Boutang v. Twin City Motor Bus Co.

80 N.W.2d 30, 248 Minn. 240, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 636
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 23, 1956
Docket36,715
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 80 N.W.2d 30 (Boutang v. Twin City Motor Bus Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boutang v. Twin City Motor Bus Co., 80 N.W.2d 30, 248 Minn. 240, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 636 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

*243 Matson, Judge.

In a personal injury action defendant bus company and the defendant bus driver appeal from an order denying their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial.

On April 11, 1952, at about 3:30 p. m., plaintiff, at the southwest corner of the intersection of Eighth Street South and Nicollet Avenue in Minneapolis, was injured by broken glass falling from the top of an ornamental light pole as she stood on the sidewalk waiting to enter defendant’s southbound bus which was then approaching the curb to make its customary stop for passengers. The top of the cast iron and steel light pole was surmounted by two light fixtures mounted on a horizontal crossarm. Each of these light fixtures consisted of a light bulb surrounded by a large glass globe about three feet high. On top of each globe was an ornamental glass canopy. One light fixture was mounted on the end of the crossarm projecting over and at right angles to the sidewalk and the other on the end projecting toward the street. The distance from the sidewalk level to the top of the light fixtures was about 23 feet.

Pursuant to a contract with the city, the defendant Northern States Power Company was responsible for the care and maintenance of the light pole and the light fixtures. Plaintiff in her complaint alleged that the crashing down upon her of glass from the light pole was proximately caused by the negligence of the bus company and its driver in operating the bus in a manner whereby it struck the light pole and also by the alleged negligence of the defendant Northern States Power Company in its care and maintenance of the light fixtures. The jury found for the plaintiff against the defendant bus company and its driver but not against the defendant Northern States Power Company. As between the defendant bus company and the defendant power company, the basic issue of fact is whether the accident occurred because the bus collided with or contacted the light pole with sufficient force to jar the overhead light globe and canopy loose from the crossarm or whether such light fixtures came loose and fell because of improper installation and maintenance by the defendant power company.

*244 Issues arise as to the alleged error of the trial court (1) in refusing to submit the rule of res ipsa loquitur to the jury; (2) in failing to instruct jurors as to the right to draw inferences; (3) in failing to instruct the jury upon unavoidable accidents; (4) in failing to submit a verdict form whereby the jury could find that all defendants were free of negligence; (5) in failing to instruct the jurors that they could find no permanent injuries unless plaintiff was knocked unconscious by the falling glass; (6) in instructing the jury that it was negligence if the bus came in contact with the light pole; (7) in admitting a hospital record containing hearsay statements of plaintiff’s subjective symptoms; (8) in misstating the evidence to the jury in giving the charge; as to the alleged misconduct of counsel (9) in remarks to the jury concerning the hospital record; (10) in arguing to the jury matters not in evidence; as to the further alleged error of the trial court (11) in refusing to permit an expert witness to answer a hypothetical question; and (12) in limiting cross-examination of the power company’s expert witness; and finally as to the contentions (13) that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence; and (14) that the verdict is excessive.

This is a scatter-gun appeal in which the trial court is charged with having committed a multitude of errors. Despite the unlikelihood that any trial judge could commit that many prejudicial errors in a single trial, careful consideration has been given to each point raised.

The trial court properly refused to instruct the jury on the rule of res ipsa loquitur as applied to the alleged negligence of the defendant Northern States Power Company. It would have been error to do so. It is elementary that the res ipsa loquitur rule has application only where the apparent cause of the accident is such that the defendant would be solely responsible for any negligence connected with it; and if an unexplained accident may reasonably be attributed to one or more causes for which the defendant is not responsible, it is error to apply the rule as a basis for a permissive *245 inference of negligence. 1 In this case the jury found that the cause of the accident was the negligence of the defendant bus company and its driver in operating the bus. Obviously the defendant power company could have no responsibility for the negligence of the other two defendants.

No error resulted from the trial court’s omission to instruct the jurors of their right to draw inferences. Generally, a trial court is not required to instruct the jury as to what inferences of fact may be drawn from the facts in evidence. Although counsel in addressing the jury may ask the jurors to draw reasonable inferences from the facts in evidence, it does not follow that he can complain because the court omitted instructions thereon. In the ordinary case, as here, the drawing of inferences is a matter of commonsense logic and reasoning which the jurors will normally use without express direction or guidance of the court. Knott v. Hawley, 163 Minn. 239, 203 N. W. 785. We see no merit in the contention that the omission was equivalent to an instruction that the drawing of inferences was prohibited.

The allegation that the court erred in not instructing the jury on the issue of unavoidable accidents is wholly without foundation since the jurors were specifically told that “the fact that an accident happens does not necessarily entitle a party to recover damages.” Neither discussion nor authority is required to establish a lack of merit in appellants’ contention that the failure to instruct on res ipsa loquitur and on the right to draw inferences, and on the alleged failure to charge the jury in unavoidable accidents was tantamount to a directed verdict against appellants on the issue of liability.

Related, however, to the question of unavoidable accident is the issue that arises from the trial court’s refusal to give the jurors a *246 verdict form permitting them to render a verdict exonerating all defendants of negligence. We find no error in the court’s refusal since, upon the evidence adduced, the breaking of the light globe must have been caused by the negligence either of the defendant bus company or of the defendant power company or by the negligence of both of them. There was no other circumstance, force, or factor at work at the time of the accident, such as wind or lightning, to which the falling and breaking of the light globe could be attributed. See, Jacobsen v. Dailey, 228 Minn. 201, 210, 36 N. W. (2d) 711, 716, 11 A. L. R. (2d) 1429. This view of the evidence is corroborated by counsel’s own emphatic statement to the jury that in his opinion the plaintiff was entitled to some verdict for damages in the case.

The request for an instruction that the jury must find that the plaintiff was knocked unconscious before it could find any permanent injury was properly denied. Although a party is entitled to a specific instruction on his theory of the case, there must be evidence to support that theory. Hagen v. Snow, 244 Minn. 101, 69 N.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.W.2d 30, 248 Minn. 240, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boutang-v-twin-city-motor-bus-co-minn-1956.