Franck v. Hudson

373 P.2d 951, 140 Mont. 480, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 100
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 9, 1962
Docket10400
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 373 P.2d 951 (Franck v. Hudson) 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
Franck v. Hudson, 373 P.2d 951, 140 Mont. 480, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 100 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of the eleventh judicial district. The action was for damages resulting from a collision of plaintiff Franck’s logging truck with defendant’s cattle.

On September 16, 1958, the defendant, owner of about eighty *482 head of cattle, was herding them along the east side of U. S. Highway 93 with the aid of Walter Johnson.

At a point about one-third of a mile south of Eureka, Montana, the highway rises to form a hill which is not steep, although high enough to somewhat obscure the vision of those approaching from either side of the hill. At the trial there was conflicting evidence as to what extent the vision of plaintiff’s driver was obscured by the hill.

When it reached the hill the herd moved onto the highway proper so that it extended completely across the highway. The herd was about half-way up the hill when the accident happened. Guy E. Allen, an employee of plaintiff Franck, was driving Frank’s logging truck and trailer with a full load of logs. Heading north towards Eureka the truck came over the crest of the hill and went between defendant who was almost at the head of the herd on the west side and Walter Johnson who was at the rear of the herd on the east side. There was conflicting testimony as to the speed of the truck and whether or not the defendant waved to warn Allen. The truck collided with twenty head of cattle and hit a pickup truck which had stopped immediately north of the herd. The pickup truck, claimed to be owned by Glen Keltner, was being driven by Eufus Holder. The logging truck, with the pickup being pushed in front, went off the highway on the west side and overturned.

By a third amended complaint, plaintiff Franck joined his insurer, Truck Insurance Exchange, as a party plaintiff. The complaint alleged negligence upon the part of the defendant in blocking the highway so as to obstruct the passage of vehicles at a point where vision was obstructed, and in failing to post guards to warn oncoming vehicles. Plaintiff Truck Insurance Exchange asked damages of $2,133.97, the amount it paid for repairs to the logging truck and trailer. Plaintiff Franck asked damages of $250, the amount he had to pay towards the repairs, and $1,080 damages for loss of use of the truck while it was being repaired. Plaintiffs also asked damages for loss of the *483 pickup based on an assignment of the claim by the owner to the plaintiffs. The defendant cross-complained asking damages for the negligent killing of twenty head of cattle, for the cost of removing the dead cattle from the highway, and for exemplary damages of $5,000 under R.G.M. 1947, § 17-408.

The jury gave a verdict for defendant cross-complainant and awarded $5,100 damages for loss of the cattle and costs of removal and $2,500 exemplary damages. Judgment was rendered accordingly and plaintiffs appealed.

The question presented by plaintiffs’ first specification of error is whether the court erred in failing to give plaintiffs’ offered instructions number 5 and 6.

Plaintiffs’ offered instruction 5 is as follows:

“You are instructed that the driving or herding of cattle on a public highway is not unlawful in Montana. However, there are reciprocal duties on the part of all users of public highways toward each other to use ordinary care not to encroach upon the rights of other highway users. No highway user can appropriate the highway to his own use to the exclusion of other lawful users.

“If you find that defendant’s herd extended across and blocked the entire highway at a point where vision was obstructed, and you further find that the defendant failed to give sufficient notice or warning of such herd to plaintiff’s employee, Guy B. Allen, at the time of the accident complained of, then you must find that the defendant was negligent.”

Plaintiff’s offered instruction 6 provides:

“The law imposes upon the driver of any vehicle using a public highway, and herder of cattle, the same duty, each to exercise ordinary care to avoid causing an accident from which injury might result. The cattle herder’s duty, while using the highway, includes exercising ordinary care to avoid placing himself or others in danger. The driver’s duty requires him to be vigilant at all times, keeping a lookout for traffic and other conditions to be reasonably anticipated, and to keep the vehicle under such control that, to avoid a collision with any other *484 person or with any other object, he can stop as quickly as might be required of him by eventualities that would be anticipated by an ordinarily prudent driver in like position.”

“There is no error in refusing to give a particular instruction when the trial court has included the same subject matter in other instructions.” Kornec v. Mike Horse Mining Co., 120 Mont. 1 at 12, 180 P.2d 252 at 258.

Although plaintiff’s offered instructions 5 and 6 may be a correct statement of the law, since the same subject matter was sufficiently covered in instruction 8 and the last sentence in number 20, the refusal of plaintiffs’ offered instructions 5 and 6 was not error. Instruction 8 reads as follows :

“Where two parties have an equal right to use a public highway, each must use it so as not to injuriously interfere with the other’s right, and each much exercise a degree of care commensurate with the danger of the agency that he himself is using.”

The last sentence in instruction 20 provides:

“But a person driving cattle on a public highway must act in a reasonable and prudent manner under the circumstances and a failure to do so constitutes negligence on his part.”

Plaintiffs contend that the court erred in giving instructions 12 and 17. Plaintiffs’ objection to instruction 17, at the time of settling instructions, and in this court, was that the instruction was not applicable since there was no allegation of certain negligence in defendant’s cross-complaint, to-wit, failure to drive at an appropriate reduced rate of speed when approaching a hill crest. Failure to allege that act of negligence was cured by the evidence that went in at the trial without objection. Schaff v. Shaules, 137 Mont. 357, 352 P.2d 265. Negligence in that regard was therefore a proper matter to submit to the jury by an appropriate instruction number 17. The same reasons apply to the giving of number 12 as apply to the giving of number 17. Further, the specific objection now urged as to number 12 was not made before the trial court and plaintiffs *485 are now precluded from raising it here. Holland Furnace Co. v. Rounds, 139 Mont. 75, 360 P.2d 412. See R.C.M.1947, § 93-5101.

We have examined all of the instructions and find that taken as a whole they adequately state the applicable law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
373 P.2d 951, 140 Mont. 480, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franck-v-hudson-mont-1962.