Young v. Potter

174 A. 387, 133 Me. 104, 1934 Me. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 10, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 A. 387 (Young v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Potter, 174 A. 387, 133 Me. 104, 1934 Me. LEXIS 56 (Me. 1934).

Opinion

Hudson, J.

Actions in tort, brought by the wife for personal injuries and by the husband for medical expense, loss of services and consortium of his wife, resulting from an automobile accident on Temple Street in Portland June 17, 1933. The jury’s verdicts were for the defendant and now both cases are before us on motions and exceptions.

These actions tried together compelled the jury, it would seem, to pass upon the veracity of the litigants, for their versions of the occurrence were absolutely at variance and hopelessly irreconcilable.

The day before the accident the defendant’s mother had purchased a stove in the store of Mr. Young, in which his wife was working. On the day of the accident, the stove was delivered without the pipe, which Mrs. Potter claimed was included in the purchase. This occasioned the fateful visit to the Youngs’ store in a Ford two door sedan, driven by the daughter, the defendant, accompanied by her mother. Once in the store, an argument ensued between the mother and Mrs. Young in which a receipt played a part. Mrs. Young insisted on getting her copy of it, the original being at the Potter home, but the Potters, desiring to conclude the interview, Mrs. Potter remarked, “Never mind,” and with her daughter went out to get into their sedan, which they had parked by the edge of the sidewalk on the right side of Temple Street.

Here the evidence forks. The defense says that the daughter stepped into the street to get in on the driver’s (the left) side; that the door was locked, whereupon the mother, entering from the [107]*107sidewalk, released the catch and let the daughter in; that the driver, the daughter, before starting, then observed conditions as to traffic, both rear and front; that' while she was thus engaged, the mother proceeded to close the open door on her side and when it was “about half way closed,” Mrs. Potter “heard the motor going and saw Mrs. Young right on” them. The mother testified: “It was all in a flash. I had to look around to reach around for the door and when I looked up she was right there almost to the door. . . . She had her arms outstretched with the book in them. I had started to close the door before I saw her at all and had it about half closed when I saw her first;” and that Mrs. Young, although on the sidewalk, was in the path of the closing door which caught her as the car stai’ted and caused her injuries.

The plaintiffs state that Mrs. Young left the store with the book in her hand containing a copy of the receipt for the purpose of showing it to Mrs. Potter; that she advanced along the sidewalk toward the car whose door was open and extending over the sidewalk; that she put one foot on the running board, placed the book in Mrs. Potter’s lap and had some talk with her in regard to the receipt; that the daughter said, “Never mind the book,” and, without warning, started the car with Mrs. Young in her perilous position, hitting and causing her to be thrown to the sidewalk.

The jury, in spite of some corroboration upon the part of plaintiffs’ witnesses, did not credit their statement. Some times a case appears to be too strong, and it may well be that this jury, having the advantage of seeing and hearing the parties and witnesses on the stand, decided that this was such a case. It may well have thought that Miss Potter, with full knowledge (for Mrs. Young testified that the daughter engaged in the conversation) that Mrs. Young was in part on, if not partly in, the automobile, would not have started her car, the doing of which almost necessarily would have injured the plaintiff. Such an act knowingly done would have been most culpable, heartless, and with utter disregard' to Mrs. Young’s rights.

The jury no doubt found, on the other hand, that Mrs. Young, excited as probably she was, and desiring to show the book to' the Potters before they drove away, took a chance and hastily in undue manner put herself before the closing door just as the daughter [108]*108was in the act of starting the car and that her conduct in so’doing constituted contributory negligence.

The jury may well have found that- it was negligence upon the part of Miss Potter to start'her-car away from'the curbwithout learning that Mrs. Young wás within the sweep of the closing door* and yet also have found, as above stated, that Mrs. Young herself was' contributorily negligent, which alone would bar recovery in both of these cases. These were jury facts and we are not justified in disturbing its finding of them unless the evidence manifestly shows its verdict to' be wrong. It does not.

“No citation of authorities is needed to establish the propo-’ sition that when two arguable theories are presented, both sustained byrevidence, and one is reflected in the jury verdict, this Court is without authority tp act. It is only when a verdict is plainly without support that a new trial on general motion may be ordered.” Mizula, v. Sawyer, 130 Me., 428, 430, 157 A., 239. These motions for new trial must be overruled.

EXCEPTIONS

To the refusal of the Trial Judge to give the following instructions to the jury the plaintiffs excepted.

Exception 1: Requested instruction: “That Mrs. Young had a right to be where she was on the sidewalk and had a right to expect that the defendant would so operate her car as not to endanger the safety of -the plaintiff.”

This request has two elements in it — the ■ first, relating to Mrs. Young’s rights on the sidewalk, and the second, as to the expected operation of the car by the defendant. In his charge, the Judge had specifically stated that “she (meaning Mrs. Young) had a right to be upon the sidewalk. She had a right to approach the car and stand anywhere upon the sidewalk.” This language covered the first element of the request.

The second element is objectionable. One on á sidewalk who himself is in the exercise of due care has a right to expect that the driver of an automobile will so operate his car as not to endanger his safety. If a sidewalk pedestrian should see an automobile com-. [109]*109ing toward him on the sidewalk, and observe that its driver did not see him,, still the duty of due. care is his and without its exercise he has no right to rely on an expectation that the automobile would nevertheless be operated so as not to endanger his safety.

The learned counsel for the plaintiff relied on. the language in Crawley v. Jermain, 218 Ill., App., 51, appearing on page 53, namely:

“It is idle in the circumstances of this case to contend that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care for her. own safety; she had a perfect, right to assume that the sidewalk was safe for her to walk upon . . .”

That language pertained to the facts of that particular case. It does not hold as a rule of law that regardless of contributory negligence there is a right of such expectation by the pedestrian on a sidewalk.

Reliance also was placed upon language in Cole v. Wilson,

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 387, 133 Me. 104, 1934 Me. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-potter-me-1934.