Salisbury v. State
Salisbury v. State
Opinion of the Court
The defendant below, plaintiff in error here, was convicted on an information which, eliminating formal parts and surplusage, charged in apt language that on a certain public highway in Pierce county, Nebraska, on the 26th day of January, 1927, said defendant did operate a motor vehicle outside of any city or village at a “rate of speed greater than was reasonable and proper, having regard to the traffic and use of said highway at the place aforesaid, and having regard for the safety of the public, and did then and there so drive, propel and operate said automobile at a rate of speed so as to endanger the life and
This information is properly laid under the provisions of the motor vehicle act of Nebraska, sections 8364-8405, Comp. St. 1922. It further appears from the facts in the record that section 9546, Comp. St. 1922, has no application whatever to the offense which the proof may have tended to establish. The instructions of the district court, in general, were properly given on this theory. Wallace v. State, 91 Neb. 158.
The death of Carl Eisenblatter was, indeed, regrettable. That the automobile driven by the defendant caused his death stands admitted. The state concedes that the unfortunate occurrence was unintended on part of the accused, but insists that the death of Eisenblatter was due to the voluntary operation of this automobile by the accused at an unlawful speed as hereinbefore defined. The record fairly reflects the following facts: Salisbury is and was a nonresident of Nebraska. With his wife he had, prior to the 26th of January in question, been visiting at the home of friends in Pierce county, Nebraska. He owned and drove a Willys-Knight roadster. Because of needed repairs, he left his automobile at a shop in Norfolk. Nebraska, on the day of the accident. For his accommodation he was loaned a “Hudson speedster” at this shop for his use, while the repairs were being made on his own car. Neither with this particular car nor with the Hudsons, as a class, had he had any previous experience. From Norfolk, immediately after receiving this “car,” he drove to the Zimmer home in Pierce county where his wife was visiting. About 6 o’clock that evening, in the automobile in question, he left the Zimmer home for the home of one Mr. Carsten. With him in the front seat of the automobile sat Mr. Zimmer; Mrs. Zimmer and his wife occupied the rear seat. A portion of the road traveled by the parties was north over the state highway No. 81, commonly known as the Meridian highway. At a place
It appears that the four horses abreast spanned approximately IOY2 feet. The roadway was 20 feet wide in the clear, improved, and well maintained.
In view of the physical facts uncontroverted in the record, it seems there is no question but what there was then free space between the horses and east road boundary to afford the approaching auto sufficient room to pass. The danger inherent in the situation was, therefore, due to the propensity of the animals to scare and shy.
According to the evidence of defendant’s witnesses, which is not expressly contradicted, as the surging automobile came within some 20 feet of the horses, it was first discovered by the occupants of the automobile that the latter were frightened. At about 12 feet, still nearer, the stallion (the east horse of the team of four), in its fright, suddenly lunged away from its team mates to the eastward and reared upon its haunches almost in the direct course of the approaching automobile. The witnesses describe him as appearing to be raised above the engine. At this the defendant spun his steering wheel to the eastward,
The defendant now challenges the sufficiency of the evidence contained in the record, and insists that the district court erred in giving and refusing to give certain instructions. In considering these contentions, it must be kept in mind (a), that, as a general rule, direct testimony is not essential to warrant a jury in finding that an automobile was operated at an excessive speed. Evidence of the force of the impact of the collision may, by itself, or in connection with other circumstances, be of sufficient weight to warrant a jury in finding negligence as to speed; (b) if evidence in the case, either direct or circumstantial, or any material part thereof, is fairly susceptible of two
The state, in view of the conceded fact that the accelerator stuck just before the accident occurred, offers little, or no, convincing, direct evidence on the subject of the speed of defendant’s car. The sole, direct evidence on the subject is from a single witness who testified that, at and prior to the accident, he was in his field about 40 rods north of the bridge on this highway, and approximately 2 rods from the road; that he heard á car coming from the south, and it sounded as though the cutout was open, and the car running fast; that he heard the crash of the accident which occurred just south of the bridge above referred to; that he looked south towards the source of the sound and he saw one automobile light still burning; that he went down the road to the wreck and found the car. At the time he started for the scene of the accident, the engine of the car, which had not stopped running, was still making considerable noise, but later was shut off by some one, and that the light went out before he arrived at the place of the wreck. This witness also said that he first heard this automobile coming “somewhere around Ulrich’s place,” which he “judges was better than a half mile” south of the scene of the accident, and that it was between a minute and a minute and a half from the time he first heard the coming automobile until he heard the crash of the collision. Witness, if correct, was, at the time he first heard the approaching automobile, more than 3,400 feet north of the approaching car. Disregarding the time required for the transmission of sound to him (approximately 1,100 feet a second), and assuming his judgment to be accurate and correct, it discloses that the average speed of defendant’s car, after this witness first heard its-approach, was not in excess of 20 or 30 miles an hour.
