Wisdom v. Bernhardt

1935 OK 96, 40 P.2d 679, 170 Okla. 385, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 29, 1935
Docket23801
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1935 OK 96 (Wisdom v. Bernhardt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wisdom v. Bernhardt, 1935 OK 96, 40 P.2d 679, 170 Okla. 385, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 695 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This action was brought by Sarah I. Bernhardt, as administratrix of the estate of Albert H. Bernhardt, deceased, who will be referred to in this opinion as plaintiff, against C. C. Wisdom, who will be referred to in this opinion as defendant, to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by virtue of the death of Albert H. Bernhardt due to injuries which he received, and which injuries it is alleged were caused by the wrongful and negligent acts of the said C. C. Wisdom.

In her petition upon which the cause was tried, the plaintiff alleges that the deceased had stopped upon State Highway No. 8 approximately one mile east of the town of Hitchcock, Blaine county, Okla., to repair or replace a chain upon the left rear tire of his automobile; that the deceased had been proceeding westerly along the highway, and before stopping had driven his car to the north side of the road, leading a clear space to the south of his car for at least 18 feet; that the defendant, C. C. Wisdom, driving his ear and proceeding in the same direction along the road, in attempting to pass the deceased carelessly and negligently drove his ear along the road, which was slippery, at too great a rate of speed for safety and without chains upon his car, and that in attempting to pass the deceased who was in the road working upon the left rear wheel of his car, the defendant permitted his car to get *386 out of control and skid and to run into deceased, crushing him between the two cars and so injuring him that he died from the effects of such injuries. The petition is in two counts, the first seeking to recover for the pain, suffering, and pecuniary damages sustained by the deceased, and the second seeking to recover for the pecuniary damages sustained by the widow and children of the deceased by reason of his death.

The defendant answered by way of general denial and plea of contributory negligence.

The case was tried to a jury and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff. Motion for new trial was filed and overruled, and the cause was appealed to this court by petition in error with case-made at-' tached.

No complaint is made of any error in the instructions of the trial judge to the jury, nor of any error committed in the admission or rejection of testimony, the plaintiff in error herein, the defendant in trial court, presenting the case in this court upon the ground that there was not sufficient evidence of any primary negligence upon the part of the defendant.

There was no witness to the accident testifying at the trial except the defendant himself. There is very little, if any, conflict in the evidence, and the facts as shown by the record may be briefly stated as follows :

The deceased (herein called Bernhardt) lived some distance south and east of the town of Hitchcock and the defendant, Wisdom, lived in the town of Okeene. By prearrangement Bernhardt and AVisdom agreed to meet in the town of Hitchcock and to go together from there to Watonga for the transaction of certain business. On the morning of the accident, which occurred in the month of February, 1929, Bernhardt left his home in his own car to go to. Hitchcock where he was to meet Wisdom, and Wisdom left his home in Okeene in his car, a Nash sedan weighing 3,600 pounds approximately, to go to Hitchcock to meet Bernhardt. There had been considerable snow previous to the day of the accident, and on State Highway No. 8 running east and west, east of Hitchcock where the accident occurred, considerable snow had drifted into the road and had been scraped out by the road graders to the edge of the road. On each side of the roadway so graded there were drifts of snow running parallel with the road, which snow had been scraped from the roadway and which drifts were a foot or 18 inches or more in height. At the point of the accident these drifts or piles of snow were approximately 23 feet apart. The surface of the road was snowy and icy and the road was very slick, due in part to the fact that trees along- the south of the road at that point shaded the road and prevented thawing. The road from Hitchcock to Okeene along which the defendant traveled ran south from Okeene some ten or twelve miles and then turned west some mile and a half into Hitchcock, and the testimony shows that in that district north and south roads at the time of the accident were comparatively free from snow and in fair condition for travel while the east and west roads were more nearly covered with snow. The deceased Bernhardt entered upon State Highway No. 8 some distance east of the point of the accident, and when he arrived at where the accident occurred, he apparently had some trouble with the mud or the tire chain upon his left rear wheel, and he drove his car over to the extreme north edge of the graded portion of the Highway with his right wheel up against the snow bank on the north side of the road, where he stopped * his ear and got out and began working with his tire chain on the left rear ¡wheel, thus placing- himself in the roadway at the left rear of his car. AVhile he was so engaged AVisdom came along in his car traveling in the same direction. AVisdom had no tire chains upon his car, although he testified he had chains in the car. The road at the point of the accident wás level for some distance and AVisdom had an unobstructed view of the road and the deceased and his car for some distance before he reached the scene of the accident. AVisdom in attempting to pass to the south of deceased and to go by him on the road, in some manner or other lost control of his car and it skidded and turned around clockwise in the highway, striking Bernhardt and crushing him between the cars and so injuring Bernhardt that he shortly afterwards died. The testimony indicates that the car of Bernhardt was pushed and shoved some four or five feet west and some two feet north from where it had originally stood, over and partly across the snowdrift at that point. After the'accident the cars of Bernhardt and Wisdom were standing close together but not touching; Wisdom’s car was pointing in a northeasterly direction, and Bernhardt himself was some six feet to the rear of his own car. The left rear wheel of Bernhardt’s ear, which was a wire wheel, had one spoke broken, several spokes bent, and the hub knocked an inch or two *387 out of line. The tire on the wheel was punctured and cut, the fender bent and crushed in on wheel. The casting holding the left end of the front bumper on Wisdom’s car was broken. In explaining how the accident occurred Wisdom testified that as he came along the road he saw Bernhardt squatting by the side of the left rear wheel of his ear; that the road at that point some distance both ways from Bernhardt’s car was icy and very slick. He recognized Bernhardt, and when he got within 75 feet or 100 feet from Bernhardt’s car, he angled his car off to the south in order to pass and go around the Bernhardt car, and that when he got within a few feet of the Bernhardt car he suddenly lost control of his car and it commenced to skid on the icy road, wheeling around and sliding, catching Bernhardt between the ears and crushing him. Deceased’s widow, Sarah I. Bernhardt, testified that she talked with Wisdom after the accident and that Wisdom told her that he saw Bernhardt and put on his brakes and skidded and hit him. Another witness, the brother of the deceased, testified that after the accident he asked Wisdom how he came t" run into Bernhardt when he was away out to the side of the road like he was, and that Wisdom said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 96, 40 P.2d 679, 170 Okla. 385, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisdom-v-bernhardt-okla-1935.