Zogg v. O'BRYAN

237 S.W.2d 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 23, 1951
StatusPublished

This text of 237 S.W.2d 511 (Zogg v. O'BRYAN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zogg v. O'BRYAN, 237 S.W.2d 511 (Ky. 1951).

Opinion

VAN SANT, Commissioner.

These appeals are from a single judgment entered in three consolidated actions arising out of a collision between an automobile owned by Mary Martin Zogg and driven by her seventeen-year-old son, Joseph Franklin Zogg, and one owned and being driven by Robert Preston O’Bryan, at the intersection of Frederica and 18th Streets in Owensboro, on November 26, 1948 at about 11:30 o’clock p. m. Zogg was proceeding north and O’Bryan south on Frederica. Commencing with the north curb line of 18th Street, Frederica narrows in width. 'At that point and north thereof it is approximately 45 feet; south of that point it is approximately 70 feet in width. Zogg intended to continue his northerly course but was required to veer to the left because of the narrowing of the street. O’Bryan changed his southerly course by turning left or east into 18th Street. Zogg testified he was traveling at approximately thirty miles per hour as he approached the intersection; O’Bryan estimated the speed at not less than 50. The *513 speed at which O’Bryan was traveling does not appear in evidence but he testified that he came to a full stop north and west of the center point of the intersection when he was struck by the Zogg car. Zogg testified that he was proceeding- northerly on the east side of the medial line of Fred-erica Street and the cars collided when O’Bryan drove directly in his path. O’Bryan’s wife and three of their children were passengers in his car. Both Mr. and Mrs. O’Bryan as well as Zogg were injured.

The first of these actions was instituted against O’Bryan by Joseph Zogg, who sued by his father, Frank Zogg, as his next friend. In that action O’Bryan filed a cross-petition against Mrs. Zogg and a counterclaim against the plaintiff. The court did not, nor was he requested to, appoint a guardian ad litem to defend the plaintiff in the counterclaim. Defense to the counterclaim on behalf of the infant was made by the attorneys who filed the suit. The next suit was instituted by Mrs. O’Bryan against Joseph Zogg and his mother, Mary Martin Zogg, to recover for personal injuries sustained in the accident. In that action Honorable John W. Beard was appointed guardian ad litem for the infant defendant and filed answer for him. The third suit was filed by Mary Martin Zogg against O’Bryan to recover for injuries sustained to her automobile in the collision. On the 13th day of June, 1949, an order was entered directing the three cases to be “consolidated and tried together”. On the 16th day of June, an order, was entered in the second suit, appointing Honorable John B. Anderson guardian ad litem, in addition to -the guardian ad litem theretofore appointed, with directions that the guardians ad litem “represent and defend this action for and on behalf of the said infant defendant”. No additional pleading was filed on behalf of the infant before the trial. The cases were tried together, resulting in verdicts for the O’Bry-ans against the Zoggs and pursuant thereto judgment was entered allowing Robert Preston O’Bryan to recover the sum of $1222.65 of Joseph Zogg and Mary Martin Zogg on the counterclaim' and cross-petition in the action first herein referred to and allowing Frances Elizabeth O’Bryan to recover the sum' of $4996.65 of Joseph Zogg and Mary Martin Zogg in the second action. These awards and dismissal of the ■petition in the third action were entered in a single judgment, from which the Zoggs have appealed.

Appellees contend that none of appellants’ complaints hereinafter set out should be considered/because they were entitled to a peremptory instruction under the evidence. From what we have said at the outset of this opinion, it is obvious that this contention cannot be sustained.

The first complaint is that the court erred in the instruction- which required Zogg to yield the right of way to O’Bryan, if the jury believed from the evidence that O’Bryan first reached and entered “the intersection of 18th Street” with Frederica Street. It is the contention of appellant that the words “beyond the center point” should have been inserted after the word “intersection” in this instruction. Reliance is had on the opinions of this Court in' Walton v. Grant, 302 Ky. 194, 194 S.W.2d 366, and Bridge Transit Co. v. Le Seuér, 304 Ky. 403, 200 S.W.2d 942. Appellees contend that the instruction is correct and those approved in Walton v. Grant, supra, and Bridge Transit Co. v. Le Seuer, supra, are erroneous because the "O’Bryan car would never lawfully reach the center point of the intersection since by another instruction it was required to change its course short of the center point. It is true, as ap-pellees contend, that1 following the course required of him by the other instructions, O’Bryan would not have reached the center point of the intersection of 18th and Frederica Streets in a north-south direction ; but, in making the turn from a southerly course to an easterly course, he passed or would have passed the center point of the street in a west to east direction. Thus, from the time O’Bryan commenced the turn into 18th Street, he was traveling a course which inevitably would intersect the course being traveled by Zogg; and, since Zogg was or would have been on O’Bryan’s right when the cars arrived, or should have arrived, at the intersection of their paths, Zogg was required to yield the *514 right of way only if O’Bryan first reached such point of intersection, KRS 189.330(2). The respective rights 'and duties of the par- ■ ties under, this section of the Statute however are secondary to Zogg’s right and O’Bryan’s duty under the provisions of KRS 189.380(2) which reads: “(2) Every person operating a vehicle on the highway before turning, stopping or changing the course of the vehicle and before turning the vehicle when starting it shall first, sec that there is sufficient space for the change or turn to be made in safety, * *

A proper instruction under this section was given by the court in instruction (a) under “the further duty of said Robert Preston O’Bryan” and is identical to instruction No. 1(5) in the Walton case, supra. Despite this fact, we can appreciate the possibility of confusion, arising in the minds of the jurors in reading these instructions, unless their attention is called to the fact that O’Bryan must comply with the duties imposed on him in making a left turn before he has the right to proceed toward the intersection of his and Zogg’s respective paths. Since the judgment must be reversed for other reasons and in order to eliminate the possibility of confusion, we have prepared an instruction to be given on the next trial, in lieu of instruction (c) which was given by the court under the designation “further duties of Joseph Franklin Zogg”. This instruction will be given with those reciting the duties of O’Bryan instead of those reciting the duties of Zogg, and will read:

(It was the further duty of O’Bryan)

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237 S.W.2d 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zogg-v-obryan-kyctapphigh-1951.