Unfortunately, this witness’ testimony does not attempt to state that the speed was uniform. His facts, if correct, indicate simply the average speed, or the time occupied by the automobile in covering the distance of approximately a. half mile. In view of this fact, we must remember that a. driver is quite able to control and change the speed of an automobile at different points in the distance he may be traveling. Therefore, the facts testified to' by this witness-would afford little or no basis for determining the speed of this car at the time immediately prior to the collision or at the time of impact. People v. Barnes, 182 Mich. 179.
But, at least, it must be conceded that there is no evidence of criminal negligence or of any improper operation of the car until it arrived at the approach of the bridge where the accident occurred. As to what occurred thereafter, a careful consideration of the record, in the light of the presumptions to which the defendant is entitled, compels the conclusion which may be thus summarized: That due to the sudden development of the defects of the accelerator of the strange automobile which first became apparent at a point not exceeding 50 feet from the team approaching on the highway from the north, while the accused was proceeding therein at a lawful speed, in a proper manner, on and over a portion of the public road over which he was lawfully entitled to travel and occupy for such purpose, the speed of the car was momentarily out of control, or not controlled by the defendant; that at this instant the stállion driven by deceased, due to fright and to habit, which must have been known to deceased, also
If, therefore, criminality exists in this case, it must be wholly due to a lack of success on part of the accused in his efforts to regain and to exercise proper control of the defective automobile between the time of the discovery of the approaching team and the impact of the collision that followed. If we take as the basis of our investigation 44 feet a second as the speed rate of 30 miles an hour,-and 30 feet a second as the speed rate of 20 miles an hour, the true narrative of the facts in this record must be told in a story of “split seconds.” To summarize: From the concurrent discovery of the approach of the four-horse team, and the development of the defect in the accelerator, with the thereafter sudden, constant, and progressive increase of velocity of the automobile to instant of impact, probably less than a second intervened — not time for more than a single heart-throb; from discovery of fright among horses, less than a half second; from the surge of the white stallion in front of the oncoming automobile to instant of impact would be measured by fifths of a second.
Based upon these facts, the defendant was convicted, not for what he did, but rather for what he failed to do— release the clutch, cut off the spark, apply the brakes, stop the automobile, and thus prevent an impending collision between, for the instant at least, a bolting unmanageable horse, and a bolting, uncontrollable car.
Under the peculiar facts of this record, this horse and this car present many characteristics in common.
As to the horse, it seems this court is committed to the rule that the driver of a horse which suddenly becomes unmanageable, bolts, and escapes from control is not, be
In Olney v. Omaha & C. B. Street R. Co., 78 Neb. 767, a somewhat different phase of the question before us was then before this tribunal, and was determined in a manner not adverse to plaintiff in error herein.
Brooks v. Kauffman, supra, was a civil action to recover damages occasioned by a runaway team colliding with a vehicle preceding it. It was contended that “if the defendant had been driving carefully he might have driven his team into an irrigation ditch,” and thus avoided the collision. This court answered the contention by saying that, under the circumstances of that case, there could have been no time immediately preceding the accident for the defendant to balance probabilities in his mind, and to determine his course, and that actionable negligence was, therefore, not evidenced by his failure to do “what he might have done.” The time available to the defendant in that case to balance probabilities was, at least, a hundred per cent, greater than in this.
It would seem, therefore, that the operator of an automobile which, solely because of mechanical defects, theretofore unknown, becomes suddenly out of control is plainly within the reason of the rule which is applied in this state to uncontrollable teams.
It follows that the law under which this complaint is filed does not require a finding for the state, if the defendant could have stopped the car, without limiting his efforts
We have not forgotten the fact that the physical evidences of the wreck, under some circumstances, might afford ample evidence for the conviction. However, in view of the surrounding facts and circumstances in this case, nothing in the way of proof appears from it to establish the guilt of the defendant before us.
We conclude, therefore, that the evidence adduced in this case is insufficient to sustain the conviction, and the judgment and sentence of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas Salisbury v. State of Nebraska
- Status
- Published