Towle v. Aube

310 A.2d 259, 1973 Me. LEXIS 350
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 9, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 310 A.2d 259 (Towle v. Aube) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Towle v. Aube, 310 A.2d 259, 1973 Me. LEXIS 350 (Me. 1973).

Opinion

*261 DUFRESNE, Chief Justice.

The plaintiff, Michael F. Towle, sued the defendant, Robert P. Aube, to recover damages for personal injuries, the total loss of his car, some loss of wages, and for other personal property damage sustained in a collision with the Aube automobile at a multiple intersection in Lewiston, Maine, where Sabattus Street and Campus Avenue meet at an acute angle. Both parties were the drivers of their respective vehicle. The accident happened at approximately 1:00 o’clock in the early morning of August 27, 1967. Tried under our comparative negligence statute, 14 M.R.S.A., § 156, 1 the case was submitted to the jury upon special interrogatories, to which the jurors responded that the negligence of both parties was equal. Thus, the ensuing judgment was in favor of the defendant Aube. The plaintiff appeals and we deny the appeal.

Several points are raised on appeal, and, in order to appreciate fully the treatment given to these alleged claims of error, we should initially focus our attention upon the evidence presented to the jury. Hence, we summarily recite the events which brought the parties together that night.

Towle started out first. He had picked up his girl friend (his wife at the time of trial) on August 26, 1967, a Saturday, at about 7:30 p. m. in Lewiston and then drove to the home of Wayne and Rhonda Sanborn in Leeds, Maine. The future Mrs. Towle had a birthday coming up the next day and the group were out to celebrate her anniversary. Towle had two mixed drinks at the Sanborns. At approximately 9:00 or 9:30 p. m., which is about the time the Aubes started out for the Heathwood Inn in Lisbon, Maine, Towle, his future bride and the Sanborns were on their way to the Inn to continue the celebration. Towle had three or four more drinks there, before the party was back on the road toward downtown Lisbon Street in Lewiston, where the two men repaired to a tavern for a glass of beer while the women went out to buy cigarettes.

The Aubes, on the other hand, had left their home in Lewiston at about 9:30 p. m. Their destination was the Heathwood, where they met friends and stayed until 11:30 p. m. Aube also had several drinks at the Inn, but then went to the Steer House in Lewiston for a late meal, leaving the restaurant at about 12:45 a. m. The Aubes, on their way home from the restaurant, traveled East Avenue and turned left on Campus Avenue (Campus Avenue, East Avenue and Sabattus Street mark the boundaries of a built-up triangular portion of the City of Lewiston), and, immediately prior to the accident, had stopped for the red light at the multiple intersection, which was controlled by overhead traffic signal lights hanging over the center of the intersection.

Towle intended to bring the Sanborns to their home in Leeds and, in the process, returned from downtown Lisbon Street in Lewiston to East Avenue and traveled East Avenue directly to Sabattus Street, *262 where he turned left on Sabattus Street and was traversing the multiple intersection, where Campus Avenue and Sabattus Street intersect at an acute angle, when his car was struck on its left side by the Aube automobile.

At about the time Towle was converging toward the intersection, Officer Cimato of the Lewiston Police Department, to the observation of Aube who was waiting for the traffic light to change from its steady red position, approached the traffic signal control box on the corner and switched the mechanism from its steady control cycle to the flashing cycle.

What happened at that time is somewhat in conflict. Mr. and Mrs. Aube testified that the signal light for Campus Avenue traffic turned green and Mr. Aube then proceeded into the intersection, when, as he neared the mid-point in the intersection, the light turned to flashing red. Mrs. Aube’s warning to look out for the approaching Towle automobile went to naught, being too late to permit avoidance of the collision. Towle testified that he never saw the Aube car and had a flashing yellow light at all times. Officer Cimato described how the lights operate when the switch is flipped from the steady cycle to the flashing cycle. It was his testimony that, upon the switching operation, there is a period of time, less than two seconds, when the signal will show no light whatsoever before it resumes its operation on the flashing cycle. Charles Kerr, an electrician who spends ninety percent of his working hours on traffic light systems and who was familiar with the lights at the intersection of Sabattus Street and Campus Avenue agreed with the officer that, if the light is green on Sabattus Street and red on Campus Avenue at the time the switching operation from automatic to flashing cycle is activated, there is a slight pause before the flash mechanism becomes operative, but he stated that the intermission is very short, the time lapse being measurable in a fraction of a second, at the most not more than one half of a second.

1. Exclusion of evidence — leading question

Mr. Sanborn, who had been called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified as follows in direct examination:

“Q. Okay. Now, as you were coming down Sabattus Street, let me direct your attention to that time. Was did you notice anything about Mr. Towle’s driving that seemed to you improper?
“A. His driving wasn’t improper at all.
“Q. How about speed? Can you tell us how fast you were going?
“A. I couldn’t tell you how fast, but it was no more than 30 miles an hour.
“Q. Was there anything about . did you have any feeling that Mr. Towle’s drinking was affecting his driving at all ?
[Defendant’s counsel]
“I object, if the Court please.
[The Court]
“Well, that’s excluded on that.
[Plaintiff’s counsel]
“Q. From your observation was there anything about Mr. Towle’s driving that seemed to be affected by his drinking?
[The Court]
“Well, that’s still improper. This is your witness. You can’t lead him. That’s excluded.” (Emphasis added.)

The exclusion of Mr. Sanborn’s testimony respecting the effect, if any, which Towle’s drinking of intoxicating beverages may have had on his driving, is the basis for the plaintiff’s first point on appeal. He claims that the lower Court committed reversible error, when it ruled the question a leading one and sustained the objection to it.

*263 It is well settled the general rule is that on the direct examination of a witness, absent special circumstances, 2 leading questions are improper and should be excluded. And it is not error for the court to sustain an objection to a question the answer to which would be competent evidence, if the question is leading. Thatenhorst v. United States, 1941, 10 Cir., 119 F.2d 567; Hubbard v. State, 1967, 2 Md. App.

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Bluebook (online)
310 A.2d 259, 1973 Me. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/towle-v-aube-me-1973.