Farrell v. Greene

Decision Date01 November 1938
Docket Number350-B
Citation2 A.2d 194,110 Vt. 87
PartiesBERNICE FARRELL, b/n/f v. WILLIAM GREENE, ET AL
CourtVermont Supreme Court

October Term, 1938.

Action by Pedestrian Struck by Automobile While Crossing Street---1. Review of Order Setting Aside Plaintiff's Verdict for Contributory Negligence---2. Consideration of Evidence Thereon---3. Entry of Judgment for Defendant Held Proper---4. Burden of Showing Freedom from Contributory Negligence---5. Extent of Right to Assume Due Care of Operator---6. How Long Entitled to Proceed on Assumption---7. Evidence Held to Show Contributory Negligence---8. Variation in Requirements of Prudent Man Rule.

1. In negligence action, ruling of trial court granting defendant's motion to set aside plaintiff's verdict on ground that evidence conclusively showed plaintiff was contributorily negligent, was one of law, and not lying in discretion of trial court, was subject to review.

2. On review of ruling of trial court granting defendant's motion to set aside plaintiff's verdict on ground that evidence conclusively showed plaintiff was contributorily negligent, evidence must be taken in most favorable light for plaintiff, since in this respect motion is same in nature and substance as motion for directed verdict.

3. If trial court was right in holding evidence showed conclusively that plaintiff was contributorily negligent, as claimed by defendant in support of his motion to set aside verdict for plaintiff in negligence action, entry of judgment for defendant was without error.

4. In action to recover for personal injuries received by pedestrian, who was struck by automobile while crossing street, burden was upon plaintiff to show her freedom from contributory negligence.

5. Pedestrian crossing road had right to assume that operator of automobile she saw approaching would not drive in negligent manner, but could not for that reason omit any care which law required of her, since rule permitting such assumption applies only in favor of one whose own conduct measures up to standard of due care.

6. Pedestrian crossing road was entitled to proceed upon assumption that operator of automobile she saw approaching would not drive in negligent manner only until, in exercise of reasonable care, she saw, or ought to have seen, that such assumption was unwarranted.

7. In action to recover for personal injuries received in automobile accident, where plaintiff's undisputed testimony was that she saw lights of defendant's car 500 to 600 feet away, started walking across street, looking at his lights, observed that car was approaching at constant speed and was about 300 feet away when she was half way across street, and considered herself in no danger until car was 10 to 15 feet away, when it was too late to escape, and where she was struck just as she stepped off the paved surface, held that action of trial court in granting motion to set aside verdict for plaintiff on ground that evidence conclusively showed contributory negligence on part of plaintiff was without error.

8. The practical requirements of the prudent man vary with the circumstances, so that what is prudence in one case may be negligence in another, and downright foolhardiness in another.

ACTION OF TORT to recover for personal injuries received by plaintiff when struck, while walking across street, by automobile operated by one defendant and owned by the other. Plea, the general issue. Trial by jury at the September Term, 1936, Chittenden County, Sherman, J presiding. The action against the owner of the automobile was discontinued. Verdict for the plaintiff against the defendant operator. The plaintiff's motion to set aside the verdict on the ground of inadequacy of damages was overruled. The defendant's motion to set aside the verdict on the ground that the evidence conclusively showed contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff was granted, and judgment was entered for the defendant. Both parties excepted. The opinion states the case.

Judgment affirmed.

J Boone Wilson, Charles F. Black and Willsie E Brisbin for the plaintiff.

Austin & Edmunds for the defendants.

Present: MOULTON, C. J., SHERBURNE, BUTTLES, STURTEVANT and JEFFORDS, JJ.

OPINION
MOULTON

While crossing the street in front of her home Bernice Farrell, a school girl of fifteen years of age, was struck and injured by an automobile owned by the defendant Pease and driven by the defendant Greene. A verdict in her favor was obtained against Greene, the action having previously been discontinued against the other defendant. Upon motion on behalf of Greene this verdict was set aside as a matter of law, and judgment rendered for Greene to recover his costs. The cause is here upon exceptions by the plaintiff.

There is no claim that the defendant was not negligent; in fact, it is conceded that he was in that he was driving at an excessive speed, which the evidence amply tended to show.

The ground of the motion is that the evidence conclusively showed that the plaintiff was contributorily negligent. Therefore the ruling, being one of law and not lying in the discretion of the trial court, is subject to review. French v. Wheldon, 91 Vt. 64, 68, 99 A. 232.

The evidence must be taken in the most favorable light for the plaintiff, since in this respect the motion is the same in nature and substance as a motion for a directed verdict. Belock et al. v. State Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 106 Vt. 435, 440, 175 A. 19, and cases cited; Spaulding v. Mut. Life Ins. Co., 94 Vt. 42, 57, 109 A. 22; Wellman v. Wales, 98 Vt. 437, 438, 129 A. 317. And if the trial court was right in holding that the effect of the evidence was as the defendant claimed it to be, the entry of judgment in his favor was without error. Tarbell v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 94 Vt. 449, 451, 111 A. 567.

The testimony bearing upon the issue of contributory negligence was largely that of the plaintiff herself and was undisputed. Her home was on the east side of the street which ran approximately north and south and was of macadam construction, 21 feet wide in the paved surface, with gravel shoulders of some 2 or 3 feet in width on each side. A little after five o'clock on a late November afternoon she alighted from a southbound bus directly across the street from her home. It was dark. She stood by the side of the road until the bus had proceeded about 50 feet on its way...

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  • Blanche Duchaine, B/N/F v. Maynard C. Ray
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    ... ... plaintiff, since in this respect the motion is the same in ... nature and substance as a motion for a directed verdict ... Farrell v. Greene, 110 Vt. 87, 2 A.2d 194, ... 195; Belock et al. v. State Mut. Fire Ins ... Co., 106 Vt. 435, 440, 175 A. 19; Spaulding et ... al. v ... ...
  • Irving W. Colburn v. Robert L. Frost
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    ...110 Vt. 87, 2 A.2d 194, but in considering this motion the evidence must be taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Farrell v. Greene, supra. there was no regular cross walk at the point where the accident happened the plaintiff attempting to cross there was required to exercise......
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    ... ... show her freedom from contributory negligence ... Colburn v. Frost , 111 Vt. 17, 21, 9 A.2d ... 104; Farrell v. Greene , 110 Vt. 87, 90, 2 ... A.2d 194. Conjecture is no proof in him who is bound to make ... proof ( Wellman, Adm'r v. Wales , 97 Vt ... ...
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