Walter v. State

187 Misc. 1034, 65 N.Y.S.2d 378, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2831
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 22, 1946
DocketClaim No. 27891; Claim No. 27910
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 187 Misc. 1034 (Walter v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walter v. State, 187 Misc. 1034, 65 N.Y.S.2d 378, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2831 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1946).

Opinion

Louksberry, J.

These claims arose out of a highway collision which occurred at the intersection of Thompson and South Bay Roads, near Syracuse, in the town of Cicero, Onondaga County, New York, on October 4, 1944, were tried concurrently and thus disposed of herein.

On the morning of October 4,1944, claimant, Captain Le Roy Walter, age thirty-two, an army flight surgeon then attached to the Syracuse army air base, accompanied by one Lieutenant Davidson was driven in an army staff car to the Rome army air base by a civilian army employee, claimant Mary Sanders, a chauffeur at the Syracuse army air base, who had beep assigned by the motor-pool dispatcher to make the trip. Completing their business at Rome early in the afternoon, Captain Walter and Lieutenant Davidson entered the rear seat of the staff car, which claimant Sanders was driving, for the return trip to Syra[1036]*1036cuse. Captain Walter had been on duty since early morning, and soon fell asleep. Lieutenant Davidson, who was not seriously injured, was on foreign duty at the time of the trial and his account of the events leading up to the accident was not available. The court, therefore, must attempt to determine what actually occurred from the physical evidence presented and from the widely differing testimony of the drivers of the two colliding vehicles.

South Bay Boad consists of two nine-foot concrete strips. Thompson Boad is a macadam highway, varying in width, but is approximately seventéen feet wide. At the intersection, South Bay Boad runs in a generally northeast and southwest direction, and Thompson Boad in a generally north and south direction, .so that it crosses South Bay Boad at a /northeast interior angle of forty-three degrees. Traffic on Thompson Boad, crossing the intersection, is controlled by standard State highway stop signs, one being located on the easterly edge of Thompson Boad about 50 feet south of the intersection. On South Bay Boad, about 300 feet east of the intersection, there is also a standard State highway crossroads sign, warning westerly bound traffic of the approaching intersection. Both highways are straight and level for considerable distances from the intersection. There was no material obstruction to the view of either of the drivers approaching the intersection. From sixty to eighty feet east of the intersection, South Bay Boad widens gradually on both sides, making an additional curving paved surface into Thompson Boad, and to the east the ground outside the paved portions of South Bay Boad is practically level with the highway.

The afternoon of the accident was clear and sunny, the road surface dry. The staff car, with claimant Sanders driving, traveled west on South Bay Boad, approaching the intersection. On Thompson Boad, traveling north into the intersection, was a dump truck owned by the Department of Public Works of the State of New York, and driven by one Fred Holtz, a State employee. The truck was loaded with four tons of warm macadam, known as blaclc-top ”, for construction work being conducted on Boute 31, further north. There were no other vehicles in the vicinity.

At a point near the center of the intersection, the right front of the staff car collided with the right side of the truck near the rear wheels. The impact broke the rear shackles of the truck, which continued forward a probable ten feet before its rear wheels and the entire rear assembly weighing 1,500 pounds [1037]*1037broke loose, jumped a fence into a field northwest of the intersection, and came to rest nearly eighty feet distant. The rear of the loaded truck body dropped to the pavement, and the truck dragged and skidded on towards the north up Thompson Boad sideways, the rear of its chassis scraping intermittent gouge marks of from three quarters to an inch in depth in the macadam surface of the road, for a distance of forty-nine and one-half feet. The staff car, badly damaged, remained in South Bay Boad near the center of the intersection. A skid-mark, forty-one feet long, led from its left rear wheel. The skid-mark commenced east of the intersection in the north lane of South Bay Boad and angled southerly down across the center line of the highway, indicatinga swerving of the staff car to the left. Another skid-mark, five and one-half feet long, led from the right rear wheel to the north indicating a pivoting of the rear of the staff car to the south-as its front end was shoved north from the probable point of collision,.

The testimony of claimant Sanders and of Holtz furnished conflicting accounts of the events leading up to the collision, and must therefore be considered in the light of the physical evidence produced. As these two drivers approached the intersection, it was the duty of both to drive carefully to avoid a collision, and in doing so to use reasonable care and mutual forbearance. (Ward v. Clark, 232 N. Y. 195, revg. 189 App. Div. 344; Shirley v. Larkin Co., 239 N. Y. 94, revg. 208 App. Div. 833; Shuman v. Hall, 246 N. Y. 51, revg. 219 App. Div. 75; Plantz v. Greiner, 232 App. Div. 73.) The right-of-way privilege conferred by statute (Vehicle and Traffic Law, § 82, subd. 4) is a flexible rule, not a matter of law, and in its application implies the duty of reasonable care and mutual forbearance. (Reynolds v. State of New York, 174 Misc. 333, revd. 262 App. Div. 927.)

Claimant Sanders’ statements as to her speed and operation of the staff car were consistent at both the trial and the preliminary hearing conducted by the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. She testified that she approached the intersection at a speed of about forty to forty-five miles an hour, but was uncertain of the exact speed of the staff car as its speedometer was broken. She testified that she had traveled South Bay Boad on numerous prior occasions, and knew of the intersection with Thompson Boad. Upon observing the truck approaching the, intersection from her left, she stated she slackened speed, but continued into the intersection, assuming that the truck would stop and grant her vehicle the right of way. When she finally [1038]*1038perceived that the truck was not going to stop, she testified she applied her brakes and swerved to the left, though not far enough to avoid the collision.

Holtz’s testimony at the preliminary hearing and at the trial, varied considerably. At the hearing, he testified he brought his truck to a halt “ right at the stop-sign.” At the trial, he testified he did not stop at the stop sign, but ■“ about eighteen feet from South Bay Road.” He also stated that, as he brought his truck to a stop, he looked both west and then east on South Bay'Road, for three or four hundred feet ” but saw no vehicle approaching; that he then shifted into third gear and entered the intersection; that.he again looked to the east when the front wheels of his truck were at the south edge of the concrete ” of South Bay Road, although actually the concrete ” of South Bay Road was obliterated by a layer of macadam at the intersection, and then saw the staff car approaching about ‘ ‘ one hundred and fifty to two hundred feet away ’ ’; that he was traveling at “ possibly six, seven, eight miles an hour ” as he started across the intersection, but that when he did see the staff car, he continued to increase speed to about ten ” miles an hour, at the time of collision, in an effort to get out of the way; that, at the time of the collision, the rear wheels of his truck had just crossed the center of the intersection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 Misc. 1034, 65 N.Y.S.2d 378, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-v-state-nyclaimsct-1946.