Zang v. Wright

23 P.2d 580, 93 Colo. 80, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 388
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 26, 1933
DocketNo. 12,819.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 P.2d 580 (Zang v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zang v. Wright, 23 P.2d 580, 93 Colo. 80, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 388 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

*81 Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, William Scott Wright, a minor, eight years of age, son of Scott it. Wright and Alice M. Wright, was a guest in his father’s automobile as the same was being driven by the father in an easterly direction along Bast Sixth avenue in the city of Denver, which is a public highwway 42 feet in width. At the same time the defendant Mrs. Zang was driving her' automobile in a westerly direction along the north side of Bast Sixth avenue on which are two street car tracks. Columbine street, 36 feet wide, runs north and south and crosses the avenue at a right angle. At the intersection of these two highways there was a collision between the two automobiles which resulted in physical injuries to the plaintiff. This action by him, conducted by his mother' as next friend of his own selection, has for its object a money judgment to compensate him for the injuries which he sustained as the result of the alleged negligence of the defendant. Trial to a jury resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,500, on which the trial court entered judgment.

In its instructions to the jury, given at plaintiff’s request, or with his approval, the trial court thus states his grievance: When the Wright car was proceeding easterly on the south side of East Sixth avenue and along the south track of the street car line thereon, and when it reached the intersection of that street with Columbine street, the father made a left-hand turn to go north on the latter street, and in making this turn his car also cut the corner; that is, passed to the left of the center of the intersection of the two streets, and, as he says, was running- at the rate of 12 or 15 miles an hour, while the Zang car, coming from the east on the north side of the avenue, was running at the rate of 15 or 18 miles an hour. While plaintiff’s father was making- this turn the defendant, as it is said, carelessly, negligently and recklessly drove her *82 car into and upon the Wright car in which the plaintiff was riding*, as the result of which the plaintiff sustained the injuries complained of. The negligence of the defendant is thus specified: That she drove her automobile at an excessive rate of speed in violation of the ordinances of the City and County of Denver, with inadequate lights, likewise in violation of such ordinances, and failed to bring* her car to a stop before striking the car in which plaintiff was riding, and that she failed to turn her car to one side of the point occupied by the Wright car so as to avoid striking* the same, and operated her car without adequate brakes or other device for checking the speed in violation of the Denver' ordinances.

Without reproducing the specific allegations of defendant’s answer, it is sufficient to say that it put in issue all of the affirmative allegations of the complaint in which negligence of the defendant is set forth, and averred due care on her part. That the father of the plaintiff, who was driving* the car at the time of the collision, was- negligent in making the left-hand turn from Sixth avenue into Columbine street and in cutting the corner and in continuing" to drive north on the west side of Columbine street was guilty of neg*lig*ence, as matter of law, is too clear for argument, for the same was in direct violation of the Denver ordinance applicable to such conduct, and plaintiff does not even claim to the contrary.

-Plaintiff’s counsel in their briefs, however, contend that the negligence of the father may not be imputed to the plaintiff because the latter was riding as a guest in the father’s car. The trial court in one of its instructions rightly so instructed the jury. The plaintiff, however, in his briefs argues at length, possibly for the purpose of neutralizing his father’s negligence, that the defendant, by reason of her own negligence in driving her car, may not in any -event be heard to complain of the father’s negligence. If that were the only question in the case possibly that would be so', but if defendant *83 herself was not guilty of negligence in the driving of her car, this judgment against her should be reversed, whether or not the father was negligent.

No objection seems to have been made by the plaintiff to the introduction of evidence which tended to show that the defendant at the time of the collision was lawfully driving* her car. The important and controlling question in the case is not whether the father was guilty of negligence in driving his car, but whether the defendant was negligent in driving her car. We have examined the evidence and are fully justified in the statement that the defendant was not driving her car at an excessive rate of speed, or in violation of any Denver ordinance, or was in any other respect negligent. There is no evidence whatever that the brakes on the defendant’s car were inadequate. The only evidence upon that subject is directly to the contrary, that they were in perfect working condition. There is no evidence that the defendant was negligent in failing* to turn her car' in such a. way as to avoid collision with the Wright car. To the contrary, she did all that any careful driver could do to avoid collision. Indeed, the only attempt to establish any specific act of negligence of the defendant at the time of the collision was that the car did not have its headlights burning*, which prevented her' from seeing the ear driven by plaintiff’s father, and prevented the father from seeing her ear, as he suddenly swung from Sixth avenue into Columbine street. The plaintiff’s father testifies that at the time he made the turn into Columbine street the headlights of his own car were burning* and the light cast thereby extended far beyond the east line of Columbine street and along East Sixth avenue on which the defendant was driving. There was also a street light at the intersection of these streets. Plaintiff’s only evidence upon this particular issue was the testimony of the plaintiff’s father who testified that, in making this turn, he did not see the defendant’s car at all until after the collision occurred. If the father did not see the *84 defendant’s car’, and he says he did not, as he was making’ this turn, he certainly could not determine whether or not its headlights were then burning. The defendant testifies positively not only that her brakes were in perfect condition, but also that both the headlights and side or cowl lights of her car were burning as she drove down the avenue and were still burning at the time of the collision. In this she is corroborated by two of her daughters who were- riding- with her in the car at the time. We do not think there was any sufficient legal or competent evidence in the case even tending to show that the defendant’s car was without headlights or side lights. She herself testifies, and in this is not contradicted, but is corroborated by other testimony, that her car was already within the street intersection before the Wright car suddenly started to turn from Bast Sixth avenue into Columbine street. The father may have testified truly that he did not see the defendant’s car until after the collision.

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Bluebook (online)
23 P.2d 580, 93 Colo. 80, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zang-v-wright-colo-1933.