Macshara v. Garfield

Decision Date01 December 1967
Docket NumberNo. 10579,10579
Partiesd 152 Gary MACSHARA, a minor, by his Guardian, Burt S. Macshara, Jr., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. Rulon Ray GARFIELD, Defendant and Respondent.
CourtUtah Supreme Court

Patterson, Foley, Phillips & Gridley, Ogden, for appellant.

David K. Watkiss, Salt Lake City, George B. Handy, Ogden, for respondent.

LETON, District Judge.

This is a suit for injuries suffered by Gary Macshara, 17-year-old son of the plaintiff, arising out of an automobile collision at the intersection of Tyler Avenue and Sheridan Drive in Ogden, Utah, on the late afternoon of August 23, 1964. From an adverse verdict plaintiff appeals.

Defendant Rulon Garfield was traveling west on Sheridan Road approaching its intersection with Tyler Avenue, while Gary Macshara was driving south on Tyler Avenue. There are no traffic signs or signals at that intersection. The parties are in dispute as to who entered it first. The point of impact was placed about 18 feet south and about the same distance east of the north and west curb lines and thus in the northwest quadrant of the intersection.

Plaintiff argues that inasmuch as he was the driver approaching from the right, and thus should have been accorded the right of way, the jury was wrong in rejecting his complaint and that this resulted from errors committed by the trial court in these particulars: (1) in refusing to allow a traffic officer to in effect reconstruct the accident from his interpretation of the physical evidence; (2) in admitting certain testimony as to the plaintiff's speed preceding the impact; and (3) in refusing to give some of the plaintiff's requested instructions.

In directing our attention to the rulings on evidence we note first that the trial judge, as the authority in control of the proceeding, has some latitude of discretion in passing upon which evidence has sufficient credibility and probative value to be helpful in establishing the facts. 1 We think the trial court was correct in not allowing the officer to in effect reconstruct the accident and the speed and direction of the vehicles on the basis of such physical evidence as: gouge marks on the lawn and on the curbing, the damage to the automobiles, and the course he assumed they took after the impact. The disallowance of the evidence was in conformity with the rule that such an opinion is not admissible if a layman of ordinary intelligence can just as well interpret the evidence as the experts. 2 In this connection it should be observed that all of the complete evidence, including photographs taken of the vehicles, were before the jury. And further, that the trial court did allow the officer to give his observations as to the damage to the vehicles and its causation, and to give his estimate of their speed based upon the skid marks. 3

Neither do we see any error which would transgress the reasonable latitude of discretion invested in the trial court in his allowance of testimony of witnesses who observed the plaintiff's speed at 35 to 45 miles per hour short distances, just seconds in time, before he got to the intersection. Plaintiff argues that this testimony was too remote as related to his speed on entering the intersection. This...

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4 cases
  • Zakroff v. May
    • United States
    • Arizona Court of Appeals
    • July 18, 1968
    ...of permitting such testimony. Falcone v. New Jersey Bell Telephone Company, 98 N.J.Super. 138, 236 A.2d 394 (1967); Macshara v. Garfield, 20 Utah 2d 152, 434 P.2d 756 (1967); Frozen Food Express v. Modern Truck Lines, Inc., 79 Ill.App.2d 84, 223 N.E.2d 275 (1967); Cardenas v. Peterson Bean ......
  • Jansen v. Lichwa, 2
    • United States
    • Arizona Court of Appeals
    • October 6, 1970
    ...of this type. Appellant was free to cross-examine him as an expert with any authoritative text on the subject. In Macshara v. Garfield, 20 Utah 2d 152, 434 P.2d 756 (1967), a witness was allowed to testify even though he had not been disclosed at pretrial. The court there indicated that fai......
  • Edwards v. Didericksen
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • June 27, 1979
    ...occurrence or condition, depending upon the degree of positiveness the witness desires to give his opinion. Macshara v. Garfield, 20 Utah 2d 152, 434 P.2d 756 (1967), is an aberration from the above principles. In that case, this Court sustained a trial court's refusal to admit testimony of......
  • Bridges v. Union Pac. R. Co.
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • September 13, 1971
    ...13 Utah 407, 420, 45 P. 47 (1896).2 Day v. Lorenzo Smith & Son, Inc., 17 Utah 2d 221, 223, 408 P.2d 186 (1965); Macshara v. Garfield, 20 Utah 2d 152, 154, 434 P.2d 756 (1967).3 57 Am.Jur.2d, Negligence, Sec. 289, p. 686, including footnote 11 therein.4 See Rogers v. Rio Grande Western Ry. C......

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