Clark v. Feldman

224 N.W. 167, 57 N.D. 741, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 321
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 167 (Clark v. Feldman) 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
Clark v. Feldman, 224 N.W. 167, 57 N.D. 741, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 321 (N.D. 1929).

Opinions

*744 Birdzell, J.

This is action to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff through the negligence of a servant of the defendant in driving the defendant’s delivery truck upon and over the plaintiff as he was crossing the street in the city of Devils Lake. From a judgment in favor of the defendant entered on the verdict of a jury *745 and from an order denying the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, the plaintiff appeals to this court.

The salient facts are: That on the morning of July 30, 1927, between 8 :00 and 9 :00 a. m., the plaintiff Clark, a man nearly eighty years of age, walked down the east side of Fourth avenue, in Devils Take. At the intersection of Fourth avenue and Fourth street, he turned to the right to cross the avenue. As he was crossing toward the west, the defendant’s delivery truck, being operated at the time by one Melhouse, came upon him, struck and seriously injured him. The plaintiff’s eyesight was good and he testified that he looked but saw no car coming. There was no obstruction in the street or nothing, so far as the record shows, to interfere with the vision of the driver of the truck. He testified that he was driving not over twelve miles an hour; that as he approached the intersection of Fourth street and Fourth avenue he saw the plaintiff standing by the lamp post at the curb and a little north of the intersection; that as he was driving up the avenue the left wheel of the car was about the center of the street; that he next saw the plaintiff right beside the' car and a little bit north of the pedestrian’s lane marked upon the pavement at the intersection. Clark was about three feet from the car when the witness observed him and had he stopped he would not have been struck. The witness applied the foot brakes as quickly as he could, stopping the car within about twenty feet, or, as he explained later, within twenty feet of the north line of the pedestrian’s lane. From these facts alone there can be no question in our judgment but that the questions of negligence and contributory .negligence were for the jury. It is needless to recite the testimony as to the circumstances of the collision.

It appeared that Melhouse had been employed by the defendant for several weeks before this time to operate the truck in question for the purpose of delivering groceries; that he was in the employ of the defendant at the time; that the defendant was not in town on the morning of the accident; that Melhouse had gone to the store that morning, which was located about a block north and half a block west of the place where the collision occurred and, after having done some work about the store, took the truck, drove to the depot in the south part of the city, for the purpose, according to his testimony, of mailing *746 some letters of his own on the morning train and that the collision occurred as he was on his way back to the store.

There are a number of errors assigned and argued in the brief which, in the view we take of the case, it will be unnecessary for us to consider. We shall consider only the exceptions to the charge. In charging the jury on the question of contributory negligence, the court, after defining negligence, said:

“So, in this case, to make the defendant liable it must appear that the plaintiff was using ordinary care and diligence, but it must also appear from a fair preponderance of the evidence that Melhouse was negligent in the operating of that automobile on the street at that time; that is, that he did’nt use ordinary care in running that automobile. In order that Mr. Clark recover in this lawsuit, it must appear not only that Melhouse was acting in the course of his employment, and that he was negligent and careless, but that Mr. Clark was himself free from negligence and carelessness. If you find that Melhouse was acting in the course of his employment, if you find that he was negligent in operating that automobile, and that that negligence brought about or helped to bring about that accident and the injury to Mr. Clark, then you should pass to the question of whether or not Mr. Clark himself, under all of the circumstances, was negligent or careless; and in passing upon that question, have reference to all of the evidence that may apply to that matter or may throw light into your minds as reasonable men. If you find, Gentlemen of the Jury, that Melhouse was negligent, but, on the other hand, you find that Clark was also negligent, and that his negligence or carelessness brought about or helped to bring about his injury, then he cannot recover in this lawsuit. If he was negligent or careless and that negligence or carelessness had anything to do with bringing about his injuries, then Mr. Clark cannot recover. • That would be true no difference how negligent or how careless Mr. Melbouse was in the operation of that automobile.”

After the jury had been considering the case for some time they returned to the court room, whereupon the foreman annoimced that there was a difference of understanding concerning the charge, that they could not agree as to the part wherein the court had said that if there was negligence on the part of both parties the verdict should be for the defendant. Thereupon the court said:

*747 “Well, I say to you, Gentlemen of the' Jury, in that respect that I first said to you that the case was bottomed on negligence; that is, that if it was just a mere accident without negligence or carelessness of Mel-house, then Feldman would not be liable. That if you found that Melhouse was negligent, careless, guilty of a lack of ordinary care, and that you also found that Mr. Clark had been negligent or careless on his part, and his carelessness or negligence had brought about or helped in some way to bring about his injury, then he could not recover, even though Melhouse was negligent. In other words, under the law, a man who is himself negligent or careless and his negligence or carelessness results in his injuries, he can’t recover damages no matter how negligent the person was who injured him. His negligence doesn’t have to be the entire cause of the trouble, but if the plaintiff’s negligence has any part in bringing about the injuries, he is said to have contributed or helped to bring about the injuries, and is therefore guilty of contributory negligence, that is, negligence or carelessness that contributed to or helped to bring about the injury, and therefore he cannot recover. So, if in this case you find that Melhouse was negligent, and also find that Mr. Clark was negligent, and that his negligence helped to bring about or brought about, or assisted in bringing about his injury, then Mr. Clark cannot recover. Does that answer your question, Gentlemen of the Jury ? Now, in this connection you will have reference to the whole charge, not to just a little piece of it.”

It appears that, in speaking of negligence, the court had merely charged that a person who drives a motor vehicle upon a highway carelessly and heedlessly, in willful and wanton disregard of the safety of others or without due caution and at a speed or in a manner so as to be likely to endanger any person, is guilty of negligence. There was in the charge no statement of the difiy of a driver of an automobile in approaching a crossing used by pedestrians to be on the lookout for persons crossing the street and to yield them the right of way.

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 167, 57 N.D. 741, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-feldman-nd-1929.