Suter's Administrator v. Kentucky Power & Light Co.

76 S.W.2d 29, 256 Ky. 356, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 409
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 13, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 76 S.W.2d 29 (Suter's Administrator v. Kentucky Power & Light Co.) 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
Suter's Administrator v. Kentucky Power & Light Co., 76 S.W.2d 29, 256 Ky. 356, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 409 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Eichardson

Affirming.

Naomi Katheryne Suter, about 13 years of age, on July 9, 1933, was killed by the overturning of an automobile in which she1 was traveling. She and Euth McKay, in an automobile operated by E. G-. McKay, the-father of Euth, attended Sunday school at a church near the residence of Mark Gentry in Owen county, Ky. While they were at Sunday school, E. G. McKay left.-the church in his automobile with Laurel Yancy and Elmer Moreland, went to Earnest Bourne’s to look at á'crop *358 of tobacco, where they remained about ten minutes and returned in front of Mrs. Jessie Jones’ residence, when they stopped and took a drink of whisky, then returned to the church. The container of the whisky was a pint bottle, half full. They, of course, emptied it and threw it away.

After church McKay with his daughter and Naomi Katheryne, occupying the front seat with him, traveled Highway No. 227, going to his home. Before reaching the point where the automobile overturned and killed her, McKay’s automobile passed that of Byron Donnley which was traveling in the same direction. Within about 300 feet of the barn of Cooper Gentry, McKay passed the car of Ball. McKay claims Ball was traveling 15 or 20 miles an hour and he was traveling 25 or 30 miles an hour. Ball testifies that McKay was traveling 40 or 50 miles an hour at the time he passed. Before reaching Gentry’s barn, McKay claims he saw for the first time a Studebaker car parked partly in the Gentry driveway with the rear wheels about 20 inches, and the body about 3 or 3% feet, in the highway; that he traveled without slackening his speed, going on the left side of the highway, in order to pass the Studebaker, when the wheels of his car began to skid — the road being wet. To be accurate, we here use his language: The Studebaker was “three or three and one-half feet out on the road.”. “I pulled over to the.left to keep from colliding — my hind wheels began to skid' — my left front wheel running in the direction of the car on my right side.” “I turned my ear back to my left, running in the direction of the big tree in Mark Gentry’s yard — almost running into the tree.” “I swung back and run.in line to mail bos.” “The car skidded off of the road and turned over.” “I had no control of it from the time it started to skid until it turned over about 300 feet from the Studebaker.” “The Suter girl was caught between the door and the top.” She was immediately removed and carried to the doctor’s office, then to the home of McKay, where she died.

The Studebaker belonged to the Kentucky Power & Light Company and had been driven to the point where it was parked by one of its employees. At the time McKay passed the Studebaker, Homer Hughes and Jesse Carrico were in it.

On a trial before a jury a verdict was returned for *359 the Kentucky Power & Light Company, the owner of the Studebaker.

The basis of the cause of action of the administrator is the car of the Kentucky Power & Light Company was, by its agents, negligently parked “on that part of the highway used for public travel and on that portion, over which McKay was compelled to travel”; “that he did not know it was so parked” “upon the highway until he approached within a few feet of same;” and he “was compelled to, and did, turn to the left,” and in so doing as the proximate result thereof, “his car began to skid and turned over and inflicted such injuries on Naomi Katheryne Suter that she presently died therefrom.” The Kentucky Power & Light Company traversed the petition and pleaded that McKay’s negligence was the sole cause of her death.

The administrator is here complaining because the court refused to give offered instructions and overruled his objection to certain given instructions. The offered instructions read:

“The court instructs the jury that it was unlawful and negligent for the defendant, Kentucky Power and Light Company, a corporation, its officers, agents or employees, acting within the scope of their employment, to stop its automobile or automobiles, upon State Highway No. 227 at the. time and place complained of, if it did so, at any point within 1001 feet from the brow of a hill or curve in the road which obstructed the view for a distance of less than 150 feet from the crest of the hill, if any, or curve, if any, or other obstructions, if any. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence in this case that the driver of the car in which Naomi Katheryne Suter was riding acted in an emergency produced by the negligence, if any, of the defendant, its officers, agents or employees, then he is not held to the same strict rule or ordinary prudence required and. demanded of one not so-situated. The court instructs the jury that the decedent, Naomi Katheryne Suter, was responsible-only for such negligence, if- any there was, that, she was guilty of, and she is not liable for any contributory negligence, if any there was, that may have been committed by the driver of the machine in which she was riding.”

*360 Not only should the instructions in every case be based on the pleadings, but on pleadings supported by ■evidence sufficient to authorize a submission of the issues presented by the pleadings. It is always the duty •of the court to confine his instructions to issues made by pleadings which are supported by the evidence. Edge v. Ott, 151 Ky. 672, 152 S. W. 764; Hess’ Adm’r v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 249 Ky. 624, 61 S. W. (2d) 299; City of Prestonsburg v. Mellon, 220 Ky. 808, 295 S. W. 1064; Black Mt. Corporation v. Webb, 228 Ky. 281, 14 S. W. (2d) 1063. There was neither pleading nor evidence authorizing the giving of the first-quoted instruction and under the familiar rule that a requested instruction on a cause of action not pleaded should not be given the court properly refused it. Minor v. Gordon, 171 Ky. 790, 188 S. W. 768. Another way of stating the same is, instructions should be limited to the things alleged. Eastham v. Stumbo, 212 Ky. 685, 279 S. W. 1109. The court properly refused to give the third quoted instruction. There was no plea of contributory negligence in the pleading of either the administrator or the Kentucky Power & Light Company, and for this reason alone no instruction thereon was proper.

In the petition, the administrator particularly pleaded special negligence as the basis of his cause of action. The power and light company took the broad position that the negligence of McKay was the sole cause of the death of the decedent. Even if the pleadings be regarded as sufficient to authorize the admission •of evidence of an emergency caused by the negligence ■of the power and light company, there was no evidence tending to show an emergency existed. McKay admits that he saw the Studebaker and its position in the road when he was 100 feet away from it. The highway was 22 feet wide; 16 feet of which was metaled and 3 feet on each side of the metal was suitable for travel. He had the distance of 100 feet in which to bear to the left, and if the Studebaker was 3 or 3% feet on the metal portion of the highway,- there was ample space for his safe passage. There is a total absence of any evidence of the existence of an “emergency,” as this term is used in the offered instruction.

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76 S.W.2d 29, 256 Ky. 356, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suters-administrator-v-kentucky-power-light-co-kyctapphigh-1934.