Delyea v. Goossen

32 N.W.2d 179, 226 Minn. 91, 1948 Minn. LEXIS 574
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 16, 1948
DocketNos. 34,541, 34,542, 34,543, 34,547, 34,548, 34,549.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 32 N.W.2d 179 (Delyea v. Goossen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delyea v. Goossen, 32 N.W.2d 179, 226 Minn. 91, 1948 Minn. LEXIS 574 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

Frank T. Gallagher, Justice.

Actions arising out of a collision between two automobiles. At about ten o’clock in the forenoon of August 19, 1944, defendant J. Fred Goossen was operating his 1941 Pontiac sedan over and upon *92 state aid highway No. 1 in a southerly direction, and defendant Martha Delyea King was operating her 1938 Ford coach in a westerly direction over and upon state aid highway No. 11. Both highways are in Wright county, this state. Plaintiffs Sanford J. Delyea and Aagot A. Delyea, husband and wife, are the parents of defendant Martha Delyea King, and plaintiff Kathleen Delyea Hanf (a minor at the time of the trial) is the sister of defendant King. All the plaintiffs were passengers in the King car at the time of the collision. The cases were tried in district court. The jury returned a verdict of $9,000 in favor of plaintiff Sanford J. Delyea, one for $3,500 in favor of plaintiff Aagot Delyea, and one for $12,000 in favor of plaintiff Kathleen Delyea Hanf against both defendants. (The case of Kathleen, a minor, was brought by her father and natural guardian, Sanford J. Delyea.)

Judgments were entered in all cases pursuant to the verdicts, and each defendant appeals from the respective judgments. This court, under date of August 14, 1947, ordered that all the appeals be heard and submitted upon one printed record. The question raised on appeal by defendant Goossen is whether there was any competent evidence of any negligence on his part which proximately caused or contributed to the accident. The question raised by defendant Martha Delyea King is whether the verdicts against her are justified by the evidence. Defendant King contends that the answer to that question turns upon whether plaintiffs, before resting, made out prima facie cases against her, and, if not, whether the evidence which was adduced Toy defendant Goossen m his defense, after Tooth the plaintiffs and defendant King had rested, is evidence in support of plaintiffs’ cases against her.

It appears from the record that the collision occurred on the date mentioned. Goossen, accompanied by his wife and son, J. Fred Goossen, Jr., was driving south on state aid highway No. 1. Defendant King, accompanied by her parents, her minor sister Kathleen, and John A. Delyea, her brother (not a party to the actions), was driving west on state aid highway No. 11. Both roadways were gravel-surfaced and practically level. They intersected at right *93 angles. There was a standing cornfield in the fenced field to the northeast of the intersection. The corn was about five or six feet high and pretty well tasseled out. The traveled portion of highway No. 1 is about 25 feet wide, and that of highway No. 11 about 28 feet. There were no stop or warning signs at the intersection at the time of the accident. A line representing the prolongation or projection southerly across highway No. 11 of the westerly limit of the cornfield would have been 33 feet to the east of the center of the intersection. The distance from the north shoulder of No. 11 north to the cornfield fence was 19% feet. Between the cornfield and the traveled roadway of No. 11 there was a ditch two or three feet deep. The distance from the east shoulder of highway No. 1 east to the cornfield fence was 14% feet. Between the cornfield fence and the traveled roadway of highway No. 1 there was no ditch.

Goossen, when called by plaintiffs for cross-examination under the statute, testified that he was on his way from St. Cloud to Mankato; that he was familiar with highway No. 1, upon which he was traveling; that his car was in good driving condition, had good brakes, and was a very good, fast automobile, with a normal load. He recalled that just before the collision he applied his brakes hard and held his foot on the brake, trying to stop. He said that he saw a car approaching from his left, “and I put on my brakes at that time or as soon as my reaction would respond.” He said that he kept on his brakes until the impact. With reference to the position of the cars after the impact, Mr. Goossen testified as follows:

“Q. Where did your car wind up after the impact, Mr. Goossen ?
“A. To the best of my knowledge, it was approximately in the center of the intersection with my front wheels nearly at right angles to the direction I had been going.
“Q. And do you recall where the other car wound up ?
“A. It was to my left diagonally in the ditch facing approximately southwest.”

Defendant King, also called by plaintiffs for cross-examination under the statute, testified that she was driving her car west on *94 highway No. 11 with her parents, her sister, and her brother as her guests, and that they started out from Clearwater Lake in the morning. She said that it was a nice day, that she was on a good gravel road, that her car was in good condition, and that the brakes and tires were all right. She testified that when she got on the graveled road about half a mile east of the intersection she “was going about 35, which is the fastest you were allowed to go [during the war], and before we got to that farmhouse, why then I slowed down to twenty-five.” She further testified as follows:

“Q. Then after you had passed the Partridge farmhouse did you step it up again?
“A. No, I didn’t because my dad warned me it was going to be a bad corner there so I slowed down to 20.”
She said that she saw the cornfield, which was up fairly close, and that it was difficult for her to see what might be on the right-hand side. Further testifying, she said:
“Q. And as you approached the intersection, Mrs. King, were you looking to the right to see if a car might be approaching ?
“A. Well, yes, you look on both sides when you come to an intersection. That’s what I did.
*****
“Q. But you were looking to the right, were you?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Was it before or after you entered the intersection that you .first saw the car approaching from your right?
“A. It was before.
“Q. About how long before?
“A. Well, at least over four or five car lengths, I would say.” She testified that at that time she was traveling about 20 miles an hour and that she did not apply her brakes. She said that when she got up to'the intersection and realized there was going to be a collision she turned to her left.
“Q. Would you have any idea as to about where you were in the intersection at the time the cars collided ? That is, how far out into it or whereabouts, if you could tell us.
*95 “A. I was on the side of the middle.
“Q. Which side of the middle?
“A. To the left.”

Plaintiff- Sanford J. Delyea, who was riding with Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.W.2d 179, 226 Minn. 91, 1948 Minn. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delyea-v-goossen-minn-1948.