144 Minn. 459 | Minn. | 1920
Actión for the death of plaintiff’s intestate alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. Plaintiff had a verdict and defendant appealed from an order denying a new trial.
Decedent and her husband were driving a team of horses hitched to a two seated buggy along one of the streets of the city of Fairmont. The horses became unmanageable and ran away. To protect herself from injury that might result from tbi runaway if she remained in the buggy, decedent jumped therefrom to the street, as a result of which she suffered some injury, the exact nature of which the evidence does not clearly disclose. Within a moment or two thereafter an automobile weighing 3,500 pounds owned and driven by defendant came down the same street, ran over decedent as she lay on the pavement, crushing her slrall and carrying a piece thereof with attached brain matter a distance of about 30 feet from the body.
The evidence makes it clear that defendant, on the occasion in question, ran his car down the street in a reckless and negligent manner, and without due regard to the safety of others. A person who was aware of the presence of decedent lying prostrate on the street made every effort to cause him to stop his car, and though aware of such efforts defendant failed to heed them, with the result stated. That his car, at least one wheel thereof, passed over decedent’s head is also established with reasonable certainty; those present at the time traced the tracks of the car to and over the same, and in our view of the evidence the fact is not open to serious question.
The contention that decedent was killed by jumping from the buggy, and not by the automobile, is not sustained by the record. We find no basis for that conclusion other than the opinion of plaintiff, expressed to witness Krause soon after the accident. Plaintiff denied making the statement, but if made was only his opinion, based wholly 'upon her act in jumping from the buggy, and clearly not conclusive that she- thus met her death. He was greatly disturbed at the time, suffering intense grief, and his opinion is of no greater force than that of any other person, based upon the same fact. O’Connor v. Modern Woodmen of America, 110 Minn. 18, 124 N. W. 454, 25 L.R.A.(N.S.) 1244. It is not probable that instant death resulted from her act in jumping from the buggy. The evidence makes it clear that her head was crushed by the automobile, leaving that as the natural cause of death, for there was no other serious injury to her body. And moreover there was evidence that decedent was alive immediately before she was struck by the automobile, and was calling for her husband; her calls ceased after it had passed. The reliability of that evidence was for the jury and court below, and, taking the record as a whole, without further enlargement on the facts, our conclusion is that the death of decedent was sufficiently shown to have been caused by the automobile. On the facts disclosed the burden to prove to the contrary was on the defendant.
We have examined the assignments challenging the rulings of the court
Order affirmed.