southwardly direction, and a Plymouth car, in which were six negroes and their baggage, was traveling northwardly. The car was driven by Dan Rutledge and on the seat with him were Lillian Morrow and Viola Martin. There were two grown girls on the rear seat with a ten year old boy, Amos Morrow, Jr., who was 57 inches tall, seated between them. In the collision between the car and the truck the left portion of the top of the car was mashed, which resulted in the immediate death of Dan and injuries to Felicia Stevenson, seated directly behind him, from which she died a few hours thereafter. Viola received rather severe injuries about her face and head and to one of her knees, while Amos suffered a broken leg.

The occupants of the car had left Birmingham about mid-night on Aug. 13th, and had driven continuously for about fifteen hours. Lillian surrendered the steering wheel to Dan at Jenkins about two hours before the accident. The only eyewitnesses to the accident were the persons in the car and the driver of the truck. The three occupants of the car who testified, Lillian, Viola and Amos, all stated that the car was proceeding on its right (east) side of the road at a speed of some 12 or 15 miles per hour and just as it emerged from the curve they sighted the truck from 100 to 150 feet up the highway; that it was approaching at some 35 or 40 miles per hour, straddle of the line marking the center of the road; that when its driver attempted to pull the truck to its right (west) side of the road, it skidded on the slippery highway and the back end thereof collided with the car some 20 feet from the end of the curve.

Hensley, the driver of the truck, testified he was go *240 ing down a one and a half per cent grade at 30 or 25 miles per hour and saw the car at a distance of 150 feet approaching on his (west) side of the road with its driver making an effort to pnll to his right (east), but the car skidded. Hensley testified he was traveling on the extreme west edge of the road with two wheels on the berm to prevent skidding. As the car approached on his side he pulled his truck over until it struck some guard posts protecting a high embankment on his right, two of which posts were bent and the third knocked down by his truck; that he had brought his truck to a complete stop before the collision with practically all of it off the west side of the pavement; that the road was “banked” at the point of the collision, the west side being the higher, and the front portion of the car ran under the corner of the bed of the truck just behind the cab.

After the collision the car was angling across the road with its front end west of the center of the road and about 4 feet from the truck, and its rear wheels were some two feet from the eastern edge of the pavement. Amos testified the truck drug the car over to the west side of the road. A photograph of the car shows it was badly crushed on the front left side with the left front wheel down, the left part of the bumper on the ground and the left front part of the top mashed in. There were two gashes 40 and 48 inches respectively from the western edge of the pavement which Hensley testified were made by the car when its left side 'went down. Several witnesses for the plaintiffs who visited the scene the day after the accident described the gashes or sears on the highway as being on the car’s side, or east, of the center line. The pavement at the place of collision was 21% feet wide with a berm of about 5 feet on the west at the edge of which were guard posts as protection against a steep declivity. The east side of the road had a narrow berm as a hill bordered the road on that side. There was no white, or any, line marking the center of the highway. A person or two testified they saw immediately after the accident a track on the western berm for 30 or 35 feet which led to the truck.

Hensley and other witnesses for the defendant testified to hearing Lillian say immediately after the accident that the surviving occupants of the car were asleep and did not know how the accident happened. She testified she was hysterical at the time and did not know what *241 she was saying. The following day Lillian and Viola each signed written statements detailing what they knew about the accident. Viola’s statement recited that she was asleep at the time of the collision and did not know what happened just previous thereto. Lillian said in her statement that she was dosing and waking up; that the wreck occurred as Dan attempted to pass a truck going in his same direction, and defendant’s truck appeared traveling at a moderate rate of speed on its right side of the road. -While both women admit signing such writings, they testified they were suffering from their injuries and did not understand the full purport of what they Signed and that the statements were not correct. Certainly, there is no evidence in the record that Dan was attempting to pass another vehicle at the time of the accident. The testimony of Viola and of Amos contradicted several statements contained in their depositions taken as if upon cross-examination.

Defendant vigorously insists that the physical facts when considered in connection with the inconsistent and contradictory testimony given by Viola, Lillian and Amos show the verdicts are flagrantly against the evidence. This collision occurred between a truck weighing 15,000 and a car weighing 3,200 pounds. It happened on a wet and slipper highway, and as was written in C. L. & L. Motor Co. v. Achenbach, 259 Ky. 228, 82 S. W. (2d) 335, 338, “Freakish effects are sometimes caused by violent impacts of moving bodies.” And it was said in D. G. Hayes Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Fortney’s Adm’r, 277 Ky. 441, 126 S. W. (2d) 864, 867, “it is indeed difficult to determine from marks in the road or on the vehicles the exact position of the respective vehicles at the time of a collision so as to ascertain with any reasonable degree of certainty the fault or lack of fault on the part of the respective drivers.” There were no disinterested eyewitnesses to this accident, and we cannot say from human experience or from the accepted laws of motion or mechanics that this collision did not occur as described by witnesses for the plaintiffs, but that the truck driver’s version was correct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 S.W.2d 459, 291 Ky. 238, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-oxygen-co-v-martin-kyctapphigh-1942.