Bostwick v. Butte Motor Company

403 P.2d 614, 145 Mont. 570
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1965
Docket10752
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 403 P.2d 614 (Bostwick v. Butte Motor Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bostwick v. Butte Motor Company, 403 P.2d 614, 145 Mont. 570 (Mo. 1965).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of defendant, Butte Motor Company, hereinafter referred to as respondent, resulting from a jury trial in the second judicial district of the State of Montana, in and for the County of Silver Bow.

The facts of this case tell of an accident to an outstanding seventeen-year old boy who was burned by hot radiator coolant as he was working his way out from under the front end of a car which he had been attempting to repair. The young man suffered grievous bodily injury from second and third degree bums to his stomach, groin and legs, which will disfigure and cause him discomfort his entire lifetime. It is natural to feel great compassion for him, and we are certain that both the court and jury did have as they heard the testimony concerning the injuries he suffered, but we must, as did the lower court, search for the liability, if any.

The facts surrounding the injury to Virgil Bostwick revolve around a 1958 Ford Country Sedan. The car had originally been purchased by a company operated by Gerald Bostwick, Virgil Bostwick’s father, but because of financial problems the *572 car was returned, to the respondent. Mr. Bostwick then arranged with the respondent to purchase the car for the family inasmuch as it was a good car, and in January 1961, he requested the respondent to go over the car thoroughly and to find what was needed to be done and to fix it. The Bostwicks made a $100 down payment in February 1961 to hold the car, took delivery from respondent on May 11, 1961, and drove it to Dillon, Montana, some 67 miles. The next day he drove it to Monida, Montana, and when he started to return the car would not start. Upon opening the hood he found the motor oily and the starter loose, which he tightened. He then put in four quarts of oil, and drove it back to Dillon and then to Butte on May 15, to get the respondent to fix the car. Bostwick returned the car to Dillon on May 17, but again due to the fact it used oil it was returned to Butte and on May 30, 1961, Gerald Bostwick engaged the services of the Butte Motor Company to overhaul the car in question. He ordered overhaul of the motor, cooling system, starter and transmission, including replacement of piston rings and parts, and ordered the respondent to put the car in A-l shape. The car was completely overhauled by respondent and after the overhaul the car was road-checked some twenty miles, by one of respondent’s mechanics. The car was then cheeked out as mechanically ready for its owner. On June 16, in Butte, the appellant took delivery of the car and drove it back to Dillon. During the next two days it was driven by the family in and around the City of Dillon with no mechanical difficulties appearing.

On the morning of June 18, 1961, Gerald Bostwick turned the car over to his son Virgil to drive it to Idaho Falls, Idaho, on business for him. Virgil took his thirteen-year old brother Theodore with him for company, and also for help as the car was pulling a two-wheel U-haul trailer behind it containing a service station sign which was to be delivered at Monida, Montana. During the trip from Dillon to Monida, some forty miles, both boys testified that the car drove well, that there *573 was no nndne heating even though they were pulling a trailer with a 1,700-pound load. Leaving Monida they proceeded up over the Monida Pass into Idaho, the rise in altitude from Dillon to the top of Monida Pass being 1,417 feet in a distance of 65 miles. Though there is a fairly steady rise in altitude on this road, both boys testified that the car did not heat up nor did they experience any car trouble until they were about twelve miles north of Idaho Palls when they heard noises in the car like rocks in the hubcap. They stopped, checked the car, the trailer, its connecting chain, and the tanks in the trailer, but finding nothing wrong, started up again. After driving a short distance the noise became louder so Virgil drove the car off the side of the road allowing the wheels to straddle a V-shaped ditch. At this time, before stopping the motor, the car had not shown any undue heating. Rather, the heat indicator showed normal at the time the ear was stopped the second time.

According to the story told by both boys, Virgil lifted the hood, and as he did so, Teddy testified he heard Virgil say, “I hope it isn’t the starter.” Virgil then put on what is described as a smock and crawled under the car, starting at the rear and moving toward the front. Teddy handed him tools and after working for about five minutes Virgil called Teddy, who was seated in the car, and asked him to take the tools and put them back into the car. Shortly after accomplishing this task and getting seated in the front seat Teddy heard his brother scream and when he got out of the car his brother stood up, in front of the car, his clothes wet and the visible portions of his body, except the head and neck, showed evidence of burns. Virgil was in great pain, they removed the smock and the two boys then walked to a nearby farm house belonging to the T. R. David family. There the Davids administered first aid and obtained an ambulance to move Virgil to a hospital in Idaho Palls where he was treated for several months by Dr. C. C. Erickson.

*574 From the time of the accident to the time of the trial, Virgil had medical treatment from both Dr. Erickson and Dr. Richard H. McLaren, Dillon, Montana, the family physician. Both doctors testified at length as to the injuries, the scarring and deformities that resulted therefrom, the necessity to do skin grafting, and the development of phlebitis in the left leg. In addition to their medical testimony, Virgil, at the request of the defendant, went to Dr. J. C. Shields of Butte for a medical examination who confirmed all of the testimony of the other two doctors but did not entirely agree on Virgil’s prognosis as made by Drs. Erickson and McLaren.

Virgil testified that he had to get under the car to fix the starter, which had come loose. Concerning what he did and what happened while under the car, Virgil testified as follows:

“Q. And what was the first thing that you did, then, after you stopped the automobile in regard to getting out and investigating? A. Well, I got out of the ear and I opened up the hood and I looked around there; and it appeared to me that maybe the starter could have been loose because I had heard a buzz from the starter when I started it up, and it sounded like there was a hum to it as I was driving down the road, and it could have been the switch sticking or the starter sticking, so I closed the hood back down, * # # and you see you have this little swale like that gives you plenty of room to crawl underneath the right side; and so you figure if this is going to be, that’s the safest way to do it, so you go about doing it in that manner.
“Q. All right; then after you had stopped and lifted up the radiator — or I mean, lifted up the hood as you describe, what then did you do towards looking about to determine what the trouble was? A.

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Bluebook (online)
403 P.2d 614, 145 Mont. 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bostwick-v-butte-motor-company-mont-1965.