Citation Numbers: 143 A. 401, 101 Vt. 270, 63 A.L.R. 1427, 1928 Vt. LEXIS 150
Judges: Powers, Watson, Powebs, Moulton, Chase, Thompson, Supr
Filed Date: 10/3/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff sues for personal injuries suffered by her in an automobile collision. At the time of the accident, she was riding on the front seat of a Ford touring car owned and driven by Harold Dutton, which car was run into by the car owned and driven by the defendant. The collision took place at the intersection of Pleasant Street Extension and Coventry Road in the city of Newport. The junction of these highways takes the form of a Y, of which Pleasant Street Extension is the stem. Travelers on Coventry Road who are going north turn to the left and follow one fork of the Y onto Pleasant *Page 272 Street Extension. Those going south turn to the right and follow the other fork of the Y onto Pleasant Street Extension. The plaintiff lives at or near this junction, and on the day of the accident was with two others returning from the city to her home. They were overtaken by Dutton, who invited them to ride. The plaintiff and her companions entered the Dutton car, and it proceeded with the plaintiff's house as its destination. It reached the junction of the two highways, turned to the right and entered Pleasant Street Extension by the northerly fork, was crossing the other to enter the driveway of the plaintiff's premises, when it was run into by the car of the defendant which was entering Pleasant Street Extension from the opposite direction by making a left-hand turn onto the southerly fork.
At the trial there was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff and the defendant excepted. At the close of the evidence the defendant moved for a directed verdict upon the grounds: (1) That the plaintiff had failed to show proximate negligence on his part; and (2) that she had failed to show due care on her own. This motion was overruled and an exception saved. The only ground here relied upon is the one last specified.
For the purposes of this discussion, therefore, we may assume that the negligence of the defendant was sufficiently established, and we will assume that Dutton was shown to have been negligent. As we have several times held, the negligence of Dutton, the driver, cannot be imputed to the plaintiff, his guest. Wentworth v. Waterbury,
The evidence shows that the plaintiff at the moment of the collision had turned and was talking with her sister, who was sitting on the back seat of the car. She was not watching the road or taking any precautions for her own safety. If she had looked, she could have seen the defendant's car as it approached the turn. She was well acquainted with the locality, and knew there was danger if cars approached from different directions at the same time. She knew that Dutton was an experienced driver, and so far as appears he was competent. In *Page 273
these circumstances, was the plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law, or might a jury reasonably infer that she did as much as a prudent guest would do in just the same situation and circumstances? That she was not charged with the same responsibility as Dutton was with reference to watching the road for approaching cars is established. We said in Lefebvre'sAdmr. v. Central Vt. Ry. Co.,
We cannot say that this plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law. It follows that a jury would be warranted in drawing an inference from her conduct that she was in the exercise of due care.
In this holding we are in accord with what we regard as the best-reasoned cases. Thus, in Churchill v. Texas Pac. Ry. Co.,
In Columbus Greenville R.R. Co. v. Lee (Miss.),
In Krause v. Hall,
In Tervilliger v. Long Island R.R. Co.,
Poynter v. Townsend (Del. Super.), 130 A. 678, relied upon by the defendant, is not to the contrary of the Maryland cases hereinbefore referred to. The paragraph quoted in the brief is from the charge of the court at the trial, and was not reviewed by an appellate court. But all in all it is not out of harmony with the conclusions reached in the case before us. This appears not only from the language quoted in the defendant's brief which only requires the guest to be as watchful "as an ordinary (ordinarily) prudent passenger in such position would have done," but also in other expressions used by the court: "In such case, however, the passenger is required to exercise due care and caution as well as the driver. However, the passenger is not held to the care that is required of the operator. The passenger has a right to rely, to a great extent, on the prudence, care, and skillfulness of the operator. * * * But we instruct you that a passenger is not required to do anything more than an ordinarily prudent person in a similar position and relation, who is not the operator, would have done in a like situation."
The grade crossing cases, several of which are cited in the defendant's brief and several of which are referred to above, are not strictly in point. Railroad trains and trolley cars run on fixed rails, and when a collision impends cannot turn aside to avert it, while vehicles on the highway in like circumstances can turn out for each other. This one circumstance is enough to affect the rule in its application to collision cases. *Page 276 Moreover, the conduct of travelers on the highway is regulated by statute, and they are required, when approaching and entering an intersecting highway, as these drivers were, to proceed "slowly and with due care to avoid accident." G.L. 4705. In addition to this, the defendant, who was about to make a left-hand turn, was required to reduce his speed and to pass to the right of and beyond the center of the curve into Pleasant Street. Both WP and the plaintiff had a right to assume at the outset that he would comply with this requirement; and this is a circumstance to be considered in determining how watchful the prudent-man rule required the plaintiff to be. According to the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the accident would not have occurred if the defendant had observed the mandate of the statute in the respect last named.
Judgment affirmed.
Clarke v. Connecticut Co. , 83 Conn. 219 ( 1910 )
Chiswell v. Nichols , 137 Md. 291 ( 1920 )
Kelly v. Huber Baking Co. , 145 Md. 321 ( 1924 )
Gordon v. Opalecky , 152 Md. 536 ( 1927 )
Lefebvre's Admr. v. Central Vermont Railway Co. , 97 Vt. 342 ( 1924 )
McAndrews v. Leonard , 99 Vt. 512 ( 1926 )
Scheuring v. Northern States Power Co. , 67 S.D. 484 ( 1940 )
Dashnow v. Myers , 121 Vt. 273 ( 1959 )
Verchereau v. Jameson , 122 Vt. 189 ( 1961 )
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Faubion , 92 Ind. App. 592 ( 1930 )
Black v. Martin , 88 Mont. 256 ( 1930 )
Webster v. Canadian Pacific Railway Co. , 103 Vt. 460 ( 1931 )
Blondin v. Carr , 121 Vt. 157 ( 1959 )
Willbanks v. Laster , 211 Ark. 88 ( 1947 )
Eddy v. Wells , 59 N.D. 663 ( 1930 )
Huestis v. Estate of Lapham , 113 Vt. 191 ( 1943 )