Broberg v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co.

182 P.2d 851, 120 Mont. 280, 1947 Mont. LEXIS 35
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1947
Docket8675
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 182 P.2d 851 (Broberg v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co.) 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
Broberg v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 182 P.2d 851, 120 Mont. 280, 1947 Mont. LEXIS 35 (Mo. 1947).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE CHOATE,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendants appeal from a judgment of the district court of Yellowstone county in favor of plaintiff in an action for damages for personal injuries received in a highway crossing collision between an automobile, in which plaintiff was riding, and a railway train operated by defendant railroad company.

Defendants assign 20 specifications of error. The first three *284 relate to the court’s denial of defendants’- motion for nonsuit and for a directed verdict and present the contention that defendants should have prevailed as a matter of law. Specifications Nos. 4-14, inclusive, relate to the giving and refusal of instructions. Specifications Nos. 15-19, inclusive, have to do with alleged errors in the admission of evidence and specification No. 20-pertains to the denial of defendants’ motion to re-tax costs.

Review of evidence. Mindful of the fact that as in most cases of this character the testimony is conflicting and that upon motion for nonsuit or directed verdict the evidence must be viewed from the standpoint most favorable to plaintiff (Jarvella v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 101 Mont. 102, 53 Pac. (2d) 446; Mellon v. Kelly, 99 Mont. 10, 41 Pac. (2d) 49; Nangle v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 96 Mont. 512, 32 Pac. (2d) 11), we will review what we consider the material facts disclosed by the evidence, particularly those bearing upon the visibility of the crossing and whether or not a jury question was presented as to said crossing being unusually hazardous.

The collision involved in this action occurred November 10, 1943, at about 6 -.45 p. m., or one hour after sunset at what is known as the Dennis Beet Dump Crossing, about seven miles northeast of Billings at a point where U. S. Highway No. 10, a heavily traveled highway, intersects at grade a spur track known as the Shepherd branch of the Northern Pacific Railway Company. This spur track was used but little, about four to six weeks each year during the best harvesting season. At the point of intersection of the spur track with Highway No. 10, the highway runs approximately east and west while the railroad’s spur, the Shepherd branch of the Northern Pacific, extended • in a slightly northeasterly, southwesterly direction. East of the crossing the highway slopes downward 11.6 feet from .3 of a foot at 25 feet east of the crossing to 11.6 feet at 35.0 to 450 feet west of the crossing. On the night of the collision it was “cloudy and dark,” “very dark and cloudy.” No moon was shining. The surface of the highway was what is commonly *285 called “blacktop” and was black in color. About 350 feet east of the crossing and four feet north of the oiled part of the highway there was a standard highway department railroad crossing sign, painted with luminous paint and bearing the letters “R.R.” Mr. Ramsey, a highway patrolman, said that “if I remember correctly” this sign was visible and in good shape. However, he based that statement on the fact that it was the duty and custom of patrolmen to report to the highway department any signs that were damaged and that “if this sign had been in bad condition no doubt it would have been reported.” To the contrary, Mrs. McFarren testifying as to the condition of the sign at the time of the accident, said that “If there was any sign there before you could not have seen it for weeds. Nobody would ever notice it. ’ ’

Also on the north side of the highway and near the crossing there was a railroad crossing post, once white in color but which at'the time of the accident was “gray and old.” Along the north side of the highway on the right-hand side of the road as one travels west in the direction of Billings, there was a row of telephone or telegraph poles bearing a mass of wires characterized by the witness Folkerts as being “as heavy as I have seen on any place I know of.” These poles were about 100 feet-apart and the lowest cross-arm on the poles nearest the crossing was 30.6 feet above the highway. Still considering the north side of Highway No. 10, adjacent to the crossing, we are confronted with a conflict in the testimony, which in view of the rule already indicated, we must view from the standpoint most favorable to plaintiff. We refer to the testimony concerning the extent of weed growth along the north side of the highway. Defendants have introduced photographs testified to by its district claim agent, Mr. Murray, as having been taken by him at the scene of the collision on November 12, 1943, two days after the accident. (Defendants’ Exhibits J, K, Kl, K2 and L.) These photographs are identified by the witness Ramsey as correctly representing the condition of the crossing as it existed on the *286 clay of the accident. These photographs, particularly defendants’ Exhibit J which was taken 371 feet east of the crossing looking west toward the Dennis Beet Dump Crossing, do show some growth of weeds along the highway extending east from the crossing, although by no means such a heavy growth as was indicated by some of the witnesses testifying. On the other hand, the witness Folkerts who had lived in the vicinity of Shepherd since 1917 and was familiar with the highway and crossing in question, testified that ‘ on the other [north] side of the highway there is a field that is always cultivated but it has a high growth of horse weeds all along the fence at all times and you cannot see much, I would say hardly anything until you get right close over there — right when you get to the railroad track. ’ ’

Mrs. McFarren, who saw the condition of the highway about a month after the accident, testified that ‘ ‘ all you could see was straight ahead in the road — there was weeds up to the track and a gradual rise all the way up.”

Mrs. DeCosse testified that “there has always been a lot of weeds there along the beet dump — right at the crossing and adjacent to the highway on the north.”

Neis Johnson, testifying to the condition of the highway during November, 1943, stated that there were a lot of weeds growing up and that the vision to the right (north) side of the highway was very poor.

Jean Groves testified that she had traveled this road in the year 1943 and that on the north side of the road there was 1 an irrigation ditch — kind of a high wall like, and weeds, about as tall as I am.” To the same effect was the testimony of Frank Hoffman, Jr., that “the righthand side of the road was very much in weeds, tall weeds along the side of the road up to possibly 20 or 30 feet from the crossing” and that one approaching the crossing “could not see through these weeds to the track.” Mrs. Hoffman also testified that she knew the road as it existed right before the accident and that there had always been tall *287 weeds there ever since she could remember. As the highway approaches the crossing the view to the north is at least partly obscured by a high embankment or irrigation ditch hnd by a heavy growth of sweet clover which adds to the apparent height of the embankment.

Passing now to the south side of the highway and looking-west thereon toward the crossing, there is a continuous line of heavily bushed ash trees extending to within a few feet of the crossing. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 P.2d 851, 120 Mont. 280, 1947 Mont. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broberg-v-northern-pac-ry-co-mont-1947.