39 N.W.2d 862 | Minn. | 1949
On November 6, 1947, at about 6:30 p. m., plaintiff drove her automobile in the city of Brainerd in a westerly direction upon Norwood street and its intersection with Eighth street. Simultaneously, the automobile of defendant Addie Bock was driven south over Eighth street and into said intersection, where the two vehicles collided. Plaintiff was severely injured. The Bock car was occupied by Addie Bock's 14-year-old son, Ralph (one of the defendants *430 herein), and his 16-year-old companion, Lloyd Pickar, but the evidence is in conflict as to which one of the two boys was driving.
We are concerned with issues of negligence, contributory negligence, failure of the trial court to give certain instructions governing speed in a municipality, whether the Bock car was operated with the express or implied consent of its owner pursuant to M.S.A.
1. Taking, as we must, the view of the conflicting evidence most favorable to the verdict, the jury could reasonably find that defendants were negligent. The street was wet from falling snow which melted as soon as it touched the ground. Visibility was somewhat impaired. Plaintiff was driving slowly when she reached the intersection. She then looked to her right and saw on Eighth street, about-25 feet from the intersection, a car approaching very slowly from the north; in fact, this car was driving so slowly that it appeared to her at first as if it were parked in the street. Behind this slowly moving car at a distance of about 100 feet from the intersection, she saw the lights of a second car — the Bock car — also approaching from the north. Plaintiff proceeded to cross the intersection and was more than halfway across when she first realized that the Bock car had picked up speed and was bearing down upon her. A disinterested witness who observed the sequence of events leading up to the crash testified that the Bock car passed the vehicle ahead of it and that it was traveling at an "excessive speed for the condition of the weather." Lloyd Pickar said that he was driving the Bock car, that he had picked up a "little speed" before he reached the intersection, and that he "stepped on it a little bit" when he saw plaintiff's car. Ralph Bock also admitted that there had been some increase in speed after plaintiff's car was seen. In the light of the evidence as a whole, the jury could reasonably find that the Bock car was negligently operated and not kept under proper control, and that this negligence was the direct and proximate cause of the collision.
Defendants contend that plaintiff was contributorily negligent as a matter of law, and in support of this contention they cite Moore *431
v. Kujath,
2. Defendants also predicate error upon the trial court's failure to instruct the jury that where no special hazards exist a speed of 30 miles per hour in any municipality is lawful. §
3. Defendants assert that plaintiff has not sustained the burden of proof on the issue of express or implied consent under §
The sheriff's testimony was corroborated by his deputy. We are not impressed with defendants' efforts to construe Mrs. Bock's statement to the sheriff as being nothing more than a declaration that her husband merely claimed she had given Ralph permission to use the car. Taking the testimony of the sheriff and his deputy as a whole, the jury could reasonably and properly accept Addie Bock's statement as an unqualified admission that she had given Ralph her consent to use the car.
A more difficult question on the issue of consent arises by reason of the trial court's charge that, if the jury found that defendant Ralph Bock had the car with the express or implied consent of the owner, such owner would be liable to plaintiff for damages for the negligent operation of the automobile, even though the car was actually driven by Lloyd Pickar. Was this charge erroneous? Obviously, we cannot know whether the jury based its verdict on a finding of a driving of the car by Ralph or by Pickar. In considering the correctness of the charge, we must therefore assume that it was driven by Pickar.
Is a car owner (pursuant to §
Is a consent given to a bailee, although it contains no restriction upon the actual driving of the car, qualified by the very terms of §
"Whenever any motor vehicle, after Laws 1945, Chapter 285, becomes effective, shall be operated upon any public street orhighway of this state, by any person other than the owner, withthe consent of the owner, express or implied, the operator thereof shall in case of accident, be deemed the agent of the owner of such motor vehicle in the operation thereof." (Italics supplied.)
In construing this section, we quote with approval the language used by the supreme court of Michigan in interpreting a similar *435
statute. In Kerns v. Lewis,
"* * * Does the essential consent mentioned in the statute relate to the driver, or to the vehicle 'being driven'? The statute makes the owner liable if the 'motor vehicle is being driven with his or her express or implied consent or knowledge,' and we cannot read into it the restriction that the particular driver must be known by and his driving consented to by the owner. The statute may be drastic, but we cannot render it less so by any permissible construction."
Any other construction would be unjustifiably narrow and would partially defeat the obvious purpose of the owner's statutory liability act, namely, the protection of the public. A similar result has been reached by other leading jurisdictions. See, 21 Minn. L.Rev. 823, 831, 832; Annotation, 147 A.L.R. 875. The charge of the trial court, under the circumstances, was correct. Carlson v. Fredsall,
4. A fatal variance between the allegations of the complaint and the proof is urged by defendants. We do not so find. The complaint alleged that the Bock car was driven by Ralph Bock and not by Lloyd Pickar. At the close of the evidence, defendants made a motion for an order requiring plaintiff to elect as the basis for her recovery which of the two boys was the actual driver. The motion was denied, and we find no abuse of discretion. An examination of the record discloses that defendants were not misled or prejudiced by the variance. Where, as here, all facts relating to the issue on which a variance between pleading and proof is claimed are within *436
the knowledge of defendants and have been fully litigated, the variance is not fatal. See, Tiedje v. Haney,
The order of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.