Dunlavy v. Dairyland Mutual Insurance

124 N.W.2d 73, 21 Wis. 2d 105, 1963 Wisc. LEXIS 542
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 124 N.W.2d 73 (Dunlavy v. Dairyland Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunlavy v. Dairyland Mutual Insurance, 124 N.W.2d 73, 21 Wis. 2d 105, 1963 Wisc. LEXIS 542 (Wis. 1963).

Opinion

Currie, J.

After reviewing the record in this appeal we reach these conclusions :

(1) The movants for new trial, with respect to the negligence issues, failed to fully comply with that part of sec. 270.50, Stats., which provides, “A motion for a new trial founded upon newly discovered evidence may be heard upon afjidavits and the papers in the action.” (Italics supplied.)
(2) There was no such failure to comply with such statutory requirement with respect to granting a new trial on the insurance coverage issues.
*110 (3) This court on its own motion should grant a new trial in the interest of justice pursuant to sec. 251.09, Stats., with respect to the negligence issue.

The reasons for arriving at these conclusions are set forth below.

Affidavit Requirement with Respect to Negligence Issues.

Upon the original trial Dudley and his passengers testified that the Dudley car had come to a gradual stop on the highway because of mechanical trouble. Because of amnesia Dunlavy was unable to recall any of the facts surrounding the accident. Church and Miner similarly testified but Pearson, the other passenger in Church’s car, was not called as a witness. There was no intimation in any of the testimony that any enmity had existed between the occupants of the Dudley and Church cars. Neither was there any testimony that some of the occupants of the Dudley car had advanced toward the Church car after the two cars stopped and threatened physical violence to Church and his two passengers. The evidence did disclose that all nine occupants of these two cars were in their late teens or early twenties and lived at Janesville. It would appear that Dunlavy was the oldest of the group, being twenty-three at the time of trial some seventeen months after the accident. On the evening of the accident the six persons in Dudley’s car had visited two taverns where they had played cards and drunk beer. One tavern was in Fort Atkinson and one in Whitewater. Church and his two passengers had also been at one of these ■two taverns while Dudley and his companions were there, and had also played cards and drunk beer.

The showing made in behalf of the movants for a new trial was that Dudley, Church, and those of their passengers who had testified at the trial, other than Dunlavy, had committed perjury. This showing took the form of an affidavit by Church dated November 15, 1962; signed written state *111 ments of Miner and Pearson dated December 2, 1962; and affidavits by Attorneys Jens wold and Jackman. Dunlavy’s counsel contends that the Church affidavit is defective because it contains no venue or oath and omits the title of the officer in the jurat. The jurat affixed below Church’s signature is as follows:

“Subscribed and sworn to before me
“this 15th day of November, 1962
“County of Rock /s/ George E. Wood
“My commission expires 1/31/1965.”

By taking judicial notice of the records in the office of the secretary of state this court has ascertained that on November 15, 1962, George E. Wood was a duly commissioned notary public and that his commission expires January 31, 1965. While the first sentence in affidavits ordinarily recites that the affiant is swearing under oath, the absence of such recital does not necessarily render an affidavit fatally defective from the standpoint of compliance with sec. 270.50, Stats. The same is true with respect to the jurat’s failure to specify the notary’s venue. We consider that the statement in the jurat, “sworn to before me,” in the absence of proof tO' the contrary, necessarily presumes that the notary duly administered the proper oath to the affiant.

Church’s affidavit was witnessed by Leonard Alder son, a sergeant of the sheriff’s department of Rock county and it states that it was voluntarily made to Alderson. Further material statements of the affidavit are these: After Church left the Whitewater tavern between 11:30 and 11:45 on the night of the accident he passed the Dudley car, which proceeded “to stay directly on my tail.” Dudley tried to pass, but Church would not let him. At a stop sign in Milton, Dudley attempted to cut off the path of the Church car. Church succeeded in getting around the Dudley car, but just north of the point of accident Dudley succeeded in *112 passing Church. In the act of so doing, one of the passengers in Dudley’s car threw a beer bottle which struck the left front door of the Church car. After passing, Dudley applied his brakes and stopped his car in the approximate center of the road, just over the crest of the hill, forcing Church to stop. A group of boys from the Dudley car then came toward the Church car. Two picked up gravel and threw it at the Church car. Church told Miner to lock the car door. Henning, one of the passengers in the Dudley car, swung his fist at one of the back windows. Threats were then made, such as “Get out of the car you sons-a-bitches,” and “Get out of the car or we will kick the-out of both you and the car.” Church tried to back up so he could turn around and get away, but before he could do so the Gobin car came and the accident occurred. After the accident and before trial Dudley and his friends made threats of physical violence, and Dudley talked to Church “to make sure that our stories were straight.”

Miner’s unsworn statement avers that it was voluntarily given to Sergeant Alderson and is in question and answer form. It corroborates much of Church’s affidavit regarding what occurred up to the time of the accident. A summary of this statement commencing at the point where the accident had occurred is as follows: Dudley and some of his passengers threatened Church, Pearson, and Miner with closed fists, and “dictated” what information they were to give to the investigating officers, namely, that the Dudley car was off the road at the time of the accident and the occupants were outside the car urinating. Above all they were not to say anything about the fighting or attempt to fight. The following day, after Miner had given a statement to' the sheriff’s office, Dudley, Dominy, and another friend of Dudley’s came to Miner’s home. They inquired what had been asked of Miner at the sheriff’s office and appeared to be pleased at what Miner had told the officers. They told *113 Miner to stick with that story. Miner was in fear of great bodily harm from Dudley and his group, and it was due to their threats that he had not previously told the officers the information he now claims to be true. Miner is still concerned that an attempt will occur to carry out the threats of bodily harm.

Pearson’s signed statement was also given to Sergeant Alderson in question and answer form. It admits that a previous statement given by Pearson to the sheriff’s department left out many details of the accident and in some respects was not true. It also largely corroborates Church’s affidavit up to the point where the Church car stopped behind the Dudley car. Four of the passengers of the Dudley car, Powell, Dunlavy, Henning, and Rye, came back to the Church car, the doors of which had been locked.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 N.W.2d 73, 21 Wis. 2d 105, 1963 Wisc. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlavy-v-dairyland-mutual-insurance-wis-1963.