Waterman v. DeFreitas

284 A.2d 112, 1971 Me. LEXIS 271
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 29, 1971
StatusPublished

This text of 284 A.2d 112 (Waterman v. DeFreitas) 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
Waterman v. DeFreitas, 284 A.2d 112, 1971 Me. LEXIS 271 (Me. 1971).

Opinion

WEATHERBEE, Justice.

The Defendant has appealed from judgments entered in the Superior Court upon jury verdicts in favor of the Plaintiff, Mrs. Waterman, for property damage and personal injuries suffered by her as a result of a collision between her automobile and Defendant’s tractor and in favor of her husband for consequential damages. The jury also denied Defendant’s counterclaim and found that no negligence on the part of Mrs. Waterman had contributed to the collision.

This case raises two issues on appeal.

The Defendant first contends that this Court should find as a matter of law that there existed contributory negligence on the part of the Plaintiff and that the fact that the jury did not so conclude required an order for a new trial.

Since it has long been the rule in this state that the Law Court will not set aside a jury verdict if there is any reasonable evidence to substantiate that decision (Emery v. Fisher, 128 Me. 453, 457, 148 A. 677 (1930) ), we must examine the record for credible evidence which the jury could properly have accepted and from which it could have found the Plaintiff, Mrs. Waterman, free from contributory negligence.

The jury could have found the facts to have been as follows:

As the Plaintiff approached the scene of the accident she was driving on the eastbound lane of Interstate 95, a divided highway. At the same moment, the Defendant was driving toward the scene on the westbound road which was separated from the eastbound road by a wooded dividing area. When the Plaintiff came over the crest of a hill approaching the area of impact she looked down upon sixteen hundred feet of unobstructed eastbound highway extending to the point of collision and also a considerable distance beyond it. The eastbound road consisted of two lanes for travel and, on the right, a breakdown lane with a surface of a somewhat rougher texture. A State Highway Commission truck was stopped in the breakdown lane opposite what was to be the point of impact. At the bottom of the long descent that the Plaintiff was making the highway widened into four lanes for some six hundred feet to accommodate “turn-around” traffic which has left the westbound road for the purpose of entering the eastbound road to merge with eastbound traffic. The fourth lane is referred to as the merging lane and was at the left, as Plaintiff approached it.

As the Plaintiff descended this grade, the Defendant left the westbound highway and entered the turn-around, bearing left preparing to enter the merging lane, to cross the passing lane, the travel lane, and thence, later, the breakdown lane, in order to turn right off this highway onto the Route 1 feeder a few hundred feet further east.

The turn-around between the two highways was partially obscured from the Plaintiff’s view by trees but as she continued down the hill she.saw the Defendant’s tractor come around the turn-around and then enter the merging lane. Plaintiff, who was returning to the travel lane after passing two trucks, slowed to and then maintained a constant speed of approximately 45-50 miles per hour. The posted legal speed in that area was 55.

As the Plaintiff approached the turnaround the Defendant crossed diagonally over the merging lane and entered the unobstructed passing lane. The jury could have found either that the Defendant then continued this diagonal course to the point of collision or that when he was .part way across the passing lane he cut almost straight across into the travel lane in which the Plaintiff was driving. The Plaintiff had observed the approach of the Defendant and did not change her course until the Defendant started to enter her lane. When it did become apparent to the Plaintiff that the Defendant intended to enter the travel lane, the Plaintiff applied her brakes and swerved sharply to the left. The front of [114]*114Plaintiff’s car collided with the rear of the Defendant’s tractor. At the moment of impact, the front half of the Defendant’s tractor had crossed the line into the travel lane.

The Defendant maintains that because the Plaintiff, aware of the approach of the Defendant, failed to take any action to avoid a possible collision, she must, as a matter of law, be charged with contributory negligence. Specifically, the Defendant argues, among other reasons, that the Plaintiff’s failure to change her course of travel upon seeing the Defendant, her failure to apply her brakes when a reasonable person would have slowed down, and her failure to warn the Defendant of her approaching automobile, constituted contributory negligence. It is this Court’s obligation, the Defendant insists, to find such conduct to be contributory negligence by the Plaintiff as a matter of law.

The determination of the existence of contributory negligence depends on the circumstances of each case and it is the jury’s function to weigh the credibility of the witnesses and to review the disputed facts so as to make such a determination. Coombs v. Mackley, 127 Me. 335, 143 A. 261 (1928).

The jury found negligence on the part of the Defendant and none on the Plaintiff’s part. We may not set aside this verdict “if it is possible to reconcile it with any reasonable interpretation of the evidence”. Emery v. Fisher, supra.

“Examining the issues on appeal we apply the familiar rule that the evidence must be viewed in the light which is most favorable to the Plaintiff. * * * If the evidence is conflicting the jury’s verdict will not be set aside unless it is clearly wrong. * * * ” Michaud v. Vahlsing, Inc., Me., 264 A.2d 539 (1970).

The Plaintiff contends that her inaction did not constitute contributory negligence as she was not required to anticipate the wrongdoing on the part of the Defendant. There was sufficient probative evidence adduced at trial, says the Plaintiff, to justify the jury’s finding that the Plaintiff was free from negligence.

We agree with the Plaintiff as to this.

The rule as to the failure of a driver of a motor vehicle to anticipate the negligence of another driver was discussed in Crockett v. Staples, 148 Me. 55, 59, 89 A.2d 737 (1952) where this Court said:

“The decisive inquiry is whether the plaintiff was necessarily negligent in relying upon the defendant stopping or in any event yielding the right of way to the plaintiff until it was too late, to avoid the accident.
The plaintiff was not bound to anticipate defendant’s negligence. He ‘had a right to consider that the defendant would observe the law as to stopping' * * ”

In Crockett, the Plaintiff was proceeding westerly along Route 121 and the Defendant was proceeding southerly along a highway that led into and ended at the northern lane of Route 121, at which point the Defendant faced a stop sign. Although the Plaintiff observed the Defendant approach the stop sign, he did not anticipate that the Defendant would fail to stop. The Defendant, nevertheless, did not yield the right of way and collided with the Plaintiff in the intersection.

The situation in the case at bar is not unlike that of Crockett in that the Plaintiff, approaching the intersection from the Defendant’s right, had the right of way and the Defendant, entering the intersection from the Plaintiff’s left, was required to yield that right of way. 29 M.R.S.A. § 944.1

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Related

Crockett v. Staples
89 A.2d 737 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1952)
Michaud v. Vahlsing, Inc.
264 A.2d 539 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1970)
Coombs v. Mackley
143 A. 261 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1928)
Emery v. Fisher
148 A. 677 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 A.2d 112, 1971 Me. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterman-v-defreitas-me-1971.