Evans v. Dineen

Decision Date10 October 1969
Docket NumberNo. 9663,9663
Citation105 Ariz. 44,459 P.2d 304
PartiesIrena May EVANS, a single woman, Appellant, v. John Doe DINEEN and Mary Ann Dineen, his wife, Appellees.
CourtArizona Supreme Court

Virginia Hash and Jerome R. Kase, Phoenix, for appellant.

Snell & Wilmer, by John Bouma, Phoenix, for appellees.

HAYS, Justice.

The plaintiff below appeals from an adverse judgment in an action arising out of a collision between an automobile and a horse in North Phoenix.The only question for determination on this appeal is whether the trial court correctly refused to instruct the jury as to the doctrine of Last Clear Chance.

At midday on a sunny Sunday in November, 1964, plaintiff and her male companion were riding horses in a westerly direction along the right hand side of Orchard Lane.Defendant's automobile, driven by defendant and carrying two of defendant's minor children, was headed in the same direction, and passed the two equestrians somewhere between the points where Orchard Lane intersects with Central Avenue and Third Avenue.Soon after defendant's car drove past the riders, plaintiff's horse suddenly bolted into a gallop, which plaintiff, though struggling desperately, was unable to control.By the time defendant's vehicle had reached the Third Avenue intersection, plaintiff's runaway horse had crossed to the left side of the street, and as defendant turned her automobile left onto Third Avenue plaintiff's horse collided with the left front of defendant's car.The collision resulted in substantial bodily injuries to plaintiff.

In her complaint, plaintiff alleged that her condition of helplessness on her runaway horse placed her in a 'position of imminent peril,' that 'the defendant actually saw, discovered and realized the position of peril in which plaintiff had been placed,' and that 'by the exercise of ordinary care'defendant'could have avoided the said collision.'Extensive testimony was offered at trial in behalf of both parties as to the particular circumstances leading up to the collision.Because a material question of fact concerned the relative positions and speeds of the defendant's vehicle and plaintiff's horse during the moments leading up to the collision, each of the eyewitnesses to the event was asked to supplement his oral testimony at trial by charting what he saw on diagrams of the area drawn to scale.These diagrams have not been made part of the record on appeal.

At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial judge reviewed the requested instructions of both parties, and instructed the jury as to both negligence and contributory negligence.He refused, however, to give plaintiff's requested instruction on Last Clear Chance.The jury returned a defense verdict.

We have on numerous occasions enumerated the elements necessary for application of the Last Clear Chance doctrine in Arizona, and need not restate those elements here.SeeOdekirk v. Austin, 90 Ariz. 97, 366 P.2d 80(1961);Gray v. Woods, 84 Ariz. 87, 324 p.2d 220(1958);Trauscht v. Lamb, 77 Ariz. 276, 270 P.2d 1071(1954);Casey v. Marshall, 64 Ariz. 232, 168 P.2d 240(1946).It is also clearly established that to support an instruction on Last Clear Chance, there must be 'substantial evidence' of the requisite elements.Layne v. Hartung, 8 Ariz. 88, 348 P.2d 291(1960).In order to determine whether such an instruction should be given, the evidence must be considered in the strongest possible light to support the plaintiff's position.Webb v. Hardin, 53 Ariz. 310, 89 P.2d 30(1939).

Our review of the incomplete record before us provides no indication that the trial judge erred in refusing to give plaintiff's requested instruction.Without the numerous charts and diagrams which were a significant part of the evidence admitted at trial, we cannot say that there was substantial evidence to support an instruction on Last Clear Chance.An example of...

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4 cases
  • Schneider v. Macari
    • United States
    • Arizona Supreme Court
    • April 3, 1975
    ...clear chance? We must view the evidence in the strongest possible light to support the plaintiff-appellant's position, Evans v. Dineen, 105 Ariz. 44, 459 P.2d 304 (1969); Webb v. Hardin, 53 Ariz. 310, 89 P.2d 30 (1939); Towers v. Johnson, 11 Ariz.App. 455, 465 P.2d 592 (1970). We agree with......
  • Packard v. Reidhead
    • United States
    • Arizona Court of Appeals
    • November 19, 1974
    ...last clear chance instruction, would warrant the jury's reasonably concluding that elements of that test were met. Cf. Evans v. Dineen, 105 Ariz. 44, 459 P.2d 304 (1969). Instead, Rule 51(a) of 16 A.R.S. is our basis for rejecting this argument. Rule 51(a) states in '. . . No party may assi......
  • State v. Chambers
    • United States
    • Arizona Supreme Court
    • October 10, 1969
  • Gammage v. Thomson Conant, PLC
    • United States
    • Arizona Court of Appeals
    • November 26, 2013
    ...17, 266 P.2d 738, 738 (1954) (quoting Frost v. Grizzly Bluff Creamery Co., 36 P. 929, 929-30 (Cal. 1894)); see Evans v. Dineen, 105 Ariz. 44, 45-46, 459 P.2d 304, 305-06 (1969) (declining to find error in refusal of a requested instruction because the record was incomplete). To the extent t......

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