Sternberg Dredging Co. v. Screws

166 So. 754, 175 Miss. 383, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 37
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1936
DocketNo. 32160.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 166 So. 754 (Sternberg Dredging Co. v. Screws) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sternberg Dredging Co. v. Screws, 166 So. 754, 175 Miss. 383, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 37 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee, Miss Lurline Screws, instituted this suit against the Sternberg Dredging Company and Burl Moody, for damages for personal injuries sustained by her in a collision between an automobile in which she was riding as a guest and a truck owned by the said dredging company and driven by the said Moody. She recovered a judgment for one thousand five hundred dol *387 lars against both defendants, and from this judgment this appeal was prosecuted.

Appellee was traveling north on United States Highway 61 in an automobile driven by her sixteen year old brother. She was on the rear seat immediately behind the driver. Her sister and a young man were also on the rear seat, while her father, who owned the automobile, and another young man were on the front seat with the driver. Some distance south of Rolling Fork, in Sharkey county, there is a narrow bridge one hundred twenty-eight feet and two inches long, which has a clearance of fifteen feet and one or two inches between the guard rails. The road north and south of this bridge is straight for a long distance, and several feet wider than the bridge, and the floor of the bridge is covered with gravel. The collision occurred at a point near the north end of the bridge, and the automobile was knocked or plunged through the east railing or banister, and landed bottom up in the creek over which the bridge passed. The northern twenty-two feet of the east railing was tom down, while the truck scraped the west rail and broke it at a point sixteen feet from the north end of the bridge.

The testimony as to the movement and the exact location of the automobile and the truck immediately before and at the time of the collision is conflicting. Three of the occupants of the automobile testified that they were traveling north at a speed of thirty-five miles per hour; that when the automobile in which they were riding entered the south end of the bridge the truck was about one hundred feet north of the north end of the bridge and was traveling south at a speed of about forty miles per hour; that it continued onto the bridge without slackening its speed; that the right wheels of the truck were from one to two feet from the west guardl rail; and that it so obstructed the road that it was impossible to avoid a collision, although the driver of the automobile pulled as close to the east rail as possible.

The driver of the truck testified that the track entered *388 ’the bridge first; that when it entered the north end of the bridge the automobile in which appellant was riding, was twenty-five or thirty feet south of the south end of the bridge and was approaching it at the rate of forty-five or fifty miles per hour; that the automobile entered and continued over the bridge without slackening its speed; that when he realized that the automobile was not slowing down he pulled the truck over against the west rail and stopped there; and that the automobile came on swinging, or swerving, in the loose gravel, and struck the truck at a point about where the front fender joins the running board. The only other occupant of the truck corroborated the driver of the truck in all respects, except as to the movement of the truck at the moment of the collision. As to this, the witness testified that the truck was almost, but not entirely, stopped at the time of the collision, and that it rolled a short distance after the collision.

Appellee testified that about five minutes before the collision, at a time when they were traveling at a speed of thirty-five miles an hour and there was no appearancé of danger, she, being tired, removed her hat, rested her head on the back of the seat, and closed her eyes, and remained in that position until the collision occurred. She further testified that she was not familiar with the road; that she had no knowledge of the fact that they were approaching the bridge, or that any danger whatever confronted them.

The first point presented by appellants is that a peremptory instruction requested by them should have been granted. The argument upon this point is that the physical facts demonstrate that the appellants were guilty of no negligence, and that appellee’s injuries were due solely to the negligence of the driver of the automobile in which she was riding. In support of this contention appellants rely upon the uncontradicated testimony that the body of the truck scraped the west railing or banister of the bridge, and the further fact that the automobile *389 passed the front end of the truck and struck it at a point near the connection of the front fender with the running hoard. The effect of this argument is that these facts demonstrate that the truck was on the extreme west side of the bridge, where it had a right to be, and that the automobile swerved out of its right of way and ran into the truck. We cannot agree with the contention that the physical facts are wholly inconsistent with the Version of appellee’s witnesses as to the location and movement of the two- motor vehicles just before they entered the bridge and at the time of the collision. Accepting as true the testimony of appellee’s witnesses as to the location and speed of the truck immediately before and at the time of the crash, as the jury has done, the physical facts appear to us to be easily reconcilable therewith. The testimony shows that there was a clearance between the guard rails of the bridge of only fifteen feet and one or two inches, and that the truck was seven feet and one and one-half inches wide, while the sedan was six feet and six inches wide. The combined width of the two motor vehicles was thirteen feet, seven and one-half inches, and therefore the clearance between them when passing at any point on the bridge could not exceed eig'hteen and one-half inches, if each of the motor vehicles was touching the guard rail on its respective side of the road. It is probably true that two motor vehicles being driven slowly and carefully can pass each other safely on a bridge covered with gravel when there is a possible clearance of only eighteen inches, but an attempt to de so at a high rate of speed would be manifestly dangerous and negligent.

In Universal Truck Loading Company v. Taylor (Miss.), 164 So. 3, it was held that the driver of a motor vehicle which reaches a bridge in advance of one approaching from the opposite direction has the right of way, but this rule does not have the effect of rendering one guilty of negligence who; in the exercise of due care and at a reasonable speed under the circumstances, drives *390 onto a bridge already occupied by a vehicle being operated in an apparently careful manner, if such bridge is sufficiently wide to permit the safe passage of two- carefully driven vehicles; but to enter and traverse a bridge covered with loose gravel, on which there is a possible clearance between passing vehicles of only eighteen inches, at a high rate of speed, when the bridge is already occupied by a motor vehicle rapidly approaching from the opposite direction, is manifestly exceedingly dangerous and highly negligent.

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Bluebook (online)
166 So. 754, 175 Miss. 383, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sternberg-dredging-co-v-screws-miss-1936.