Court Opinion

ID: 6725006
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 23:02:31.43009+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:36.068448
License: Public Domain

BY THE COURT.
Peter Dearwester was indicted and convicted of manslaughter in the Montgomery Common Pleas. The State claimed that Dearwester, while in an intoxicated condition, and while driving his machine at an excessive rate of speed struck and killed one, Martin Shock.
Error was prosecuted and Dearwester contended that the presence of Martin Shock as a loiterer upon the highway must be held to be the proximate cause of the killing. The Court of Appeals said:
A pedestrian has a legal right upon the highway of the state, and it is only when a pedestrian is guilty of some act which provokes or brings his own injury that the act of such pedestrian may be held to be a proximate cause of an injury to him by the driver of an automobile.
The verdict of the jury was supported by sufficient evidence and was not contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. Judgment affirmed.