Coolidge v. Meagher

46 P.2d 684, 100 Mont. 172, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 83
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1935
DocketNo. 7,398.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 46 P.2d 684 (Coolidge v. Meagher) 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
Coolidge v. Meagher, 46 P.2d 684, 100 Mont. 172, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 83 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

*176 ME. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant, Thomas A. Meagher, has appealed from a dual judgment against him and in favor, first, of Gus B. Coolidge, the plaintiff, on the cause of action alleged in his complaint, and, second, in favor of the Treasure State Pipe Line Company, a corporation, on its cross-complaint. The action arose out of an automobile collision between a “Ford Pickup” driven by Coolidge and owned by the pipe line company, and a Chevrolet sedan, owned and driven by Meagher, in which both cars were damaged and both the plaintiff and defendant Meagher injured.

The complaint of Coolidge alleges that the collision was due to the negligence of the defendant in driving on the wrong side of the highway and at a dangerous rate of speed. To this complaint the defendant filed an answer and cross-complaint in which he alleges that the collision resulted from the negligence of plaintiff Coolidge in driving on the wrong side of the highway, and that, at all times he, Meagher, was driving on his own side. He also alleges that Coolidge was the agent of the Treas *177 ure State Pipe Line Company and joins the company as a defendant in his cross-complaint for damages. Coolidge replied, denying the allegations of the cross-complaint, and the pipe line company answered with a counterclaim against Meagher for damages to its automobile.

A trial was had which resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff Coolidge in the sum of $2,154.50, and in favor of the company in the sum of $200. Judgment was entered in conformity with the verdict, whereupon Meagher moved for a new trial and to tax costs; each motion was overruled, and he appealed, contending that the court erred in its ruling on each of these motions.

The first assignment of error raises the question as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and judgment, the determinative question being as to whose negligence was the proximate cause of the collision. The collision occurred on the graveled highway between Shelby and Sweet Grass which runs straight, due north and south, for several miles each way from the place of the accident, but is not level, the summit of a hill being 223 feet north of the point where the cars met. The plaintiff was driving south in a Ford Pickup belonging to the pipe line company; the defendant was driving north in a Chevrolet sedan. Bach car was visible to the occupants of the other only after the Ford came over the summit of the hill, at which time the defendant’s car was from 350 to 600 feet distant. The highway has a driving surface 28 feet wide, with a ditch on each side. The evidence as to what transpired from the time the two cars were in view of the occupants of each until after the collision is in sharp conflict; therefore the judgment can be affirmed only if the evidence discloses substantial evidence in support of the verdict. This means that if the evidence is such as will convince reasonable men of its truth, it is substantial, but if all reasonable men must conclude that the evidence does not establish the case, it is not substantial evidence. (Morton v. Mooney, 97 Mont. 1, 33 Pac. (2d) 262; In re Silver’s Estate, 98 Mont. 141, 38 Pac. (2d) 277.)

*178 Coolidge and Miss Soderstrom, who was riding with him, testified that when first in view, defendant’s car was approaching at a high rate of speed, 50 to 60 miles per hour, swaying in the gravel and traveling the center of the highway, more on the west side of the center than on the east; that, fearing it would skid into plaintiff’s car, plaintiff drove as near the edge of the west side of the highway as he dared; that, when defendant was within 150 to 200 feet from them, he turned sharply to his own side of the road going clear to the shoulder, but, as it was soft, his car swung back diagonally across the highway and into plaintiff’s ear, knocking it back and into the ditch on the west side of the highway. Coolidge stated positively: ‘ ‘ The front of his car struck the front fender or front of my bumper on the front left hand side of the radiator of my car.” “There is no question in my mind at this time that the front of Mr. Meagher’s car crashed right into the front and side of the car I was driving. ’ ’

In corroboration of this version of the accident, evidence was adduced showing that broken glass and spilt oil were found at the point of the accident, all of which was to the west of the center line of the highway, and the sheriff and his deputy who investigated the crash testified that they traced tire tracks from tires of the make then on the Ford, along the west line of the highway to within ten feet of the Ford after the accident, and the tire tracks of another car from the soft shoulder on the east side of the highway diagonally across to the place of the collision.

This testimony was ample to support the verdict and judgment, despite the fact that the defendant gave a diametrically opposite version of the collision, as the conflict was resolved by the jury in favor of the plaintiff. (Wise v. Stagg, 94 Mont. 321, 22 Pac. (2d) 308; Burns v. Eminger, 81 Mont. 79, 261 Pac. 613.) However, counsel for defendant assert that the physical facts shown on the trial so contradict the oral testimony on behalf of the plaintiff as to render it unbelievable by reasonable men, and thus to destroy its substantiality.

It is first contended that the coroborative evidence of the sheriff and his deputy to the effect that the highway disclosed *179 the fact that Meagher’s car crossed the road diagonally is rebutted by the testimony of one Snyder, who testified that he came upon the scene in a car and drove across the road to pick up the unconscious plaintiff, and that the record shows that but one car crossed the road at that point. However, the defendant, on whose behalf this statement is made, contradicted Snyder’s testimony on this point. He testified that after the collision his car was over on the east side of the road; that he heard Snyder’s testimony and “that was not what happened at the time,” that Snyder drove up and stopped on the east side of the road to the rear of his car, and that he and Snyder, or one Fust, who was with Snyder, carried the injured man over to the Snyder car, and Snyder then drove around the Meagher car and on up the east side of the road. In this he was corroborated by Miss Soderstrom, who stated that after the accident she got into the Snyder car, which was “south of the Meagher car, ’ ’ and that the latter was moved so that the Snyder car could pass it. The jury was justified in finding that the diagonal crossing to the point of collision, as described by the sheriff and his deputy, was made by the defendant’s car.

It is next contended by counsel for the defendant that the broken glass and oil spots on the road were east of the center, and that thus the physical facts support defendant’s version rather than that of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
46 P.2d 684, 100 Mont. 172, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coolidge-v-meagher-mont-1935.