Wasson v. Warren

434 S.W.2d 51, 245 Ark. 719, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1269
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 25, 1968
Docket5-4743
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 434 S.W.2d 51 (Wasson v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wasson v. Warren, 434 S.W.2d 51, 245 Ark. 719, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1269 (Ark. 1968).

Opinion

J. Fred Jones, Justice.

Appellee Warren sued Greyhound Lines, Inc. and its bus driver, Wasson, in the Conway County Circuit Court for $10,000 personal injury and property damage growing out of a highway collision in Conway County. Greyhound filed a counter-claim but a jury trial resulted in a judgment for Warren in the amount of $10,000. Greyhound and its driver, Wasson, have appealed. They rely on two points for reversal, as follows:

“The jury failed to take into account appellee’s contributory negligence.
The Court erred in giving AMI 902 because it is an erroneous statement of the law, it is confusing and it is in conflict with AMI 601.”

The facts briefly are these: On July 27,1967, Warren was driving his automobile in a direct course on Highway 64 in Conway County and appellant’s bus was traveling in a direct course in the same direction behind Warren. Appellant’s bus driver turned the bus from a direct course to the south, and his left hand side of the highway, in order to pass slower traffic, including Warren’s automobile. Warren turned his automobile from its direct course and from the north, to the south side of the highway, in order to cross the south side of the highway and enter a driveway to a grocery store and filling station on the south side of the highway. The right front corner of the bus collided with the left rear portion of appellee’s automobile and the appellee was injured.

The jury verdict was for $10,000, the full amount sued for, and appellants contend that the jury obviously did not consider comparative negligence as evidenced by a verdict for the full amount sued for. The thrust of appellants’ contention is that we should assess contributory negligence in this case on appeal as a matter of law.

We cannot agree with this contention. The verdict was general in nature and form, and no interrogatories were propounded to the jury as to the comparative negligence of the two drivers. The evidence as to damages is not abstracted and we find no evidence in the record that the jury even knew the amount being sued for. There is no evidence in the record at all, except the verdict itself, that would indicate the jury did not consider contributory negligence in arriving at its verdict of $10,000. The mere fact that a jury verdict, on conflicting evidence, is for all or more than the maximum amount for which judgment may be entered on the pleadings, does not raise a presumption that the jury disregarded its instructions on comparative negligence and failed to consider the evidence relating thereto. The presumption would be, under such circumstances, that the jury did consider contributory negligence and found none.

The question of negligence, as well as contributory negligence, are questions for the jury. Armour Co. v. Rose, 183 Ark. 413, 36 S.W. 2d 70. It is the province of the jury to pass upon the conflict in, and the weight of, the testimony, and the fact that the testimony is conflicting, and that the verdict may even appear to be contrary to the preponderance of the testimony, furnishes no ground for reversal and a question of contributory negligence properly submitted to a jury is concluded by the jury verdict. Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. Cates, 180 Ark. 1003, 24 S.W. 2d 846; Mississippi River Fuel Corp. v. Senn, 184 Ark. 554, 43 S.W. 2d 255; Missouri Pacific R. Co. v. Henderson, 194 Ark. 884, 110 S.W. 2d 516.

The appellant bus driver testified that when appellee first drove into the highway, he, the bus driver, had to put on brakes in order to keep from hitting appellee’s automobile; that he continued to follow the appellee west on the highway at forty-five or fifty miles per hour; that another automobile got between the bus and appellee’s automobile, and that there was an automobile and a truck ahead of appellee’s automobile when he sounded the horn on the bus, deviated from his direct course and started to pass the line of vehicles. He says that when he got about even with the rear window of the appellee’s automobile, it deviated from its direct course and started coming to the south side of the highway. He says that he sounded his horn but appellee’s automobile kept on coming and continued to crowd the bus from the highway to the point of collision. The bus driver testified that he was watching appellee’s automobile for turn signals and that none were given.

The appellee testified that he was driving his automobile in a direct course west in the north traffic lane of the highway and observed, in his rear-view mirror, the appellant’s bus following him in a direct course on the north side of the highway. Appellee says that he turned on the left blinker signal of his automobile indicating his intention to turn left from his direct course and into a driveway on the south, and his left side, of the highway. Appellee testified that his blinker signal had been on for a distance of from one hundred feet to one hundred yards when he turned his automobile from its direct course to, and across, the south traffic lane of the highway. Appellee testified that he heard no horn signal from the bus and that when his automobile had almost cleared the south traffic lane of the highway as he drove it into the side road or driveway to the filling station, the appellant’s bus struck the left rear of his automobile and injured him.

This case presented to the jury the usual sharp conflict in testimony attending collisions of this kind. Appellant says he sounded his horn, appellee says he heard no horn. Appellee says he turned his blinker signal light on, and appellant says he did not.

Several of the bus passengers testified for the appellants. They had all been on a six thousand mile sightseeing trip through the northern United States and a part of Canada with the same bus driver. These witnesses were sitting on both sides of the bus and they all testified that they saw appellee’s automobile turn left into the path of the bus without giving any signal of intention to turn. As to details of related events both before and after the collision, the testimony of these witnesses was in conflict with each other and with the driver’s testimony. They all testified as to their confidence in the driver’s proficiency during the two weeks trip, as well as at the time of the collision. One of the witnesses made pictures of the vehicles following the collision and gave them to the bus driver. They all saw the accident and testified that appellee gave no signal, but none of them saw the other automobile that the bus driver said was between the bus and the appellee’s automobile.

The police officer who investigated the accident testified that he talked with some of the bus passengers in the front portion of the bus at the time of the collision, and that none of them indicated at that time that they knew anything about how the collision occurred.

The appellants argue, in effect, that we should find contributory negligence as a matter of law in this case and reduce the amount of the verdict and judgment commensurate with the comparative negligence. If the appellee had admitted contributory negligence in this case, or if he had admitted facts that would have constituted contributory negligence as a matter of law, then appellants’ argument would be valid and Missouri Pacific Rd. Co. v. Magness, 206 Ark. 1081, 178 S.W. 2d 493, cited by appellants would be in point with the case here. In the Magness case, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
434 S.W.2d 51, 245 Ark. 719, 1968 Ark. LEXIS 1269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wasson-v-warren-ark-1968.