Wilson v. Holloway

208 S.W.2d 178, 212 Ark. 878, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 626
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1948
Docket4-8355
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 208 S.W.2d 178 (Wilson v. Holloway) 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
Wilson v. Holloway, 208 S.W.2d 178, 212 Ark. 878, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 626 (Ark. 1948).

Opinions

Smith, J.

Arthur Holloway and Beba, his wife, filed suit in the Crawford Circuit Court for damages to compensate a personal injury sustained in a collision with appellant Wilson’s truck. His brother, Earl and Earl’s wife, filed a similar suit in Crawford county, based upon the same collision, in which all the plaintiffs sustained personal injuries more or less serious.

Thereafter appellant Wilson filed suit in the Franklin Circuit Court against appellees for damages arising out of the collision. He recovered a judgment against Arthur Holloway in this suit to compensate the damages to his truck, but the trial court set this judgment aside for the reason that a member of the jury, which had tried the case, visited the scene of the collision unaccompanied by other members of the jury.' The Franklin Circuit Court convened prior to the Crawford Circuit Court, and demurrers filed in the Franklin Circuit Court to Wilson’s complaint were sustained as to all the defendants except appellee, Arthur Holloway. The suits brought in the Crawford Circuit Court were consolidated for trial and judgments were rendered in favor of all the plaintiffs for various sums, and from the judgments upon these verdicts is this appeal.

A motion was filed to dismiss the suit of Arthur Holloway upon the ground that he was a resident of ■Sebastian county at the time of the collision causing the injury which had occurred in Franklin county. The motion was overruled, but we find it unnecessary to consider this motion in our view of the testimony, and the legal effect thereof.

As stated the suits arose out of the collision between an automobile in which the plaintiffs were riding, and a truck owned by Wilson, on October 22, 1946, at about 10 p. m. at a place about four miles west of Ozark, in Franklin county, on Highway No. 64. The pictures of the locality where the collision occurred and a map thereof, offered in evidence, show that the collision occurred at a curve in the highway which began near an elevation in the highway, which the parties refer to as a hill. The photographs indicate that the road is comparatively level, with a slight grade. It had been raining and was raining at the time of the collision, and the visibility was low.

A party of four, consisting of Arthur and his brother, Earl, with their wives, left the home of Earl in Yan Burén at about 5' p. m. and went to Ft. Smith for their evening meal. They remained in the restaurant about an hour and a half. All admitted that they drank beer while in the restaurant, but all testified that they drank only two' bottles each. They returned to Van Burén where they decided that they would drive to Alix to visit another of the Holloway brothers, and they were on their way there when the collision occurred.

Appellant Wilson operated under the name of Wilson Transfer Company, doing a general trucking business, and he has his trucks designed to service disabled cars and other trucks. Another collision had occurred earlier that night, near the curve above referred to, between another car and a truck, and Wilson had answered the call for a service truck, and after servicing the automobile, he returned to get the truck. Before leaving with the car, which he had serviced, he pushed the truck off the highway onto the side road.

Wilson was accompanied by two men when he returned for the disabled truck. On arriving at the scene of this first collision he drove his truck across the highway and backed it up to the disabled truck. He got out of his truck and went to the end of it to get flares to place on the road, but before getting them, appellee’s automobile collided with Ms truck, which was parked on the side of the road, and he escaped injury only by jumping into a ditch which paralleled the side road.

Wilson had driven west to the place of the collision and his truck was facing in that direction after crossing' the road and backing up to the disabled truck. Appellees were driving east traveling, according to their testimony, at a speed of about 35 miles per hour, although another person, traveling in a car, testified appellees were driving at a speed of from 50 to 55 miles per hour when they passed him. The testimony is conflicting as to whether Wilson had dimmed Ms lights. He and the two men who were in the truck with Mm testified that he had dimmed the lights, and that he had done so as it was safer to drive in the rain, then falling, with dim lights than- with lights burning brightly. All appellees testified to the contrary, and as the failure to dim his lights was the sole allegation of negligence submitted to the jury, we must assume that Wilson had not dimmed his lights.

Arthur Holloway, who was driving the car, testified that “As I topped the top of a rise or hill, I noticed car lights and it looked like I was just meeting a car. I had my fog lights on and my head lights. His (Wilson’s) lights blinded me. I dimmed my lights two or three times, and turned my fog lights out. He (Wilson) never did dim his lights. I had been driving about 35 miles per hour, but when I crossed the hill I took my foot off the accelerator, and the closer I got to the truck the more its lights blinded me. ’ ’ He further testified that he kept getting over as far on the slab (or highway) as he could, without getting completely off. In 40 or 50 yards of the place of collision, he felt his right front wheel and the rear right wheel get -off the slab. It looked like someone was trying to hog the road. He put his foot over on the brake, but before he could stop he had run into the truck and the collision occurred. His left wheel did not get off the pavement. He signaled what he presumed to be an oncoming car to dim its lights. He dimmed his lights two or three times. The truck did not dim its lights, which were shining right straight up the highway and blinded him. There were no other lights on the truck, and no flares or flags were out. The testimony of the other occupants of the car was to the same effect.

The complaint alleged several acts of negligence on the part of Wilson, .but the only question submitted to the jury was whether Wilson was negligent in failing to dim his lights. There was submitted, however, the question whether occupants of the car were guilty of contributory negligence. On this issue the jury was correctly instructed that if the occupants of the car were, at the time of the collision engaged in a joint enterprise, the negligence, if any, of the driver of the car would be imputed to all of its occupants.

It is not seriously questioned that under the testimony in this case this instruction was properly given. It is insisted, however, that the motion for a new trial did not call to the trial court’s attention the fact that contributory negligence had been pleaded and interposed as a defense. But the several instructions given on this issue make clear the fact that this defense was interposed and was seriously relied upon. Separate instructions were asked as to each plaintiff to the effect that a verdict should be returned in Wilson’s favor if the occupants of the car were guilty of contributory negligence, and were engaged in a joint enterprise and the motion for a new trial assigned as error the failure to give each of these instructions.

Two defenses were interposed.

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W.2d 178, 212 Ark. 878, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-holloway-ark-1948.