United States v. Uarte

175 F.2d 110, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2341
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 17, 1949
Docket12042
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 175 F.2d 110 (United States v. Uarte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Uarte, 175 F.2d 110, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2341 (9th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

BONE, Circuit Judge.

This is an action brought under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C.A. § 921 et seq., * in which appellee recovered judgment against appellant. Appellee’s complaint alleged in general terms that he sustained serious personal injuries and property damage as the result of an automobile collision caused by the negligence *111 of two Federal Government Navy Department employees (petty officers) while they were driving a Government-owned automobile in the performance of official duties within the scope of their employment. The specific charge is that they drove a Navy Department “station wagon” automobile in such a negligent manner as to cause it to collide with his sedan automobile which in turn caused his sedan to come into collision with a truck and trailer then going in the opposite direction. The resulting collision inflicted upon appellee the aforesaid injuries and caused damage to his sedan.

The accident in question occurred about 11:30 P.M. on a paved highway near Ma-dera, California, at a point where the paving was approximately 22 feet in width. It was raining and the highway was slippery. Appellee was driving in a southerly direction and the Navy car was proceeding in the same direction at some point behind appellee’s car. A heavy truck to which was attached a semi-trailer and a trailer was then proceeding in a northerly direction on the same highway. The collision which occurred involved all three vehicles; both Navy men were killed and their car practically demolished. Appellee received a fractured skull and brain concussion resulting in a complete amnesia as to the facts of the accident. No other witness saw the accident except McCoy, the driver of the truck, and his wife who was riding with him. She was unable to add anything of substance to his testimony.

The record before us calls for emphasis upon the fact that the three-vehicle crash occurred with appalling suddenness on a dark and rainy night. This fact probably accounts for some uncertainty which characterized the testimony of McCoy. It is certain that a calm appraisal by McCoy of the precise movements and positions of the fast moving three vehicles at the instant of the crash was well-nigh impossible. He was abruptly confronted with a highly dangerous situation; his truck-trailer combination weighing 55,000 pounds was then going 40 miles an hour on his own right side of the highway. His own safety and that of his wife must have appeared to be of supreme importance in the split-second before the cars caromed off one another and caused his heavy truck-trailer combine to “jack-knife” across the highway.

The Navy car was almost completely demolished and after the collision was about 40 1 feet north of the position of the other vehicles.

Photographs and sketches were employed to show marks on the cars and on the highway, and the position of the various vehicles right after the crash.

There was testimony that the Navy car was coming up behind appellee’s car at a high rate of speed, an estimate placing this speed at 70 or 80 miles per hour at a point a few miles north of the point of the collision.

The Government is persuaded that this confusing and kaleidoscopic pattern of events fails to show a degree of negligence of the operator of the Government car which imposes liability on the Government. It avers that inferences drawn therefrom by the trial court lack support in the evidence.

We cannot agree with the Government’s view. It appears that certain aspects of the evidence and testimony did trouble the trial judge but this was natural since he was here confronted with a difficult task in appraising and weighing all of the facts disclosed in the evidence. The totality of these facts caused him to finally conclude that the negligence of the driver of the Government car was sufficiently established as the proximate cause of the accident. As he indicated, he was called upon to exercise judgment, from hearing the evidence and observing the witnesses, and we cannot say that the inferences he drew from the confusing and complicated array of facts are unreasonable or lack support in the record.

Appellant advances three major reasons for reversal of the judgment: (1) The evidence does not support the judgment in view of the fact that only the truck driver (McCoy) and his wife were eye-witnesses; (2) error in admitting evidence of speed of the Government car at remote points which were 4 to 11 miles north of the point of the collision, and without any additional evidence showing the speed or manner of operation of said vehicle be *112 tween these remóte points and the scene of the accident, or any evidence indicating that its speed was in any way a cause of the accident, and (3) error in permitting McCoy to be called and examined as an adverse witness by appellee pursuant to Rule 43(b), Federal Rules Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A.

We have already indicated our lack of agreement with the first of these contentions.

As to the second contention. There was evidence from estimates tending to establish facts from which the court could logically infer that for over a course of several miles north of the place of col- • lision, the Navy car had been continuously proceeding at a rate of speed of from 70 to 80 miles per hour; that it had then been handled in a reckless manner in passing a car ahead on a slippery highway; that its condition after the accident indicated an impact of frightful violence. We think that the evidence in this case gave rise to a legitimate inference that the Government car had been continuously driven at a high and dangerous rate of speed for several miles before it reached the scene of the accident and that it was maintaining such high and dangerous rate of speed at the time and place of the accident at which point it attempted to pass appellee’s car in a reckless manner which caused the collision.

In respect to the actions of the Government car at the time of the collision, we think that the trial court may well have concluded from McCoy’s testimony that in attempting to pass appellee’s car the Navy car “clipped” the left rear fender of ap-pellee’s car at a time when there was insufficient clearance between appellee’s car and the approaching truck driven hy McCoy, and that this contact with or “clipping” of appellee’s car caused it to skid and turn into the path of the truck. McCoy had testified that he saw “the two lights bunched together and then one started skidding.” His memory being refreshed by reference to a certain statement made by him (hereafter referred to) and in answer to questions of court and counsel for appellee, McCoy stated in substance that “the two pairs of lights were so close at that moment that they seemed as one * * it ['Uarte sedan] just seemed to fairly jump out there. That is the reason that I thought he got clipped or blew a tire.” The trial judge asked McCoy if this “statement” he had given the Madera County District Attorney at the scene of the accident was true, to which McCoy answered “to the best of my knowledge, yes, sir.”

We think that the facts in this case portray a situation where admissibility of evidence as to the speed of the Navy car at the times and places mentioned in the testimony was a question to be determined in the sound discretion of the trial court.

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Bluebook (online)
175 F.2d 110, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-uarte-ca9-1949.