Summerfield v. Wetherell

135 A. 147, 82 N.H. 513, 1927 N.H. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedFebruary 1, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 A. 147 (Summerfield v. Wetherell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summerfield v. Wetherell, 135 A. 147, 82 N.H. 513, 1927 N.H. LEXIS 73 (N.H. 1927).

Opinion

*514 Snow, J.

The accident occurred at Exeter, on a street running east and west known as Front, at a point opposite and southerly of a fifty foot triangular grass plot formed by a junction of said street with Winter street, which leads off Front in a northeasterly direction, and by a narrow connecting way on the east. A third street, forty-seven feet in width, known as Carroll, enters on Front from a southwesterly direction immediately west of the apex of the grass plot.

The plaintiff’s intestate was a boy seven years of age, residing on Carroll street. He attended a school situated on Winter street about four hundred and fifty feet from the northeasterly corner of Carroll. He was accustomed to return from school by Winter street, crossing . the grass plot and Front to Carroll.

The three streets at and near their junction constitute a congested residential section of Exeter village. Proulx, the driver of the defendent’s Chevrolet car, was a resident of Exeter, and as a witness disclosed familiarity with its streets. The accident occurred on a school day, between three-thirty and four o’clock in the afternoon, the hour when school children might be expected to be returning home. The evidence disclosed the presence upon the sidewalk of Front street near Carroll, at the time of the accident, of at least five other children.

Proulx, the only eyewitness of the accident, was proceeding easterly upon Front street, driving the car as a part of a continuous five-day run to test the consumption of gasoline and oil. He first saw the boy in front of his right mudguard at the instant of impact.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that there was a dent or depression, one and seven-eighths of an inch deep, in the surface of the forward end of the mudguard, which was constructed of “sixteen gauge sheet steel,” that the guard was “tipped back some,” and its fastening to the car slightly cracked. There were marks on the boy’s legs at or below the knees and on his back, principally, however, on his hip, where it could be inferred the tip of the mudguard struck him. The back of his head was entirely crushed in.

The immediate place of the collision, as indicated by the blood on the ground, and by the position of the body, was at a point on the roadbed about twenty-six inches from the edge of the grass, and between thirty-five and forty-five feet easterly of the northeast corner of Carroll street. This point was nearly on a line drawn between the termini of the easterly sidewalks upon Winter and Carroll, and, it could be found, approximately on the boy’s cus *515 tomary course of travel when returning from school. The body lay on the edge of the traveled roadbed close to the grass, or on the edge of the grass.

The sidewalk upon the southerly side of Front has a variable width of between three and four feet, and is separated from the traveled part of the street by a grass strip about six feet wide. Along the grass strip, next to the sidewalk, are a tree, a telephone'pole and a second tree, distant easterly from Carroll in the order named, approximately fifty-five, eighty, and eighty-five feet.

The evidence as to the speed of the car was conflicting. Proulx estimated it at from twelve to fifteen miles per hour. This was confirmed by a witness for the defendant who was traveling in a Ford car in the opposite direction, and who testified he passed Proulx at Carroll street. On the other hand, a witness for the plaintiff, who observed the defendant’s car when at a point several hundred feet away, testified that the car was going “extremely fast” —so fast that it was a matter of remark, and that it passed her so quickly, that she could not read the letters upon the side of the car advertising the test run. Another witness who was about one hundred feet west of Carroll street observed the car coming “very fast,” that it did not slacken its speed until it ran upon the boy, and that there was a loud squeaking noise when the brakes were applied.

The roadbed was dry. Proulx testified that he must have put his brakes -on immediately he struck the boy, and that he stopped within one hundred feet. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that this distance by actual measurement was one hundred and thirty-five feet. There was evidence that, beginning at a point between fifteen and eighteen feet past the point of collision, the roadbed showed that one wheel dragged for about fifteen feet, and that from that point wheels upon both sides of the car had dragged for a distance of ninety feet. Proulx was an experienced operator and testified that his brakes were working all right. The plaintiff who had had considerable experience in operating automobiles, testified that a car, traveling between twelve and fifteen miles per hour upon a dry road, could be stopped by the application of brakes in good condition within ten to twelve feet “without any wheel-sliding”; that, from his experience, having in mind the distance traveled with the brake application indicated by the marks of the car on the roadbed, and its weight and load, the defendant must have been proceeding, at the time the brakes were applied, at the rate of forty *516 miles per hour. The defendant submitted evidence that the proximity of the brake pedal and the accelerator in a Chevrolet car were such that the driver might, in the excitement of the accident, have applied his foot to the latter. Proulx had no recollection of making such a misapplication.

As there was no evidence that any of the named streets had been laid out-in the mode prescribed by statute, or had been in use for twenty years (P. L., c. 74, s. 1), the provisions of the motor vehicle statutes do not apply. P. L., c. 99, s. 1, cl. xxv. Dow v. Latham, 80 N. H. 492, 496. The rights of the parties must be determined under the general principles of the common lavr of negligence.

The defendant contends that the plaintiff failed to establish (1) that the defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the deceased’s injury and (2) that such injury was the cause of his death.

1. The substance of the defendant’s first contention is that, since the boy was seen only at the instant of impact, and as there is no direct evidence whence he came, it is mere conjecture that the manner of operating the car had anything to do with the accident, or that the exercise of due care by the driver could have avoided it; that it is as reasonable to suppose that the boy dodged from behind the passing Ford, or a team which it appeared was approaching from the east, or from behind a tree, as to conclude that he came from a direction where his presence could have been discovered in season to have avoided the accident; in other words, that the evidence presents a case of two or more equally possible theories as to the truth of which the jury are not permitted to guess. Reliance is placed upon Dingman v. Merrill, 77 N. H. 485, 486, and cases there 'cited, all of which are clearly distinguishable from the instant case. It is sufficient to say that the defendant’s position appears to be predicated upon the erroneous assumption that the plaintiff was bound to produce direct evidence of the course pursued by the boy from which a want of care by Proulx could be inferred.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A. 147, 82 N.H. 513, 1927 N.H. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summerfield-v-wetherell-nh-1927.