Judges: Fritz
Filed Date: 12/9/1930
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/16/2024
The collision occurred at six p. m. on July 4, 1929, while plaintiffs were riding south on an arterial highway which had an oiled, graveled roadway twenty-eight feet wide. Plaintiffs claimed it occurred in an intersection o'f the arterial and a crossroad, on which defendant approached from the west. Defendant claimed it occurred after he had turned north at the intersection and gone seventy-five feet along his right-hand side of the arterial highway, when his automobile was struck by an automobile which McCumber was unlawfully driving on defendant’s side of the road. There was an arterial stop sign on the crossroad to the west of the arterial, but there is a dispute as to whether defendant stopped before entering the arterial highway. There was also the usual crossroad sign along the arterial highway, 375 feet north of the crossroad, but plaintiffs claim that the view thereof was obstructed by growing brush. At the northwest corner of the intersection, tall brush growing up to the westerly edge of the traveled portion of the arterial obstructed the view so that drivers approaching the intersection from the north could not see an automobile approaching from the west until it entered the traveled portion of the arterial.
The verdict discloses that the jury adopted plaintiffs’ version that the collision occurred at the intersection, and not seventy-five feet to the north thereof, as defendant and his witnesses testified. Giving to the evidence the most favorable construction of which it fairly admits in support of the verdict, the following facts may be deemed established: Defendant failed to stop before entering upon the traveled portion of the arterial at the rate of fifteen miles per hour. McCumber, driving south at thirty-five miles per hour, on his right side of the arterial, first saw defendant’s car as it emerged from behind the brush and entered upon the traveled portion of the arterial, when McCumber’s car was one hundred feet to the north. McCumber immediately applied his brakes. Defendant stopped on the arterial, in the pathway- of south-bound cars, with the rear of his car at the western Sedge of the graveled track. McCumber considered it safer to turn to his left and pass in front of defendant’s car than to attempt to' stop too abruptly. He started to turn his car accordingly, when he was about fifty feet from defendant's' car, but just as he got alongside, defendant’s car suddenly started and shot ahead toward defendant’s left, and McCumber’s rear right wheel collided with defendant’s front right wheel and McCumber’s car was 'upset.
Those facts fairly admit of the jury’s findings as stated above, with the exception of the finding that the injuries
Defendant contends that the plaintiffs and E. H. McCum-ber were guilty of negligence which proximately contributed to produce plaintiffs’ injuries, and that the negligence of E. H. McCumber, as driver, is to be imputed to all of the passengers in his car. Under thejevidence, the "question of whether Mrs. McCumber was negligent was a jury issue, and there is no occasion to set aside the jury’s-finding exon-
However, prejudicial error was committed in instructing the jury “. . . that at the time of the collision it was prima facie lawful for the driver of a vehicle to drive the same at a speed not exceeding forty miles an hour at the place of the collision in question.”
At the time of the collision, sec. 85.08 (2), Stats. 1927, limited the speed to “fifteen miles an hour when approaching within fifty feet and in traversing an intersection of highways when the driver’s view is obstructed.” That section further provided:
“A driver’s view shall be deemed to be obstructed when at any time during the last fifty feet of his approach to such intersection, he does not have a clear and uninterrupted view of such intersection and of the traffic upon all of the highways entering such intersection for a distance of two hundred feet from such intersection.”
As McCumber’s view was obstructed, that statutory limitation of the speed to fifteen miles an hour was applicable in this action to his speed when approaching within fifty feet and when traversing the intersection. As defendant approached and traversed the intersection he was entitled to assume that McCumber’s speed when approaching within
As to appellant’s contention that the court erred in permitting judgments to be entered for excessive damages, we find no error excepting in the case of Ernest McCumber, who was four years old. He sustained a cut two and one-half inches long, which extended diagonally across the brow and through the lids of the right eye to one-half inch below the lower lid. The cut left a permanent scar two and one-half inches long and one-sixteenth to one-eighth of an inch wide. Nine stitches were required, and the child was ten days in the hospital, but the medical and hospital charges are not to be included in the damages recoverable by him. The jury awarded $2,083.33 damages. The court held that amount to be excessive, and gave plaintiff the option to consent to a recovery of $1,500 as the lowest amount at which a fair-minded jury would probably assess his damages. As the option to consent to the entry of judgment for a reduced amount was extended to the plaintiff, the court rightly fol
By the Court. — Judgments reversed, and each action remanded with directions to grant a new trial.