Day v. Kelly

146 P. 930, 50 Mont. 306, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 21
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1915
DocketNo. 3,468
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 146 P. 930 (Day v. Kelly) 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
Day v. Kelly, 146 P. 930, 50 Mont. 306, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 21 (Mo. 1915).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

On April 30, 1911, plaintiff was riding on horseback driving loose horses along the public road, when he met an automobile [310]*310driven by defendant. His riding horse became frightened, reared and fell, crushing one of plaintiff’s feet and otherwise injuring him. He brought this action to recover damages, and in his complaint charged the defendant with negligence (a) in driving the automobile toward him after she discovered that his horses had become frightened; (b) in failing to turn out of the road; and (c) in causing or permitting the machine to make very loud and unusual noises. Issues were joined, and the cause was brought to trial. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony the court sustained a motion for nonsuit, and judgment was entered in favor of defendant. From that judgment, plaintiff appealed.

1. Of the three grounds of negligence charged, the first and second were entirely eliminated upon the trial by the testimony [1] of plaintiff himself, to the effect that his riding horse was well broken, accustomed to automobiles, that he could safely ride him within five feet of one, and that it was the loud and unusual sound emitted from the machine which caused his riding horse to plunge and fall, with the resulting injury to plaintiff. No evidence was offered tending to show that the noise from the machine was caused by any act of defendant, or that by the exercise of the highest possible degree of care she could have prevented it. Under these circumstances the trial court correctly held that plaintiff had failed to make out a prima facie case.

2. Counsel for appellant contend that the affirmative defense of contributory negligence pleaded in the answer confessed the [2] negligence alleged in the complaint, and released the plaintiff from the burden of proving actionable negligence on the part of defendant. But for the earnest insistence of counsel that support for their view is to be found in the decisions of this court, the contention would scarcely merit serious consideration. In Wastl v. Montana Union Ry Co., 24 Mont. 159, 61 Pac. 9, this court quoted approvingly the definition of contributory negligence from Beach on Contributory Negligence, section 7, and from the analysis of a like definition by Thompson, from Thompson on Negligence, section 3, page 1148, and then said: “The [311]*311principle embodied in these definitions is that, in order that there may be any contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part, there must be negligence also on the part of the defendant having a direct and proximate causal relation to the injury.” In Birsch v. Citizens’ El. Co., 36 Mont. 574, 93 Pac. 940, we said: “Contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff presupposes negligence on the part of the defendant. ’ ’ Again, in Nilson v. City of Kalispell, 47 Mont. 416, 132 Pac. 1133, we said: 1 ‘ The very charge now made by the city that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence presupposes actionable negligence on the city’s part.” And it is by these statements of an axiom of law that this court is now sought to be committed to the doctrine that a plea of contributory negligence confesses the truth of particular allegations of negligence stated in the complaint, notwithstanding the answer also contains a general or specific denial of those allegations. We have employed the phrase “axiom of law” advisedly. The declaration, “contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff presupposes negligence on the part of defendant,” does not require the citation of authority to support it or admit of proof of its correctness. It is a self-evident truth, but one which does not bear the remotest relationship to the question now for the first time pressed upon the attention of this court. Whether phrased in the elegant diction of the answer now before us, or not, the plea of contributory negligence, when coupled with a denial, is always hypothetical in effect, if not in form, and amounts to no more than this: I deny absolutely that I am guilty of negligence; but assuming, without admitting it, that some act of mine was negligent in character and proximately contributed to plaintiff’s injury, nevertheless plaintiff’s negligent acts united with my act to produce the injury, and without which the injury would not have occurred. To hold that such a plea admits the truth of the allegations of specific acts of negligence in the complaint would revolutionize the rules of pleading in vogue in states employing the Code system, as here. If it be assumed, for the purposes of this argument, that the defenses of general denial and contributory negligence are verbally incon[312]*312sistent, they are not so inconsistent as to fall under the ban of the rule implied from the fact that our pleadings are required [3] to be verified. A defendant may plead inconsistent defenses, so long as the inconsistency is not so marked that, if the facts stated in one be true, the facts' stated in the other must of necessity be false. (Johnson v. Butte & Superior C. Co., 41 Mont. 158, 48 L. R. A. (n. s.) 938, 108 Pac. 1057; O’Donnell v. City of Butte, 44 Mont. 97, 119 Pac. 281.) This is the meaning of section 6549, Revised Codes, which provides: “A defendant may set forth, in his answer, as many defenses or counterclaims, or both, as he has, whether they are such as were formerly denominated legal or equitable” (Kline v. Hanke, 14 Mont. 361, 36 Pac. 454; Ball v. Gussenhoven, 29 Mont. 321, 74 Pac. 871), and is the uniform rule of Code pleading. (Phillips on Code Pleading, secs. 262-266; Bliss on Code Pleading, secs. 340-344; 1 Sutherland, Code Pleading and Practice, sec. 466; Boone on Code Pleading, sec. 78.)

Counsel for appellant have not referred to any authority sustaining their position, while the courts and text-writers are practically unanimous in holding against them. In 29 Cyc. 582 the rule is stated as follows: “A general denial and plea of contributory negligence do not constitute inconsistent defenses and they may be pleaded together, and negligence on the part of defendant is not admitted by a plea of contributory negligence following a general denial.”

“While a denial of negligence and an allegation of contributory negligence are verbally inconsistent, they are not so in practice, and a defendant need not elect between the two defenses; nor does the plea of contributory negligence, when properly pleaded, admit the negligence as charged in the petition.” (6 Current Law, 768.)

In 1 Thompson on the Law of Negligence, section 390, it is said: “In Louisiana it is held that a plea of contributory negligence admits an issue of negligence on the defendant’s part. But if this means that a plea of contributory negligence is in the nature of a plea of confession and avoidance, admitting the [313]*313negligence of the defendant, and avoiding it by showing that the plaintiff was also negligent, then it is unsound and incorrect, unless in a special application to rules of pleading peculiar to particular states. The pleading of contributory negligence as a special defense is not inconsistent with a denial of the negligence of the defendant. The rule of the modern Codes which forbids the pleading of inconsistent defenses is therefore not violated by the defendant denying his own negligence and setting up the negligence of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
146 P. 930, 50 Mont. 306, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-kelly-mont-1915.