Weichhand v. Garlinger

447 S.W.2d 606, 1969 Ky. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 13, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 447 S.W.2d 606 (Weichhand v. Garlinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weichhand v. Garlinger, 447 S.W.2d 606, 1969 Ky. LEXIS 90 (Ky. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

CULLEN, Commissioner.

The personal representatives of Jasper and Ramona Bradford, deceased, are appealing from a judgment awarding $100,-000 damages to John Garlinger for personal injuries sustained by him in a collision between his car and the Bradfords’ car. The personal representatives brought the suit initially, seeking damages for wrongful death, and Garlinger counterclaimed. The jury found that the accident was caused solely by the negligence of Jasper Bradford, driver of the Bradford car, wherefore the verdict denied any recovery to the plaintiffs and awarded the defendant recovery on his counterclaim. The judgment followed the verdict.

We shall consider first the contention of the appellants that they were entitled to a directed verdict on their claim and on Garlinger’s counterclaim, on the ground that as a matter of law they were not negligent and he was negligent. Related to this is the contention that the court erred in giving a sudden-emergency instruction for Garlinger.

The accident occurred around 5:15 p. m. on a day in November on a two-lane, blacktopped country road which runs east and west. The road is straight in the area where the accident occurred and it slopes downward from west to east. Garlinger was traveling eastwardly in a Chevrolet stationwagon. The Bradfords were headed west in a black Chevrolet sedan. The two cars collided substantially head-on. Although there was some dispute on the trial as to which car was on the wrong side of the road at the moment of collision, the evidence established conclusively, we think, that the collision took place in the Brad-fords’ lane and that the Garlinger car was on the wrong side of the road. The Brad-fords were killed. This left as eyewitnesses to the collision only Garlinger and one Anna Mae Chumley, whose car, headed west, had been passed by the Bradford car shortly before the collision. (The key question in this case is: How shortly?) Another witness, one Milton Henderson, who was in his yard some 200 or 300 feet from the scene of the accident and who ran to the scene after hearing the sound of the impact, gave some testimony from which inferences could be drawn as to the movement of the Garlinger car immediately preceding the impact.

Garlinger’s testimony was that he was driving about 35 miles per hour. He saw a white car approaching from the opposite direction and then observed a black car pull out to pass the white car, coming over a rise. At one point in his testimony he said that the white car was about 400 feet from him when the black car pulled out to pass; at another point he said the black car was only 90 to 100 feet from him when he saw it pull out to pass. Similarly, at one point in his testimony he said that he could not estimate the speed of the black car, although it was “fast,” while at another point he said that his “guess” would be that the speed was 75 or 80 miles an hour. Garlinger testified that when he saw the black car approaching on his side of the road, in its passing movement, he “tried to get out of the way by hitting my brakes and getting to the right,” and that is the last he could remember.

[608]*608Mrs. Chumley’s testimony (which was read from a pretrial deposition, she not being present at the trial) was that she was proceeding westwardly, in a light-colored car, about 30 or 35 miles per hour and:

“* * * So coming on, a black Chevrolet passed me. As he got past me, he went to throwing his brake lights on, they were coming on, flashing on and off, on and off. I put my foot on the brake and kept slowing down. Well, then, crash, I don’t know. * * * This car that passed me, and when the crash happened, a green car came up, bounced up. That’s the first I even seen that car the whole time after the car passed me. I didn’t see him coming this way or toward me or anything. Just when the crash happened, that station-wagon bounced up and the other car, the back end went up.”

She said that from the point where the black car passed her to the point where the collision took place was around the length of a city block, and that she stopped her car “a long time before the collision. I run the rest of the way.” She stated that the black car got back on its right side of the road before the collision. When asked how fast the black car was going when it passed her she said she could not tell, and when asked if it was going at a “pretty fast rate of speed” her answer was “I don’t know.” She said that she was the first person to arrive at the scene and that no one else arrived for ten minutes.

The witness Henderson testified that upon hearing the sound of the collision he ran to the scene from his yard, some 200 or 300 feet, and when he arrived “there was a car just pulled over the rise ahead of the accident and a lady got out. I noticed that when I went down over the bank and I got to the death car before she did, I would say maybe a few steps.” The woman’s car was parked “up the road I would say 75 feet or so.” He said he observed marks on Garlinger’s right side of the road; “there was a ditch where it looked like a car skidded, marks in the bank where I don’t know whether the back end was thrown off and tore up the turf but there was a skid mark I would say six, eight feet in the back of his car on the right side of the road and the gravel had been torn up like a car had been in a skid.” When asked whether the skid marks led to the tires of the Garlinger car he replied: “Yes, I assumed that’s what made it. I’m no expert.”

Police officers who investigated the accident said that there were skid marks extending back 50 feet from the Bradford car, entirely in the Bradfords’ proper traffic lane.

The foregoing is all of the evidence that contains any support for Garlinger’s theory of the case, which is that the circumstances under which the Bradford car passed the Chumley car were such that the passing constituted negligence; that Gar-linger was confronted with an emergency created by Bradford’s negligence; and that he could not be charged with negligence if his car got on the wrong side of the road in his efforts to escape from the emergency situation.

Our first problem is to determine whether the evidence warranted a finding of Bradford’s negligence. Of course in making this determination we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to Gar-linger. It is our conclusion that the evidence did warrant the finding that Bradford’s passing movement violated KRS 189.340(3), which provides:

“(3) No vehicle shall be driven to the left side of the center of the roadway in overtaking and passing another vehicle proceeding in the same direction unless the left side is clearly visible and free of oncoming traffic for a sufficient distance ahead to permit overtaking and passing to be completely made without interfering with the safe operation of any vehicle approaching from the opposite direction or any vehicle overtaken. [609]*609In every event the overtaking vehicle must return to the right-hand side of the roadway before coming within one hundred feet of any vehicle approaching from the opposite direction.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Louisville v. Maresz
835 S.W.2d 889 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1992)
Silveira v. Santos
490 A.2d 969 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1985)
James v. Kentucky
466 U.S. 341 (Supreme Court, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
447 S.W.2d 606, 1969 Ky. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weichhand-v-garlinger-kyctapp-1969.