DocketNumber: 36738
Judges: Felton
Filed Date: 6/20/1957
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
The evidence pertinent to a decision of this case is as follows: The defendant, called by the plaintiff as a witness for the opposite party for cross-examination, testified: that at the time of the accident he was night policeman at Nicholls, Georgia; that he was driving the automobile about midnight on April 1st when it collided with Mr. Rigdon’s automobile; that
Trenton C. Taylor, plaintiff, testified on direct examination: that he remembered the night of April 1, 1955, pretty well; that he was a passenger in an automobile driven by the defendant at that time and that he was injured in an automobile accident in an automobile driven by the defendant; that the defendant stated how the collision came about pretty well; that he was sitting up there talking with him and Marie Meeks came up and said someone was out there breaking in the place, or something, and the defendant said he would go see about it and the defendant took off; that as they were riding along they overtook Marie somewhere up the road and got up close to her and she kind of slowed down and motioned to some girl walking in the ditch out there and that the defendant and he were looking at her and deciding who it was, and that one would say it was she, and one say it was not, and that the first thing you knew “it was just like that”; that Marie was pretty well gone when they started off; that he couldn’t say at what speed the defendant was driving when he first came out of Nicholls but they were “hitting it pretty well”; that he would estimate the speed at 60 to 70 miles an hour; that they overtook Marie; that when Marie slowed down she put her brakes on and had her hand out to show them the woman walking in the ditch down there and that they were look
On cross-examination, the plaintiff testified: that when Marie pulled out the defendant pulled out right behind her; that he could not estimate how far Marie had gone before the defendant started; that the defendant caught up with her; that at the time the defendant caught up with her they were going about the same speed, which he would estimate to be sixty or sixty-five miles an hour; that he did not know the exact speed as he was not looking at the speedometer, but that he would say that Mrs. Meeks was going sixty or sixty-five miles an hour; that both of them were going around sixty or sixty-five; that Mrs. Meeks had left Nicholls and was traveling sixty to sixty-five miles an hour after she had slowed down ,for them to catch up; that that was when she passed this woman in the ditch; that he turned around looking at the woman in the ditch and that he felt the car zigzagging when the collision occurred; that that is all he knew about it; that he did not see the other car at all; that he did rrot know what part of the highway the collision took place on; that “if we were zigzagging we were looking to the rear and our car was zigzagging”; that the collision could have happened on
Homer B. Adams, defendant, testified: that Mrs. Meeks left Nicholls before he did; that the lights of her car were in sight; that he did not think he drove over forty-five or fifty miles an hour the entire distance he traveled; that he thought Mrs. Meeks slowed down a little when she saw the woman but that she did no pointing that he saw; that he looked at the woman in the ditch and they were two hundred yards beyond the woman when the collision occurred; that he did not turn around and look at the woman after they passed her; that he looked at her in the ditch; that he was looking down the road after he passed the woman in the direction in which he was going; that he was driving on the right-hand side of the highway; that he did not see anything out of the ordinary about the other car until it just swerved toward him; that he saw the car lights before the car got right up on him; that you do not register things like that if you don’t know something’s going to happen; that when he first noticed the car it swerved right at him; that when the car swerved toward him he was on his side of the highway and that he believed he was partly off the road before he was hit, at which time he was on his side of the road; that when he was hit he had a reflex and pulled to the right; that the other car hit the left-hand light of his car and twisted his car around crossways the road; that his car went fifteen or twenty feet and stopped crossways the road; that the other car went, by guess, 150 feet or farther on across the road on the defendant’s side, crossed the ditch and plowed into the embankment; that the other car would have had to be going sixty or seventy miles an hour to do the damage it did; that he saw the men who were in the other automobile that night and that he would say they were drunk; that the pavement they were driving on was not broken and uneven, but was ordinary,
Mrs. Marie Ann Meeks, witness for the defendant, testified: that she asked the defendant to follow her to her home, and about one hundred yards from her home the car that collided with defendant’s caused her to have to take the ditch to miss it; that he was going about thirty-five or forty miles an hour; that the other car was swerving on the road; that it was on her side of the road completely when she had to leave the road into the ditch; that the speed of that car was at least sixty miles an hour; that she saw the defendant’s car through her rear-view mirror; that she had kept the defendant’s oar lights in view since they left Nicholls; that the defendant drove one hundred or one hundred and fifty feet behind her; that the defendant did not pass her; that she drove at about forty miles per hour from Nicholls; that she actually saw the car collide with the defendant’s car through the mirror; that the defendant’s car was on its side of the road at the time of the collision; that after the collision the defendant’s car was north and south across the highway with the back wheels off the highway with the front wheels pointed northward; that the other automobile was about 150 feet across the south side of the highway in the ditch and into a fence; that the men in the other automobile were under the influence of alcohol; that the lights on the defendant’s car were dim; that she and defendant’s wife are first cousins.
E. C. Gilliard, sworn for the defendant, testified, that he was Deputy Sheriff of Bacon County, and corroborated Mrs. Meeks as to the location of the cars and the condition of the men in the vehicle involved with the defendant in the collision.
E. W. Tillman, sworn for the. defendant, testified: that he was a trooper with the Georgia State Patrol; that he investigated the collision in question with Sergeant Hamrick about 1:30 a.m., Saturday, April 2, 1955; that the defendant’s car was crossways
The evidence did not authorize a finding that the defendant was guilty of any act or acts of negligence which proximately caused the plaintiff’s injuries. The only way the jury could possibly have arrived at a finding that the defendant was negligent was to accept the testimony of the plaintiff in preference to that of any other witness which was to the contrary. The plaintiff’s testimony did not authorize the finding that the defendant did not dim his lights, or that the pavement was rough. The plaintiff’s testimony as to the speed of defendant’s car was most contradictory and uncertain, but assuming for the sake of argument that the defendant was negligent in driving too fast and in looking back at the woman in the ditch, there is no evidence to authorize the finding that such negligence was the proximate cause of the collision. There is no evidence whatever that the defendant’s car ever got on the wrong side of the road or that if the defendant had been looking ahead and exercising ordinary care he could have avoided the collision.
The court erred in denying the motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The judgment is reversed with direction that the court enter up a judgment in accordance with the motion.
Judgment reversed with direction.