Wood v. Gautier

439 P.2d 73, 201 Kan. 74, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 341
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 6, 1968
Docket44,991
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 439 P.2d 73 (Wood v. Gautier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Gautier, 439 P.2d 73, 201 Kan. 74, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 341 (kan 1968).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harman, C.:

This appeal involves claims for damages arising from a collision of two vehicles at a rural intersection.

Plaintiff Ruby Wood commenced the action by filing her petition for damages for personal injuries sustained by her as one of the drivers. Named as defendants were J. W. Gautier and J. R. Gautier, partners, doing business under the name of Gautier Implement Com *75 pany. Highly summarized, she alleged in her petition that on September 4, 1962, at about 10:45 a. m. she was driving her husband’s automobile south on a blacktopped county road about eight miles south of Geneseo, Kansas, at a point where it is intersected by an east-west dirt township road; that Harold C. Sampson, defendants’' employee, while acting in the scope of his employment, was driving a pickup truck west on the township road; that as a result of Sampson’s negligence, the two vehicles collided in the intersection, injuring plaintiff, for which she claimed $200,000 damages.

Defendants answered, admitting the collision, but denying negligence on their part and asserting contributory negligence as a defense. Defendants filed a counterclaim in which they conceded Sampson was in the scope of his employment at the time of the collision; they alleged Sampson died as a result of the collision which was caused by plaintiff’s negligence; that they and their insurance carrier had paid benefits under the workmen’s compensation act to his widow and minor children and thereby became subrogated to-that extent to any recovery, and they further alleged they brought the action to recover damages for Sampson’s wrongful death on behalf of the widow and minor children, his heirs at law. Damages in the sum of $25,000 were sought.

Subsequently, the widow of Harold C. Sampson, filed a separate-wrongful death action in the same court against Ruby Wood, seeking recovery for herself and minor children because of her husband’s, death in tire collision. Upon Ruby’s motion the trial court dismissed, this separate action, consolidating it instead with that initiated by Ruby.

Trial was had to a jury. The jury answered special interrogatories finding negligence which was a direct cause of the collision on the part of both plaintiff and Harold C. Sampson (failure to' keep proper lookout), and it returned a general verdict denying: recovery for either party. Motions for new trial by each side were-overruled, judgment was entered on the verdict and each side has appealed. Neither appeal questions the sufficiency of the evidence-in support of the interrogatories or verdict. The record on appeal' is therefore somewhat meager on the circumstances of the collision except it does indicate this was a collision at a “blind” intersection-where speed, lookout and control of vehicles become all-important questions of fact.

So far as the jury was concerned, the trial on the counterclaim *76 for the wrongful death of Sampson was conducted as though the heirs at law of the decedent Sampson were seeking to recover damages from the plaintiff Ruby Wood. The instructions to the jury on the measure of damages to be used in the event of a verdict for the heirs were the usual ones in a wrongful death action of a spouse and a parent, being a combination of those found in PIK 9.30 and PIK 9.31. No mention was made of any subrogated recovery for the benefit of the workmen’s compensation carrier as authorized by K. S. A. 44-504. The trial court, by way of pretrial ruling, prohibited mention to the jury by plaintiff of this aspect of the case. Plaintiff sought to bring the subject of subrogation to the attention of the jury by way of questioning, instruction to the jury and in the closing argument, and she assigns error in the court’s refusal to permit this.

These questions, raised by plaintiff on the principal appeal, have nothing to do with her cause of action against defendants—they are pertinent only to plaintiff’s defense of the counterclaim against her. Plaintiff won this latter lawsuit (which upon cross-appeal we are affirming). Any decision we might make on the questions raised could have no effect on the rights of the parties and would be purely academic, and we express no opinion on them. This court will not decide issues where its judgment can have no effect on the rights of the parties (Kendig v. Kretsinger, 197 Kan. 186, 415 P. 2d 250; Taylor v. State, 198 Kan. 648, 426 P. 2d 159).

Plaintiff’s father testified as a witness for her. His testimony purported to show a change in her mental condition following the collision. He was then vigorously cross-examined but responded only with vague and inconclusive answers. Plaintiff assigns error in the cross-examination permitted. She fails, however, to point out impropriety in the questioning or how she was harmed by any answers given. In any event, the testimony went only to the issue of damages—not the issue of liability upon which the jury decided the plaintiff’s cause of action adversely to her, and there could have been no prejudice to her in the examination.

Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in permitting defendants, over her objection, to cross-examine her family doctor as to his treatment of plaintiff over a period of sixteen years prior to the date of the collision. We cannot agree. Out of deference to plaintiff we will not go into that cross-examination except to say it revealed a condition long prior to the collision for which plaintiff sought to recover substantial damages from defendants as a result *77 of the collision, and was highly relevant. Moreover, as with the last specification of error, it would be difficult to spell out prejudice even if the testimony were considered erroneous because it bore primarily on the issue of damages and the jury found against her on the issue of liability because she failed to keep a proper lookout.

The next assignment of error is that the trial court refused to give plaintiff’s requested instruction that she was entitled to the benefit of a presumption of the use of due care in view of the fact she suffered a complete loss of memory relative to the immediate circumstances of the collision. Plaintiff’s premise of loss of memory is unsupported by the record—in fact the contrary appears. She testified she was traveling around fifty miles per hour, maybe a little more, as she approached the intersection and when she first saw the pickup truck; that she first saw the pickup three or four car lengths from the blacktopped road; there were sunflowers, weeds and feed growing at the intersection which obstructed her vision; she was familiar with the intersection; that the pickup came out from behind the sunflowers and was moving very slowly across the intersection, only about ten or fifteen miles per hour; she felt that the county blacktopped road had precedence over the township road. She did not testify she had any loss of memory respecting the collision. More need not be said.

Misconduct of counsel in several respects is charged by plaintiff. Several of the charges are based upon incidents occurring prior to trial and concededly having nothing to do with the jury’s verdict determining this lawsuit. The record does reflect considerable tension between counsel, and between the court and counsel for defendants, much of it evidently generated from incidents in previous litigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
439 P.2d 73, 201 Kan. 74, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-gautier-kan-1968.