Hiller v. Kepler

Decision Date07 April 1928
Docket Number27,960
PartiesCHARLES W. HILLER et al., Appellees, v. H. A. KEPLER, Appellant
CourtKansas Supreme Court

Decided January, 1928

Appeal from Wyandotte district court, division No. 2; FRANK D HUTCHINGS, judge.

Judgment affirmed.

SYLLABUS

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT.

HIGHWAYS -- Collision from Failure to Provide Lights -- Liability for Injury. The contentions of appellant in this case are substantially those considered and determined in Barzen v. Kepler, ante, p. 648, and following the decision in that case the judgment in this case is affirmed.

Arthur J. Stanley and W. L. Wood, both of Kansas City, for the appellant.

E. S. McAnany, M. L. Alden and Thomas M. Van Cleave, all of Kansas City, for the appellees; James T. Cochran, of Kansas City, of counsel.

OPINION

JOHNSTON, C. J.:

This is a companion case of Barzen v. Kepler, ante, p. 648. Both cases were submitted and argued together. The present case was brought by Charles W. Hiller and Mamie Hiller, to recover for the death of their son, V. L. Hiller, who was an occupant of the automobile in which Martina G. Barzen was riding when the collision with the defendant's truck occurred the evening of December 11, 1925, which resulted in the death of plaintiffs' son. The jury found for the plaintiffs and assessed their damages at $ 10,000, but on the suggestion of the trial court at the hearing of the motion for a new trial, the plaintiffs remitted $ 4,000 of the damages awarded, and judgment was then entered in favor of plaintiffs for $ 6,000. Defendant appeals.

He makes substantially the same objections to the rulings and judgment, and advances the same contentions that he urged in the Barzen case. The special findings returned by the jury substantially conform with those returned in the Barzen case with one exception. The jury in this case found that no lights had been placed on the rear truck, with which the automobile collided, until after the accident occurred. The decision in the Barzen case is deemed to be controlling here and it must be held that the death of plaintiffs' son was caused by the negligence of defendant, and further that the finding of the jury frees the driver of the automobile of contributory negligence. Defendant makes the further point that the judgment for $ 6,000 is excessive. It appears that plaintiffs' son was a student in the state university and was twenty-three years of age when he...

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3 cases
  • Sawyer v. Claar
    • United States
    • Idaho Court of Appeals
    • December 7, 1988
    ...son); Little v. Yanagisawa, 70 Cal.App. 303, 233 P. 357 (1925) ($5,000 award for death of twenty-one-year-old daughter); Hiller v. Kepler, 125 Kan. 679, 266 P. 73 (1928) ($6,000 verdict for death of twenty-three-year-old son); Berry v. Dewey, 102 Kan. 593, 172 P. 27 (1918) ($5,000 award for......
  • Hilliard v. Southern Kansas Stage Lines Co.
    • United States
    • Kansas Supreme Court
    • July 10, 1937
    ... ... 1917A, ... 1007; Aaron v. Telephone Co., 89 Kan. 186, 131 P ... 582, 45 L.R.A. (N.S.) 309; Carl v. Ackard, 114 Kan ... 640, 220 P. 515; Hiller v. Kepler, 125 Kan. 679, 266 ... Upon a ... careful consideration of all the evidence in the case before ... us, we feel that the ... ...
  • Anderson v. Southern Kansas Stage Lines Co.
    • United States
    • Kansas Supreme Court
    • May 4, 1935
    ...clearly established negligence on his part, and he therefore cannot recover damages from one who runs into his truck. In Hiller v. Kepler, 125 Kan. 679, 266 P. 73, the in answer to special findings stated, "that no lights had been placed on the rear truck with which the automobile collided ......

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