227 N.W. 493 | Minn. | 1929
Plaintiff was injured in an automobile accident which happened about one o'clock in the morning of May 5, 1928, on the 18-foot paved state highway running between Carlton and Cloquet. The circumstances were these:
As one Gardner, his wife, and plaintiff were driving on this highway from Cloquet towards Carlton the righthand rear tire of their automobile went flat, and they stopped to change tires, the car being almost wholly off the pavement. All got out of the car and were behind it. About as the change was being finished, Brower with two companions driving from Carlton to Cloquet drew to the left side of the pavement and stopped some 40 feet beyond the rear of the Gardner car, then backed towards it so that the space between *467 the rear of the two cars was 15 or 20 feet. This placed the Brower car on the wrong side of the road. Brower and his companions stepped back of their car into the space where the occupants of the Gardner car were standing, offering to assist the latter. As they were so standing, a car coming from Cloquet, driven by one Twet, a servant of Liggett Myers Tobacco Company, approached rapidly. Someone of those between the two standing cars, sensing danger of a collision, shouted a warning, but too late. Twet's car struck appellant's, driving it back against the Gardner car, striking down and injuring plaintiff and others. Twet and his employer were codefendants in the action, but it was dismissed as to them before trial under an agreement not to sue. Appellant alleged the agreement not to sue to be in fact a compromise and settlement of the cause of action and hence a good defense.
Appellant's main contention is that Twet's negligence was the sole proximate cause of the injury or, in other words, the independent, efficient cause thereof. He claims the presence of his car there was the occasion, but not in a legal sense a contributing cause, of the injury to plaintiff, citing Denson v. McDonald,
In the Denson case,
In the Goneau case,
The Childs case,
In the Hedberg case,
In the case at bar, if the jury accepted the testimony of Twet that the lights of appellant's car on the wrong side of the road deceived him as to the position thereof until too late to avoid the collision, the conclusion properly could follow that appellant's negligence in stopping where he did proximately contributed to cause plaintiff's injury. That Twet's negligence also contributed more thereto does not relieve appellant. The latter's car was still in a negligent position when the accident occurred and by that position efficiently contributed to produce it. The fact that the drivers of a bus and of other cars drove so carefully that the negligent parking of appellant's car was discovered in time to enable them to pass safely on the wrong side thereof was for the jury's consideration, but does not prove as a matter of law that appellant's negligence was not a contributing proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff. Twet *469 claimed and testified that as he approached the point of collision another car was coming from Carlton, and from the position of the lights on that car and appellant's he concluded the one was passing the other. It is to be remembered that this was in the nighttime when drivers of cars judge of the position in the road of other motor vehicles by the headlights thereof.
Much was made in the argument of Twet's estimate of distances at which he discovered that appellant's car was on the wrong side, at which he applied the brakes, and so on. Of what value, or lack of value rather, such estimates are, made suddenly, in the dark, and in moments of excitement and peril, was for the jury. However the negligence of Twet, no matter how great, does not absolve appellant from responsibility if the latter's negligence also proximately contributed to cause the collision.
Error is assigned upon the refusal to give a request based upon this sentence in Moon v. N. P. R. Co.
"And if the original wrong only becomes injurious through some distinct wrongful act or neglect of another, the last wrong is the proximate cause, and the injury should be imputed to the last wrong, and not to that which is more remote."
Discussion in an opinion of principles of law appropriate to a given state of facts are not always suitable for instructions to a jury. Carter v. Duluth Yellow Cab Co.
We think it so clear that the law of the road forbids stopping an automobile as and where appellant did that we shall not discuss the assignment of error on that part of the charge which advised the jury that it was negligence to do so, and that if such negligence was a "proximate or direct cause of the collision" there was liability, unless plaintiff's own negligence contributed thereto.
Brower, having negligently placed his car in a position forbidden by law, was not entitled to the second and third requested instructions, to the effect that he had the right to anticipate due care from the drivers of approaching cars, without a qualification that the latter had also the right to anticipate that he had exercised due care and was on the proper side of the road until they discovered the contrary. The proffered instructions had no similar qualification.
There remains one ground upon which defendant relies for judgfent notwithstanding the verdict. As already indicated, Twet and his employer were named defendants, but the case had been dismissed as to them before the trial. At the trial the answer was amended so as to plead a settlement of the cause of action with them. It appears that they had paid $600 to plaintiff for what she claims was a covenant not to sue. The court submitted the question to the jury whether there was a release or only an agreement not to sue. The verdict establishes that as between plaintiff and Twet and his employer the contract was a covenant not to sue. The contract was in writing, but we are of opinion that the learned trial court was right in the view that as to appellant the writing was not controlling, and that oral testimony could be adduced to show the true intent of the parties to it. It is quite clear from plaintiff's testimony that she did not appreciate the difference between a settlement and release of a cause of action and a covenant not to sue. The agreement was made by plaintiff's attorney and an attorney for Twet and his employers. The attorney for the latter took the witness stand, and from his testimony the jury were fully warranted in finding the agreement was no more than a covenant not to sue joint tortfeasors.
We find no reversible error in the record.
The order is affirmed. *471