239 Minn. 87 | Minn. | 1953
Lead Opinion
Separate actions are brought by Laura Devall and Helen Devall to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from a collision
These cases arise out of the same collision involved in McHardy v. Standard Oil Co. 231 Minn. 493, 44 N. W. (2d) 90, and Leman v. Standard Oil Co. 238 Minn. 379, 57 N. W. (2d) 814.
At about 3 p. m. on February 25,1948, defendant Leonard, driving defendant Standard Oil Company’s truck, was driving south on trunk highway No. 53 approaching the bridge over the Cloquet river. Margaret Orr was following the Standard Oil Company truck in a 1946 Ford. At the same time and place, defendant Helen McHardy was traveling north in a 1941 Pontiac. The Orr car and the McHardy car collided and the plaintiffs Laura and Helen Devall were injured.
Trunk highway No. 53 is paved with tarvia and is about 21 feet wide at the scene of the accident. Guard posts extend 225 feet north from the bridge leaving a narrow shoulder on each side of the highway. The Standard Oil Company truck was eight feet in width and 23 feet 4 inches in length. The collision took place about 80 feet north of the bridge in the east lane of the highway. North of the bridge the highway is straight for about 225 feet to the end of the guard posts and then begins to curve gradually to the east. The tarvia was dry with some snow and ice on the shoulders at the time in question. Approaching from the north, a driver can see the north end of the bridge when he is about 800 feet from it.
Appellants contend that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict against them. They rely primarily upon the testimony of Fred Wallin, a deputy sheriff, who arrived at the scene of the accident shortly after it happened. He testified that he observed tracks from the truck in the snow on the west shoulder extending a distance of 50 to 80 feet north of the bridge. Appellants maintain that his testimony established a physical fact which conclusively contradicts the jury’s finding against them. In this, appellants are in error because, even if we assume that the truck’s tracks extended 80 feet north from the bridge, the maximum distance testified to by Mr. Wallin, that fact would not conclusively establish that at the time of the collision defendants’ truck was parked five or ten feet north of the bridge as contended by appellants. The jury could still find, as plaintiffs contend, that Leonard moved the truck up to the bridge after the collision and that at the time of the collision the truck was stopped so that its right wheels were on the shoulder and its rear end was about 80 feet north of the bridge.
Appellants further contend that it conclusively appears from the evidence that defendant Leonard’s negligence was not a contributing proximate cause of the collision. In their brief they assert that
We therefore conclude that, appellants were not entitled to directed verdicts and that their motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdicts were properly denied.
Appellants’ only other assignment of error is that the trial court erred in refusing to give the following requested instruction:
“If from the evidence you find that the Standard Oil Company-truck was parked at the north end of the bridge on its own side of the highway during all the time that Mrs. McHardy traveled the quarter of a mile south of the bridge, then and in that event your verdict should be in favor of defendants Leonard and Standard Oil Company.”
The trial court gave the following instruction:
“* '" * if from the evidence in this case you find that Mrs. Orr knew or in the exercise of ordinary care should have known of the presence of the truck standing or stopping ahead of her for a length of time sufficient to enable her to bring her automobile to*92 a stop behind the truck and on her own side of the highway, then and in that event there can be no verdict against defendants Alex Leonard and the Standard Oil Company.”
The latter instruction was approved by this court in both the McHardy and the Leman cases, supra, and, when read in light of the court’s general charge on proximate cause, was a clear and adequate presentation of the law applicable to this issue of the case. This court has repeatedly held that a refusal to give a requested instruction is not ground for a new trial if the general charge has adequately covered the substance of the request. 6 Dunnell, Dig. & Supp. § 9777. Since the court’s general charge was clear and adequate, the denial of the requested instruction cannot be said to have been prejudicial to appellants. Accordingly, any further discussion of this assignment of error would seem unnecessary. See, Swanson v. LaFontaine, 288 Minn. 460, 469, 57 N. W. (2d) 262, 268; Barnes v. Northwest Airlines, Inc. 233 Minn. 410, 47 N. W. (2d) 180.
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring specially).
I fully concur in the above opinion. However, in order to be consistent, in view of my dissent in Leman v. Standard Oil Co. 238 Minn. 379, 57 N. W. (2d) 814, I think that I should explain my position. I do not believe that it would have been error to give the requested instruction. Neither was it error to refuse to give it in the exact language of the request so long as the substance of the request was given in the general charge. That is what was done here; hence, there is no prejudicial error.