Armann v. Caswell

152 N.W. 813, 30 N.D. 406, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 140
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 152 N.W. 813 (Armann v. Caswell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armann v. Caswell, 152 N.W. 813, 30 N.D. 406, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 140 (N.D. 1915).

Opinion

Burke, J.

Plaintiff is a farmer living about one mile and a half west of the village of Gardar on the road to Milton. Said public road between said villages divides plaintiff’s farm almost in two, from east to west, is graded, and has a ditch and fence on each side thereof. At one side of the road is a telephone wire .strung upon poles. Plaintiff’s buildings are north of said road between 250 and 275 feet therefrom, and there is a lane running from the buildings to said road. The intervening ground is covered with timber and undergrowth, being situated some short distance from the Park river. Further from the road than the buildings is a creek at which plaintiff’s stock were accustomed to drink. Across the road from the buildings and about 40 rods east thereof, plaintiff has a little pasture of 11 acres in which upon the 31st of October, 1913, he was pasturing about 20 head of cattle. Shortly before 4 o’clock in the afternoon of said day, plaintiff’s father went to this pasture for the purpose of bringing said cattle therefrom to the buildings for water. This necessitated the opening of the gate from the pasture, so that the cattle might pass out upon the public road aforesaid along which they would próceed and up the lane leading to the house, on their way to water in the creek aforesaid. On this occasion, however, the old gentleman decided to allow the cows to make their way home, and proceeded himself through the bushes and trees to the buildings where plaintiff and a hired man were working. The cattle, left alone, were making their way leisurely along the highway towards the lane which led to plaintiff’s buildings, when defendant came from the west along the Milton road. He was at that time a traveling salesman of the Standard Oil Company, an elderly man, and making his territory by auto upon the company’s business. With him was the witness Volkner, also a traveling man, who was also making his territory upon business. According to defendant’s testimony, he had been running between 20 and 25 miles an hour before he reached [412]*412the cattle. Upon approaching them, according to his testimony, he slowed down and even came to a stop. When he had passed all of the cattle hut one, he noticed that this last one, a heifer, was about to pass on his left side, and proceeded to speed up the automobile from low to-high gear. The heifer changed her mind and jumped in front of the-automobile and was injured. The only witnesses to the accident were the two men in the automobile who have testified at length, and plaintiff’s hired man, who, however, was at such a distance and whose view was-so obstructed by trees and bushes that it is entitled to much less weight than that of the defendant and his companion. Plaintiff himself was at the buildings, and noticed the automobile approaching, but paid no-further attention to it, and was not looking at the time the accident happened. Neither did the father see the collision. The hired man testifies that he was seventeen years of age, and that he saw the automobile approaching from the west while he was at the granary. He says: “I saw the automobile coming from the west and pass through the cows- and strike one of the cows. Q. Was this automobile going fast or slow at the time it struck the cow? A. It was going very fast.” Upon cross-examination he identified a photograph which -was offered in evidence, and testifies that there was timber along the road, on the north side of the road running up past the place of the accident.

He was asked:
Q. Now, this timber runs up from this roadway, up past the place where the accident was supposed to have taken place ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Now, looking at this picture, does that show you the kind of timber that was along the north side of that road ?
A. No, sir.
Q. Can you locate this at all ?
A. I think I can. . . .
Q. Now, this timber that is shown here continues east from this gate, does it not ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And then it also continues west the way it is shown here ?
A. It is not as thick further west.
Q. This is a picture of that timber, is it not?
[413]*413A. It is not as thick as further west.
Q. This is the gateway that you refer to ? Put an X at the place jou refer to as the gateway.
A. Here is where the gate is supposed to be.
Q. Now, how far was it from the gate where you say this accident occurred ?
A. It was about 20 feet. . . .
Q. Now, looking at this picture, the buildings would be up the road ?
A. Yes.
Q. Then it would be towards that timber as shown in this picture2
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Now, can you see in this picture where the road comes into the house down there ?
A. No, I can’t see that there.
Q. And that is the way the timber looks at the place on the road shown in this picture ?
A. It looks here to be more than there is. . . .
Q. But you would say this is a picture of that timber, would you not ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Now, when you say that you saw this- automobile running through the cattle, in order to see them you would have to look through these trees, would you not ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Now, after the automobile passed the roadway that you referred to, it was going away from you, was it not ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Now, that timber that you refer to as being on the north side of the roadway running east is pretty heavy brush in there ? There is pretty heavy brush in there, near the bottom of that timber, is there not \
A. Not very.
Q. There is considerable in there, is there not ?
A. A little, yes.
Q. And some of the trees are pretty high, are they not ?
A. Yes, sir.

The picture which is in evidence, and cannot he reproduced, shows trees of about the same height as the telephone poles, and five or six [414]*414times as tall as a man, and so thick that nothing is shown behind them in the picture. So much for plaintiff’s testimony as to the manner o£ the accident.

The testimony of the defendant, which is, by the way, fully corroborated by the other passenger, is as follows:

At the time it passed the opening (by plaintiff’s house) I was probably going 20 miles an hour. . . .
Q. Tell the jury how fast you were going between that opening and the place where this accident happened.
A. I slowed down and went most of the way on low speed, 5 or 6-miles, an hour, probably 8 miles an hour.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 N.W. 813, 30 N.D. 406, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armann-v-caswell-nd-1915.