31 N.W.2d 912 | Minn. | 1948
On August 28, 1946, an automobile owned by defendant Etta R. Weinberg and driven by defendant George Torwick, an employe of defendant MacDonald Motor Company, struck and injured plaintiff Benjamin Storey, III (hereinafter referred to as Benjamin), a five-year-old boy. Mrs. Weinberg had left her car with the MacDonald company for greasing and washing. She was unable to call for the car when the greasing and washing was completed, and so, in accordance with a practice followed on a number of prior occasions, the MacDonald company directed one of its employes to drive the car to the Weinberg residence, whereupon Mrs. Weinberg entered the car as a passenger for the purpose of accompanying the driver back to the garage, where for the first time she would personally take over the actual operation of the vehicle. At about 4:30 p. m. on the return trip to the garage, with Torwick driving, the accident occurred at the intersection of Woodland avenue and Lewis street in Duluth, Minnesota. The Weinberg car was proceeding south on Woodland avenue toward the intersection with Lewis street. A short distance ahead of the Weinberg car was a trolley bus going in the same direction. This bus drew up to the curb at a bus stop just north of the intersection on the west side of Woodland avenue. In passing the parked bus on the left side, the Weinberg car struck Benjamin as he ran out past the front end of the bus. Benjamin, accompanied by his mother and his younger brother, had been walking on the north sidewalk of Lewis street toward Woodland avenue. As they neared the intersection, Benjamin, who had gone on somewhat ahead of his mother, cried "I am going to cross before this bus starts," and ran out in front of the bus into the path of the Weinberg car. The evidence is in conflict as to the speed of the Weinberg car, but it would permit a finding that it was going about 25 to 30 miles per hour.
Benjamin, by his father and natural guardian, brought an action against all three defendants for damages for personal injuries. *51
Benjamin's father and mother also personally sued the three defendants for medical and hospital expense incurred in the treatment of their son. The actions were tried together, and in both cases the jury returned verdicts for defendants. Plaintiffs thereupon made, and the court granted, a motion for a new trial in each action. The motions were granted on the ground of errors of law occurring at the trial, said errors being set out by the court as consisting of its inadvertent omission from the charge to the jury of several requisite instructions as to speed (M. S. A.
1-2-3. The granting of a motion for a new trial on the ground of erroneous instructions to the jury, unlike a denial thereof, rests largely in the sound discretion of the court, and its decision will not be disturbed on appeal unless there has been a clear abuse of that discretion.2
In the instant case, defendants contend that the trial court erred in granting a new trial, in that plaintiffs, by wholly failing to call the attention of the court to its inadvertent omission of certain previously agreed upon and material instructions as to speed (M. S. A.
"It is well settled in our state that the omission of material instructions, or indefiniteness or insufficiency or even obscurity, in the charge of the court, is no ground for error or for a new trial, when the attention of the court was not at the time specifically called to the defect, and further and more definite instructions asked for."
See, Dehen v. Berning,
4. Where, however, a motion for a new trial is granted solely for errors of law and the errors specified by the trial court are inadequate, the order granting the motion may be sustained by showing other errors than those specified if such other errors are prejudicial and were properly raised.3
Plaintiffs in their motions assigned other errors, and one of these related to plaintiffs' request that the jury be instructed as to the rights and duties of pedestrians *53
at crosswalks in accordance with the applicable portions of M. S. A.
5. At the close of the evidence, the MacDonald company moved for a directed verdict on the ground that as a matter of law it did not sustain the relation of master toward Torwick at the time of the accident. This motion was denied. At the hearing on plaintiffs' motions for a new trial, the motor company moved for dismissal on the merits. This motion was denied by the same order which granted plaintiffs' motions for a new trial. No doubt the motion for dismissal on the merits was prompted by the fact that M. S. A.
"* * * The award of a new trial wipes out the verdict. Setting aside a verdict is as if it had never been, and it cannot be used for any purpose. It is a mistrial, and the plaintiff has the same right to dismiss or discontinue as if no trial had ever been had."
If contrary to fact, we assume, solely for purposes of illustration, that M. S. A.
"* * * But where there is a disagreement and a motion for judgment notwithstanding is denied no judgment can be entered.So far as the court below is concerned the case stands asif never tried. There has been no determination of the cause ofaction on the merits so as to make the order appealable * * *." (Italics supplied.)
By parity of reasoning, no other effect should be given to the denial of a motion for dismissal on the merits under similar circumstances. In Bolstad v. Paul Bunyan Oil Co.
"In answer to a further point raised by defendant that the denial of judgment non obstante is reviewable under §
Clearly, the portion of the trial court's order denying defendant MacDonald Motor Company's motion for a dismissal on the merits involved no part of the proceedings resulting in the granting of a new trial. It is nonappealable. It follows that an appeal from an order setting aside a verdict for defendants and granting plaintiff a new trial does not bring up for review a nonappealable portion of such order which denied a motion by one of the defendants for a dismissal on the merits as to said defendant. An appeal from an order which is appealable in part and nonappealable in part brings up for review only that part which is appealable. Marty v. Nordby,
The orders of the trial court granting a new trial are affirmed.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MAGNEY took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.