Yanney v. Nemer

47 N.W.2d 368, 154 Neb. 188, 1951 Neb. LEXIS 69
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1951
Docket32926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 N.W.2d 368 (Yanney v. Nemer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yanney v. Nemer, 47 N.W.2d 368, 154 Neb. 188, 1951 Neb. LEXIS 69 (Neb. 1951).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

This is an action for damages. Plaintiff’s intestate was injured and died as the result of a collision between a car and a truck. The defendants are Thomas Nemer, owner and driver of the car; the owners of the truck, individually and as members of a firm; and the driver of the truck. Issues were made and trial was had. The jury found for the plaintiff and against the defendant Nemer. The jury found for the other defendants. Defendant Nemer appeals. We reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the cause with directions to enter judgment for the defendant Nemer.

The accident happened in Iowa. The action is brought under the Iowa guest statute.

The plaintiff’s intestate was a sister of the defendant Nemer. She was riding in the Nemer car as a guest of defendant Nemer. We will refer to her as the guest. We refer to defendant Nemer, so far as the testimony is concerned, as Nemer. We will refer to his car as the car. We refer to the vehicle of the other defendants involved in the action as the truck.

At the close of plaintiff’s' case-in-chief and again at the close of all the evidence, motions were made by defendant Nemer for a directed verdict or a dismissal as- to him. These motions were overruled, and the *190 cause was submitted to the jury with the result above-indicated. Defendant Nemer then moved for judgment, notwithstanding the verdict and likewise moved for a new trial. These motions were overruled.

The sole question presented here is whether or not the court erred in overruling these motions'.

It appears from the record that Nemer testified as a witness at the coroner’s inquest involving this accident. His deposition was taken by defendants (other - than Nemer) in March 1950. The trial was in May 1950. References were made in the deposition to questions and answers of Nemer at the coroner’s inquest. Parts of the deposition were received in evidence for the plaintiff as admissions against interest. Other parts were received when offered as cross-examination by defendant Nemer. Nemer then was called and testified as a witness for the plaintiff. He was not called as a witness, for himself or the other defendants.

The evidence is in confusion and conflict. This much is fairly definite. The accident happened about 8 miles; west of Oakland, Iowa, and about 35 miles west of Atlantic, Iowa, around 4 p. m., on May 3, 1948, on U. S-Highway No. 6. The highway is paved with asphalt over concrete. It is 18 feet in width with a visible line in the center. On either side are dirt shoulders 8 to-10 or 12 feet wide, not newly made, and beyond that a ditch possibly a foot in depth. The highway runs in an east-west direction and crosses a series of hills. At the point of the collision there is a cut with a steep bank on the south side. Toward the west, at a distance fixed by one witness as 220 yards from the crest of the hill on which the accident occurred, there is a cross, road running north and south. Toward the east on the north side of the road and beyond the crest of the-hill is a filling station.

It had been raining before the accident. Nemer testified that it rained from Atlantic west. Whether- it was raining slightly or at all when the accident hap *191 pened is in dispute. It rained more thereafter. In any event, the paved surface was wet and slippery. The shoulders were wet, muddy, and slippery. There is no evidence as to limited visibility.

There is evidence as to mud. A highway patrolman who reached the scene of the accident shortly after it happened testified'that the filling station was 600 feet east of the crest of the hill; that cars driving from the station had carried mud out on the pavement west 200 or 300 feet, making a slippery surface on the pavement on the north side; and that he couldn’t say that the mud went clear to the crest of the hill. A witness called by the defendants, other than Nemer, testified to spots of mud dropped by cars on the pavement to the west of the crest of the hill, but did not testify more definitely as to number or location.

The Nemer car was a 4-door sedan. The truck was a single unit type with a body 8 feet wide and loaded with more than 5 tons of cargo. There was another car, described in the evidence as a blue car.

Just before the accident the truck was proceeding east and going uphill at an undisputed speed of 20 miles an hour. The blue car was proceeding west at a speed of 20 miles an hour, the driver intending to turn and go south on the cross road.

Nemer testified that when he left Atlantic to go to Omaha the guest was riding in the front seat on his right side. Two brothers were in the rear seat and somewhere in the car there was a young son of the guest. Nemer testified by deposition that he drove 75 to 80 miles an hour from the time he left Atlantic until the accident and that he was in a hurry to get to Omaha; that when they left Atlantic his sister asked, “What are you going so fast for, you never drive that way”; and that he kept going the same speed. On the Witness stand he testified on direct examination that when he got to the top of the hill going west, he saw the truck coming toward him and the blue car going *192 from him; that they were almost side by side, the truck over the center line to the north about a foot and a half and the blue car over the dish of the highway; and that he (Nemer) was then about a block and a half away from them. “I just don’t have any way to figure out my way to go through between them because there was no room between them to go through.” “I have to use the best knowledge I had to avoid both of them and I pulled out to the left, my left, as much as I can.” “Then I seen the south side of the road was more clear to me to go through and avoid the car and the truck both so I pulled out to my left, to my left, because the shoulder there it was wider and I see there is more room for me if I could miss the truck and go on his right I would avoid him.” “* * * by the time I got to the truck I wasn’t able to clear away from it, he hit me.” On cross-examination by his attorney he testified that he did everything in his power to avoid the truck “As soon as I saw it coming up toward me.” On cross-examination by the other defendants he testified that the driver of the blue car had his hand out; that he didn’t remember whether or not he applied his brakes; “* * * I could see myself I can’t go through”; “I was trying to avoid it; I tried to go to my left as much as I can”; that he did not remember hitting a muddy spot in the road; that “The only muddy spot I could tell you about I seen it in the pictures” that were shown to him by the patrolman; that he did not think he lost control of his car; and that he remembered everything until he was hit. He admitted testifying at the coroner’s inquest that “As I was coming along as I had been for the last 20 years just hit this spot is all, wet spot, a lot of mud on it I guess”; and further on cross-examination that “I don’t remember whether I lost control of the car”; “I had control * * *” but he didn’t remember if he had control up to the point of impact; “I lost control but I didn’t know when or where”; then he immediately denied loss of control. *193

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.W.2d 368, 154 Neb. 188, 1951 Neb. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yanney-v-nemer-neb-1951.