McCoy v. Gossett
Decision Date | 31 May 1968 |
Docket Number | No. 76,76 |
Citation | 442 P.2d 807,1968 NMCA 37,79 N.M. 317 |
Parties | Homer A. McCOY and Edna McCoy, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. W. A. GOSSETT, Administrator of the Estate of Houston Workman, Deceased, Defendant-Appellee. |
Court | Court of Appeals of New Mexico |
This appeal is from a final judgment entered for the defendant pursuant to a directed verdict in a negligence case which involved an automobile accident. The propriety of instructing the jury to find for the defendant and against the plaintiffs depends upon whether there was any evidence introduced from which the jury might have found in favor of plaintiffs-appellants upon the theory of last clear chance.
It is fundamental that a plaintiff seeking recovery under the doctrine of last clear chance has the burden of establishing all facts and elements essential to invoke the doctrine. It must be shown: (1) that plaintiff has been negligent, (2) that as a result of his negligence he is in a position of peril from which he cannot escape by the exercise of ordinary care, (3) that defendant knows or should have known of plaintiff's peril, and (4) that defendant then had a clear chance by the exercise of reasonable care to avoid the injury and that he failed to do so. Floeck v. Hoover, 52 N.M. 193, 195 P.2d 86 (1948); Sanchez v. Gomez, 57 N.M. 383, 259 P.2d 346 (1953); Burnham v. Yellow Checker Cab, Inc., 74 N.M. 125, 391 P.2d 413 (1964).
It appears that the accident involved occurred on January 26, 1966, at approximately 12:00 o'clock noon in the 100 block of North First Street in Carlsbad, New Mexico. The weather was clear and the street dry. North First Street in the area runs in a northerly and southerly direction. The plaintiff-appellant, Mrs. Edna McCoy lives on the west side of North First Street. Immediately prior to the accident she entered her automobile preparatory to driving into North First Street. Her automobile was then parked in the driveway adjacent to her home and was headed toward the street. Upon entering the car and before moving it forward Mrs. McCoy looked to the north along North First Street and saw the vehicle driven by the defendant, Houston Workman, proceeding in a southerly direction along the street. Mrs. McCoy estimated that the Workman vehicle was approximately a block from her at the time she saw it.
Mrs. McCoy then proceeded to start her car and drive it along her driveway toward the street. She stopped at the intersection of her driveway within the street and looked to the south but did not look to the north, although she knew the Workman vehicle was coming from that direction. She then drove into First Street, turned to the right, proceeding south along the street.
It appears from the testimony that at this time there was no traffic on the street in the area except the automobile being operated by Mrs. McCoy and defendant's vehicle. Mrs. McCoy pulled on the North First Street at a very low rate of speed and when she reached a point about ten feet from the southerly edge of her driveway at the point it intersects with the street the automobile driven by defendant collided with Mrs. McCoy's car.
It appears that as Mrs. McCoy entered the street she saw defendant's car in her rear view mirror, slowed down and pulled toward the righthand curb. At the time of the collision the right side of Mrs. McCoy's car was approximately six feet from the righthand curb. There were seventy-one feet of skid marks left by defendant's vehicle which extended in a straight line from the point of impact.
It is the general rule that upon defendant's motion for directed verdict the court views the evidence and inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to plaintiff and disregards...
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