Vennard v. Lihme

2 R.I. Dec. 38
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 30, 1925
Docketno. 1169
StatusPublished

This text of 2 R.I. Dec. 38 (Vennard v. Lihme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vennard v. Lihme, 2 R.I. Dec. 38 (R.I. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CAPOTOSTO, J.

Tlie plaintiff in an action of trespass on the case for negligence received a verdict from the jury with damages assessed at $18,-000. The defendant moves for a new trial and urges not only that the verdict is against the evidence and the weight thereof, but also claims that the verdict is the result of sympathy and prejudice.

The case revolves about the collision between a Packard motor car driven by the defendant and a motorcycle operated by the plaintiff at the intersection of Elm and School streets in the town of Westerly in the early afternoon of September 23, 1924. The day was clear and the roadways were dry. The defendant, a young man 18 years of age, is a resident of Watch Hill. The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was a little over 20 years old and employed as á coast guard in the Uited States coast service at Watch Hill.

At the point of the accident Elm street runs practically north and south. School street intersects Elm .street and runs for all intents and purposes east and west. The southeast corner of Elm and School streets is a square corner while the other three corners are rounded out to a greater or less extent. The Pendle-ton property, so called, is situated at the southeast corner of Elm and School streets and is enclosed by a low wall of masonry and some shrubbery, which shrubbery grows thicker as you proceed in an easterly direction along School street. This corner is clearly reproduced in the photographs introduced in evidence by the defendant and marked defendant’s exhibits, A2, A5, A8. A't the southwest corner of Elm and School streets is located the Langworthy residence,: which property is enclosed by a picket fence of the ordinary size and has no shrubbery at or in the immediate vicinity of its rounded corner. Elm street is lined with trees of considerable size on both sides of the street. (Defendant’s Exhibits A4 and A9.) Elm and School streets are approximately the same in width, some 26 and 25 feet wide respectively. Proceeding in a northerly direction Elm street presents a down grade as you approach the intersection of School street. Travelling in an easterly direction School street has an up grade which extends beyond the line of intersection of the two streets in question. (Defendant’s Exhibits A2, A3, A4, A5, A8.

On the day in question the plaintiff, having received leave of absence, was riding his motorcycle in a northerly direction along Elm street, intending to go through Westerly to his parents’ home in Stonington, Connecticut. -The defendant was out in his motor car with a school chum, John L. Pardridge, and two young girls, Miss Carrie Nye, 17 years' old, and Miss Edith Burke, 19 years of age, driving in an easterly direction up School street. The automobile and mpltorcyc^e came together at some more or less indefinite point beyond the easterly curb line of Elm street at or in the vicinity of the center of School street.

Before proceeding with a consideration of the evidence as to liability, the Court desires to state that there was nothing improper in the fact that the defendant and his chum were taking the two young ladies out for a short time. The boys called for the two girls at the home of Miss Nye and started off on an aimless [39]*39automobile ride. Any innuendo that the whole affair was anything more than perhaps an innocent flirtation is unwarranted, either from the spoken evidence or from the appearance and demeanor of the parties concerned while on the witness stand. While this situation is deserving of careful consideration as to the attention or lack of attention which any one or all of these young people were paying to the existing conditions at the time of the accident, it is immaterial for any other purpose.

- The first witness for the plaintiff, one William Liddell, testified that while he was on the westerly side of Elm street, north of the intersection of School and Elm streets, at a point about opposite the Fowler house, -so called, he saw the automobile “just as it shot across;!’ that he could not tell how fast the ear was going, that he first saw the motorcycle some 300 feet north of the intersection of Elm and School streets coming right along at a medium rate of speed; that be did not see the motorcycle change its speed in any degree, and that at the time of .the collision he could not see the motorcycle as his view was obstructed by the intervening automobile.

Mrs. Lydia York Brown testified that while she was walking on the northerly side of School street, going toward Elm street, she saw the automobile coming up the crest of the hill at a great rate of speed and giving no signal; that as the automobile reached the westerly corner of Elm street she noticed the motorcycle in the vicinity of the Pendleton house, and that at that time it seemed to her as if the motorcycle made a quick turn in her direction. In cross-examination she stated that when she observed what she had testified to she was 75 feet away frdm the corner; that she had stepped off the distance from where she was to the corner but a few days before she testified and had counted 80 steps, but that, in any event, when she saw the accident she was opposite the gate to the schoolhouse yard. It may be important to observe at this point that the gate referred to, accordng to measurements made and subsequently testified to by Fred T. Mitchell, is 233 feet from Elm street. This witness further said that she had heard the noise of a motorcycle coming down Elm street but that she did not actually see the motorcycle until it had reached the corner and made a quick turn to its right; that she had no knowledge of the rate of speed of the motorcycle when she first saw it, and that in regard to the speed of the automobile, as to which she had testified to in direct, all she meant to say was that the automobile was going over 15 miles an hour.

Thomas Wilson Dorr Coy, a witness for 'the plaintiff, stated that at' the time of the accident he was in his room, which is on the second floor of the dwelling house on School street,- next below the' Langworthy house; that is room as two windows, one facing School street, the other looking towards Elm street, the windows being some three feet or so ■apart; that he heard a noise on School street, went to the School St. window, and seeing nothing walked over to the window facing Elm street, from which position he saw an automobile strike a bicycle. He further said that the 'automobile was going at a speed of about 30 miles an hour. In his cross-examination,- this witness testified that he first saw the motorcycle when it was struck by the automobile, that he did not know how fast the motorcycle was moving or whether it gave any signal. He further said that he got his view of the collision by looking toward Elm street between the limbs of two trees. In weighing the testimony of this wit[40]*40ness, his advanced age. and fe.eble, condition of health must be kept in mind.

Edwin D.

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2 R.I. Dec. 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vennard-v-lihme-risuperct-1925.