Bowers v. Kugler

1 N.W.2d 299, 140 Neb. 684, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 248
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1941
DocketNo. 31209
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1 N.W.2d 299 (Bowers v. Kugler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowers v. Kugler, 1 N.W.2d 299, 140 Neb. 684, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 248 (Neb. 1941).

Opinions

Paine, J.

Plaintiff, as administratrix, brought this action to recover for the death of her husband, killed in a motor vehicle accident near Red Cloud. The jury returned a verdict for [685]*685$15,600, which the trial judge ordered reduced to $13,600. The defendant appeals from the judgment entered thereon.

The plaintiff’s husband, Delbert L. Bowers, aged 29, was the owner and driver of a practically new 1937 1%-ton Chevrolet truck, in which he hauled fruit and stock and other things to central and western Nebraska, earning about $200 a month. He was driving east at the time of the accident, and two men were riding with, him.

Carl B. Kugler, defendant, doing business as the Kugler Oil Company, with his principal place of business at Culbertson, was the owner of a gasoline transport, consisting of a tractor, on which was the cab and the trailer, carrying a loaded gasoline tank. This gasoline transport was driven by Lester Elliott, and Gus Lonn was riding with him. All five men in the two trucks were burned to death in this accident.

It appears that about 11 o’clock on the night of September 22, 1938, which was a clear night, the Bowers fruit truck was going east on highway No. 4, and approaching a bridge located between two hills about four miles west of Red Cloud, the highway being about 24 feet wide, with only a 16-foot road across the bridge. The gasoline transport was going west, and, it is charged, was negligently run against the north side of the bridge with force and violence, especially at the east end of the bridge, breaking off a wooden guard-rail and scarring- the steel supports, and the steel channel irons along the north side of the bridge were damaged clear across the bridg-e.

It is charg-ed by plaintiff that the transport dragged against the north side of the bridge and, as it came off the west end of the bridge, sideswiped the fruit truck, which was on its side of the road, throwing it off the highway. The gasoline in both trucks ignited and burned for hours, destroying both trucks.

The evidence of the condition and position of the trucks is important, and the testimony of the witnesses varies somewhat on the exact location of the two trucks after the collision, but from.a review of all the evidence it may be [686]*686stated that the trailer part of the gasoline transport was bottom side up in the middle, or to the south side, of the highway, at a distance of 25 to 75 feet west of the west end of the bridge, and the cab on the tractor part was tipped over on its side on the south half of the road, but ■still attached. The sheriff was finally able to allow four or five cars to proceed on the north side of the gasoline transport before it blew up between 4 and 5 o’clock in the morning, but no traffic could get by on the south side.

The fruit truck, headed east, was in the ditch, off the road on the south side, partly on the fence, about 14 feet from the west end of the bridge, and lots of pears and some apples were a smouldering mass. The front left end of the cab on the fruit truck was badly bent and caved in, and on the left side the fender was caved down on the wheel, and the left front tire was mashed and blown out. While the headlights were not broken, it is clear, from the evidence as to tracing the marks from the roadbed to where it was lying, that the transport had struck the left-hand side of the fruit truck when it was about 12 feet west of the west end of the bridge, and had bent in the fenders, and bent the front left wheel back underneath the motor.

Gilbert Reed lived on his farm near this bridge. They had gone to bed upstairs when, Mrs. Reed testified, she was awake and saw a car coming from the east go by and heard a crash. They ran to the window, and Mr. Reed testified that the flames were leaping up from something burning in the road. They dressed and rushed out, Mrs. Reed and son reaching the scene of the accident first, as Mr. Reed stopped to telephone the sheriff, who came out immediately, and stayed during the night and the next day. There was a hole in the right side, and near the top, of the transport tank, out of which the flames were shooting. As soon as Mr. Reed arrived at the place of the accident, he saw a man coming up out of the creekbed on the south side of the road, entirely denuded except for his boots and the gloves on his hands, and entirely covered with burns. This man was Lester Elliott, the driver of the gasoline [687]*687transport. He was1 taken into the Reed home and placed on a cot, and told them to telephone his employer, the defendant, at Culbertson, Nebraska, and notify him of the accident; the objection to this evidence being sustained by the court.

Darrel Smith, who arrived within five minutes after the accident, met Gus Lonn in the road, with his hair and eyebrows burned off, his shirt partly burned off, and he had on no trousers. The objection to the offer to prove that he said that Elliott, the driver of the transport, had hit another transport was sustained.

The defendant sets out 20 errors relied upon for reversal, insisting that the court should have sustained the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, that the court: committed error in permitting certain evidence to be introduced, and that the court erred in giving instructions: Nos. 1, 2, 6 and 8 on its own motion, and in refusing to give instructions Nos. 18, 23> and 26 tendered by defendant.

The defendant objects to instruction No. 1, and charges that the trial court copied the pleadings of the parties almost verbatim, which the defendant insists1 has been condemned repeatedly by this court. The plaintiff denies in her brief that the pleadings were copied, and argues that the trial court gave only a brief synopsis of the same.

This method of instructing on the issues was discussed at considerable length in the case of Merritt v. Ash Grove Lime & Portland Cement Co., 136 Neb. 52, 285 N. W. 97, and in that case it' was held that it was not prejudicial error for the trial court to summarize six pages of pleadings into three pages of instruction No. 1.

It was further discussed in the later case of McClelland v. Interstate Transit Lines, 139 Neb. 146, 296 N. W. 757, and it is said that, if copying the pleadings at length results in prejudice to the complaining party, it is a sufficient ground for reversal.

However, in the case at bar, we cannot see how prejudice resulted in this case because the trial court followed the pleadings too closely.

[688]*688Strenuous objections are made to the admission of certain evidence, especially in the testimony of Gilbert Reed as to his conversation with Elliott, the driver of the transport, whom he met coming up the bank of the dry creek, badly burned, within a few moments after the accident happened.

Repeated strenuous and lengthy objections were made by defendant’s counsel to any res gestse evidence, and the jury were excused, and arguments were made to the court.

Mr. Reed was asked: “What did you hear him say? A. He was very profane, and —” the last part of the answer was stricken out on Mr. Baylor’s motion. “A. I said, ‘What did you hit?’ Q. What did he say? A. ‘A God damned stock truck.’ * * * A.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.W.2d 299, 140 Neb. 684, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-kugler-neb-1941.