Stallinger v. Johnson

139 P.2d 460, 65 Idaho 101, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 61
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1943
DocketNo. 7077.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 139 P.2d 460 (Stallinger v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stallinger v. Johnson, 139 P.2d 460, 65 Idaho 101, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 61 (Idaho 1943).

Opinion

*104 HOLDEN, C.J.

August 4, 1941, the Stallingers (George Stallinger, Sr., at the wheel), Mary Stallinger, his wife, Frieda.and Martha Stallinger, daughters of George and Mary Stallinger, drove from Fenn, Idaho to Lewiston, Idaho, on highway 95, generally known as the North and South highway. On the return trip, at about five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, the Stallingers approached the point where what is known as the Webb road intersects highway 95. At the same time L. C. Johnson was approaching the intersection on the Webb road, driving a truck loaded with about forty bushels of wheat. Highway 95 is an oiled, surfaced highway. A yellow center stripe marks the two traffic lanes on the highway. It runs straight for a considerable distance in a southeasterly and northwesterly direction at the point where the Webb road intersects the highway. That road intersects the highway from the west. It is marked with a “stop” sign and is what is known as a farm-to-market road and is unimproved except with macadam and gravel. Highway 95 is an arterial highway. At the intersection, traffic entering highway 95 from the Webb road divides in the form of a “Y”, depending on whether the traffic is going to Culdesac to the southeast or to Sweet-water to the northwest on highway 95. The intersection does not cross highway 95. The “Y” is off the main traveled and paved surface of highway 95. The highway is on a higher elevation than the Webb road so that in entering highway 95 from the Webb road vehicles come up onto highway 95 on a slight grade and in approaching and entering the highway have an unobstructed view of traffic in either direction for a considerable distance. The “Y” is cut deeply by trucks hauling grain to Sweetwater, so that loaded trucks ascending the grade from the Webb road to the highway are required to shift gears. Vehicles traveling to Sweetwater enter highway 95 at an angle and cross to the right hand side at an angle. As the cars involved in the accident approached the intersection each driver saw the *105 other when about the same distance from the intersection. The truck, driven by Johnson, but owned by Gaiser, carné to what Johnson called a “rolling stop,” Johnson shifted into low gear and drove onto the highway where a collision between the two cars occurred.

November 12, 1941, this action was commenced in the District Court in and for Nez Perce County to recover damages for personal injuries sustained in the collision by the Stallingers, respectively, as well as for damage to the Stallinger car, driven by George Stallinger, Sr., but owned by his son, George Stallinger, Jr.

Answering the Stallinger complaint for damages, respondents specifically denied the allegations of the complaint pertinent to a recovery of damages and then pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the Stallingers. Respondents also filed a cross-complaint for damages against the Stallingers; The jury found for respondent Johnson, thus denying recovery of damages to both appellants and respondents. From the judgment entered on the verdict and an order denying a new trial (sought on the ground of newly discovered evidence), the Stallingers prosecutéd an appeal to this court.

Appellants say that:

“This case presents three main questions: first, the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a verdict and judgment for the respondent and the fact that the verdict and judgment are contrary to law and against the evidence; second, the error on the part of the trial court in the giving and refusing to give of certain instructions; and, third, the error of the trial court in denying a new trial on newly discovered evidence.”

These questions will be discussed in the order above stated.

George Stallinger, Sr., testified, in substance, that he was about 400 to 500 feet from the intersection when he first noticed the truck; that the view between the two roads was open; that “Q. At what rate of speed were you traveling at the time when you first saw him (Johnson) ? A. Oh, I always go — I never go over 45 miles; 40 or 45 miles; 35; I don’t know”; that Johnson did not stop at the “stop” sign before driving on the highway that “Q. How fast were you traveling when you first noticed that he (Johnson) wasn’t going to stop? A. Oh, maybe around 40 miles. I don’t *106 know”; that when he first saw the truck it was about the same distance from the intersection he was; that when he first saw Johnson, he, Johnson was traveling about the same speed he was; that he did not see Johnson slow up; that Johnson was over on his, Stallinger’s side of the road when the collision occurred; that “Q. But your car hit his (Johnson’s car) in the front end. In other words, it was a head-on collision; is that right? A. Yes.” “Q. And the impact, the force of your car turned his truck right around, didn’t it? A. Yes”; that he was positive the truck was on his (Stallinger’s) half of the road; that “Q. * * * Had he (Johnson) completed his left hand turn at that intersection? A. Yes.” “Q. Completely? A. Well, by golly, he was completely around, see. I know when he came to the highway he swung around facing right against us.”

Mary Stallinger, wife of George Stallinger, Sr., testified that she did not know how far the truck was from the intersection when she first saw it; that “Q. You didn’t see it (the truck) while it was on the Webb road then? A. No, it just came out. I just saw him (Johnson) by the ‘stop’ sign; that’s all”; that she did not notice the speed of the truck when she first saw it; that she had never driven a car.

Martha Stallinger testified that she could not say how far the truck was from the intersection when she first saw it; that she .couldn’t say how fast the truck was traveling when she first saw it; that she had driven a car for six years; that her father was driving slowly; that “Q. Well, now, was it (the truck) going slow or was it going fast? A. Oh, I think about a medium speed.” “Q. And what would you call a medium speed? A. Oh, about forty or fifty miles.” “Q. And would you say that your car was going as fast as the truck when you first saw the truck? A. You mean as fast as our car? Q. Yes? A. I don’t know”; that the truck did not slow down as it entered the intersection.

Frieda Stallinger testified that she could not say how far the truck was from the intersection when she first saw it; that “Q. Now, what happened when you reached the intersection of Webb road with highway 95? A. Well, this pick-up was driving along at an average speed, as we were, and it did not stop at the ‘stop’ sign”; that “Q. And do you remember where the crash took place with reference to the *107 intersection? A. You mean on the road?” “Q. Yes. A. No, I couldn’t.” “Q. Whether it was in the center of the road or the right portion or left portion? A. I couldn’t say.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 P.2d 460, 65 Idaho 101, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stallinger-v-johnson-idaho-1943.