Dieruf v. Gollaher

481 P.2d 322, 156 Mont. 440, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 476
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1971
Docket11778
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 481 P.2d 322 (Dieruf v. Gollaher) 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
Dieruf v. Gollaher, 481 P.2d 322, 156 Mont. 440, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 476 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from the trial court’s denial of plaintiff’s motion for a new trial in an action in the district court of the eighth judicial district, wherein a jury verdict and resulting judgment was in favor of the defendant.

The fact situation is unique. The drivers of both vehicles involved in a head-on collision admitted having rather freely imbibed before the accident. The jury was given a full and descriptive account of each driver’s activities during the hours just prior to the accident. On the evening before the accident plaintiff John E. Dieruf, with a girl he met at the Ulm Bar, began his evening activities. The girl testified that at the time she met plaintiff at about 7:30 p.m. “He seemed like he had been drinking some. He wasn’t drunk * * The couple drove from Ulm to Great Falls and went to the J-T Bar, the Cowboy’s Bar, the Westside Bar, the Caboose Bar and Dykeman’s Bar in succession and consumed beer at each. *442 At the next bar, the Cimmaron, plaintiff changed his drinking pattern and began drinking a drink known as a “Sagebrush” the basic ingredient of which is whiskey. Upon leaving the Cimmaron Bar they proceeded to the Cartwheel Bar arriving there about midnight and plaintiff had at least one more Sagebrush. From there they went to the Nuggett Bar where plaintiff again had one or more drinks. His date testified that at about this time, approximately 1 a.m., he was “Acting pretty drunk then. One time he got up on a table and danced.” They remained at the Nugget Bar until it closed at 2 a.m.; they then drove to Gibson Park and there plaintiff “went to sleep”. His date testified he slept at least one hour and probably more because she was unable to awaken him, by shaking him. Just how long plaintiff slept is a question, but when he did awaken he went to his apartment to get some clothes, put gas in his car and began a trip to Bozeman, via Ulm where he intended to return his date to her home. A few miles southwest of Great Falls he was involved in the head-on collision.

Myrle A. Gollaher, the defendant, is a young cattleman living on his family’s ranch east of Cascade. At the time of the accident he was 25 years of age and unmarried. On the day before the accident, a Friday, he had worked all day with cattle and in the evening drove some 25 miles into Great Falls to relax. Like the plaintiff, he went to the Cowboy’s Bar, but consumed no drinks there. Later, after helping a friend pick up a truck, he and his friend went to the nearby J-T Bar where they met some girls. They spent the rest of the evening dancing and drinking. All told, defendant drank from 6 to 8 brandy cokes. When the bar closed at 2 a.m. the two couples went to defendant’s ranch to have breakfast, a ranch breakfast of waffles, bacon, eggs and coffee. According to the testimony, after breakfast defendant took about a half-hour nap. It was when he was returning his guests to Great Falls that he met the plaintiff head-on.

*443 The accident took place at approximately 5 a.m., May 25, 1968 about 3 miles south of Great Falls. Plaintiff was driving a 1964 Chevrolet Chevelle and traveling in a southwesterly direction toward Ulm. Defendant was driving a 1966 Dodge station wagon, traveling in a northeasterly direction toward Great Falls. Reconstruction of the accident, based on the participants’ accounts of it, is difficult. Plaintiff remembers nothing of the accident, except headlights and glass. His date testified she was dozing and not very attentive. Too, she suffers from eye difficulties having only one-quarter vision in one eye and is often troubled with double vision, especially at night. She was supposed to wear glasses at all times but was not wearing them the night of the accident. She recalls seeing defendant’s ear coming at them, and that it “looked like” it was in their lane of travel.

Defendant testified that at the time of the accident it was real light but he still had his lights on, and that he believed the plaintiff’s car also had its lights on when he saw it coming toward him. He further testified as follows:

“A. Well, when I first saw the car I never paid much attention to it. It was just an oncoming car. But I noticed it seemed to bounce and was coming over on my side of the road.
“Q. It was coming onto your side of the road? A. Yes.
“Q. And about how far away from you was it when you became aware it was coming on your side of the road? A. Approximately one hundred yards.
“Q. And what sort of angle was it coming at? Sharp one or gradual or what? A. Well, not just a gradual drift, not like it had been jerked, but fairly sharp. Just going right on off.
“Q. Did you get any impression as to the course that it was following? Where it was going to wind up? A. Yes. I thought it was going to go right on across the road into the ditch.
*444 “Q: What did you do when you saw this car coming at you in your lane of travel? A. I swerved to the left.
“Q. And then what happened? A. I seen this ear coming back.
“Q. What did you do then? A. About then is when I hit.
“Q. Did you turn back to your right, do you believe? A. I think I did. I couldn’t honestly say. Things were happening so quick.
“Q. And did you attempt to put on your brakes? A. I believe I did.
“Q. When the cars hit, where did your ear wind up? A. On the north side of the highway.
“Q. Were you able to tell anything yourself about which direction — were you steering the car as it went that way or pretty much out of your control? A. Pretty much out of my control. Just seemed like I froze, tried to turn but couldn’t.
“Q. Do you have any idea, yourself, of the path that you followed from the place where the collision happened up until the point of the accident? A, Not until I was in the ditch. I remember it bounced when I hit the ditch.
“Q. All right. After the accident happened, were you able to get out of your door on your side? A. Yes. I got out my door.
“Q. It opened and you stepped out of it? A. Yes.
“Q. This may be a little bit out of order, but approximately where was the heavy damage on your ear? A. Left front side.
“Q. Back how far? A. Just about to the door.
“Q. Was there any damage on the door itself? A. It tore the mirror off of it, outside mirror, and chrome strips and scratches.”

There was one witness to the accident who had not been out on the town the evening before the accident. He was a truck driver from Minnesota who was driving toward Great-Falls in a White Freightliner. His view of the road was some 10 feet above the road. The truck driver, Mr. Nordin, testified *445

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Bluebook (online)
481 P.2d 322, 156 Mont. 440, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dieruf-v-gollaher-mont-1971.