State Highway Commission v. Hall

119 S.W.2d 666, 274 Ky. 586, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 307
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 29, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 S.W.2d 666 (State Highway Commission v. Hall) 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
State Highway Commission v. Hall, 119 S.W.2d 666, 274 Ky. 586, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 307 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Beversing.

This suit against the commonwealth and the state highway commission for damages for personal injuries was authorized by a resolution of the General Assembly, chapter 461, Acts of 1936, permitting the appellee, G. B. Hall, to bring suit for recovery of such damages claimed to have been suffered by him and allegedly *588 caused by tbe gross negligence of tbe state highway commission, its agents and employees in the operation of its grader along the state’s highway.

In this suit, brought pursuant to this given authority, a verdict was recovered by appellee in the sum of $2,500 with interest, upon which judgment was accordingly entered.

Appellant’s motion and grounds for a new trial having been overruled, it has appealed, seeking a reversal of the judgment.

The facts and circumstances attending the accident in which the appellee sustained his injuries show that it resulted from a collision occurring between the car in which Hall was riding, as a guest, with certain road equipment belonging to the appellant, which _ its employees and servants, while engaged in working Ibis section of the road where the accident occurred, had left standing and extending entirely across the highway, completely blocking the movement of traffic and travel thereover, and into which the driver of the car, in which the appellee was then a passenger, recklessly drove, when appellee was, by the resulting impact of the collision, violently thrown forward in the car and badly cut and injured.

Seeking recovery of damages for these injuries sustained in this accident, the appellee, G. B. Hall, brought this action against the state and the state highway commission, by his petition averring that plaintiff was upon this occasion a guest in the automobile owned and driven by his son-in-law, M. D. Ramsey, and that the collision by which he was injured was caused by the negligence of the agents and servants of appellant in completely obstructing the highway, at the time and place of the collision, with their road machinery, without giving notice or warning to approaching motorists of the obstruction of the highway, made by its road working equipment there standing across the highway in such a way as to completely block the passway there-over.

Appellant answered, traversing the allegations of the petition (except the passage of the resolution by the General Assembly, authorizing the bringing of the suit, as stated supra) and further pleaded the following affirmative defenses: (1) That the plaintiff was contribu *589 torily negligent, and (2) that M. D. Ramsey, the driver and owner of the car, and plaintiff were at the time of their collision accident engaged in a joint enterprise and that the collision was caused by and due solely to the negligence of Ramsey, the driver.

These affirmative allegations of the answer were by agreement of the parties controverted of record, when upon a trial of the case before a jury a verdict was returned awarding damages in the sum of $2,500, to the appellee, Hall, upon which judgment was rendered, as stated supra.

It appears that the appellant, state highway commission, was at the time of the happening of this accident, out of which this suit arises, maintaining a highway in Floyd county, near Prestonsburg, upon a section of which it had two of its employees, using a tractor and grader, engaged in “ditching”' or grading it. At the time and place where this accident occurred, these employees had graded down one side of this section for a distance of about a half mile from the place of beginning, where, they testified, they had, when commencing work, placed “men working” signs.

They further stated that having graded this highway section for a distance of about a half mile on one side, which was as far as they expected to then grade, they had started turning the tractor to pull the grader around and across the road, to ditch the other side of the section back to the beginning point, when the blade of the grader had caught on the edge of the concrete, bringing their turning to» a stop while the tractor and grader were standing across the road.

It is shown the grader was coupled or fastened to the tractor by a large “coupling pin” about 8 feet in length and something over 4 inches in diameter. Further, it appears that while they were trying to extricate the grader blade- from the concrete, the tractor was standing practically over on the right-hand side of the road, while the grader stood on its opposite side, with only the connecting coupling pin extending across the intervening open space of some 8 feet.

Also, the testimony is that this road machinery had not been thus standing and blocking the highway at the place of the _ accident for more than five to eight minutes before it was driven blindly into by Ramsey, the *590 driver and owner of the car in which the appellee, Hall, was then riding.

The testimony is further that these highway employees and operators of the tractor and grader, as soon as they discovered that this road working equipment was stalled and obstructing the passing of traffic, flagged the first cars approaching the blocked section from either direction, when they stopped and parked along the road, when the other approaching cars, notified of road trouble ahead by the presence of these cars, also drew to the side of the road and stopped, where they awaited the removal of the temporary obstruction or other trouble in the road temporarily closing their passway.

It is further shown that the appellee, Hall, upon this occasion was also approaching this obstructed point in the highway, riding in a Ford car with his son-in-law, M. D. Ramsey, its owner, then driving it, when it ran, pellmell, into collision with this machinery standing across the highway, whereby the appellee was injured. This car was, it appears, then coming down this highway, towards Prestonsburg, in the same direction in which six or eight other preceding cars were being driven, which, seeing the road equipment’s obstruction of the road, had thereupon stopped, waiting for the tractor and grader to be removed from their passway. However, it is shown that the course of action followed, under such circumstances, by Ramsey, the driver of the ear in which appellee was then riding, was altogether different and less cautious, in that, instead of his also stopping behind these other six or eight cars he saw parked there along the highway in front of this blocked point, extending back in a line from it for a distance of some 85 feet, he nevertheless drove around all these parked automobiles, without slackening, but rather increasing, his speed, and recklessly and impetuously rushed on towards the closed point in the road, where were standing this tractor and grader which appellant’s employees were attempting to there turn across the road. Ramsey testifies that he was going at a rate of some 25 or 30 miles an hour until he came within a few feet of the obstructing road machinery, when, suddenly recognizing the disaster threatening, he then desperately attempted to stop his car with all his brakes, but too late to avert its crashing into the coupling pin extending across the intervening space *591

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Related

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418 S.W.2d 398 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1967)
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150 S.W.2d 14 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)
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122 S.W.2d 482 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 S.W.2d 666, 274 Ky. 586, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commission-v-hall-kyctapphigh-1938.