Guile v. Greenberg

257 N.W. 649, 192 Minn. 548
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 23, 1934
DocketNo. 29,948.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 257 N.W. 649 (Guile v. Greenberg) 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
Guile v. Greenberg, 257 N.W. 649, 192 Minn. 548 (Mich. 1934).

Opinions

DEV AN BY, Chief Justice.

Action for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by defendant Florence Greenberg’s negligent actions. Plaintiff Avas employed by the Brinks Express Company as manager of one of its armored money trucks. The accident in Avhich plaintiff received his injuries occurred Avlien the truck which he managed collided with defendant Sam Greenberg’s car on Grand avenue near the intersection of Oxford avenue in St. Paul. The car Avas OAvned by defendant Sam Greenberg and Avas being driven at the time by his wife, Florence Greenberg. Plaintiff was riding on the outside of the money truck, apparently straddling or sitting upon the left front fender. He had one foot on the bumper, the other betAveen the fender and the hood with his hands upon the radiator cap. He had just been repairing the mechanical signal device used when making a left-hand turn and apparently Avas attempting at the time of impact Avith the Greenberg car to step or craAvl to the' right *550 side of the truck and thus get into the cab. While the money truck was proceeding west on Grand avenue with plaintiff riding in this manner, the Greenberg car pulled out from a parking place at the curb into the traveled portion of the street. Thereupon a collision ensued, the right front bumper of the money truck hitting the left front fender of the Greenberg car. Plaintiff was thrown off the money truck and onto the pavement, sustaining injuries. At the trial, the lower court, at the close of the testimony and upon motion, directed a verdict for defendants. From a denial of his motion for a neiv trial plaintiff appeals.

Five questions are presented:

(1) Was defendant Florence Greenberg, the driver of the Green-berg car, guilty of actionable negligence?

(2) Was plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence (a) under common law rules, (b) under the ordinances of the city of St. Paul?

(3) Is plaintiff barred from recovery because he assumed- the risk ?

(I) Can the money truck driver’s negligence, if any, be imputed to plaintiff?

(5) Did the trial court err in admitting evidence that plaintiff previously had received workmen’s compensation for the injury which is the basis of this lawsuit?

There can be no serious doubt but that the question of defendant Florence Greenberg’s negligence was one for the jury. There was evidence that in pulling out from the parking space along the curb she did not signal as required by statute to do. Further, there is testimony which might well lead to the conclusion that if she had looked back immediately before pulling out from the curb as is required by statute, 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 2720-17, she would have seen the money truck, which, according to some of the testimony, was proceeding at no more than 15 miles per hour. Surely it was for the jury to say whether or not her actions in this respect were negligent. The court can decide a question such as is here presented only where reasonable minds could not differ as to the inferences to be drawn from the proof. This is not such a case. Hence the question properly must go to a jury.

*551 (a) Under the common law rules, it must be held that plaintiff was not barred from recovery by his negligence, if any, inasmuch as his actions in no way caused or helped to cause the accident. The problem is one of proximate cause. Regardless of how negligent plaintiff might have been, if his actions did not contribute to or were not a material element in the happening of the accident here involved, the defense of contributory negligence is not effective as against him.

“The principles which determine whether the causal relation between the plaintiff’s conduct and his harm is such as to make the law regard it as a legally contributing cause and, therefore, * * ® sufficient to make his failure to exercise reasonable care for his own protection contributory negligence barring him from recovery against a negligent defendant, are the same as those which determine whether the conduct of the actor as defendant is sufficient to make him responsible and, therefore, liable for a harm to another. Consequently, ■ * * * the plaintiff’s conduct must be a substantial factor operating with the defendant’s negligence in bringing about the plaintiff’s harm * *' Am. Law Inst. Restatement, Torts (Tent. Draft No. 10), comment to § 3, p. 11.

The fact that damage might not have resulted but for plaintiff’s placing himself in an exposed position does not necessitate a conclusion that his conduct was a proximate cause of the damage. If his exposed position resulted in injury only through some distinct wrongful act or neglect of another, the other’s act is the proximate cause and “insulates” the original conduct. The injury will be imputed to it and not to the more remote conduct. This is as much true of alleged contributory negligence, Fitzgerald v. International F. T. Co. 104 Minn. 138, 149, 316 N. W. 475, 479, as of alleged negligence, Peterson v. Fulton, 192 Minn. 360, 256 N. W. 901. In the Fitzgerald case the court was considering whether an improper position assumed by plaintiff in her work Avas a proximate cause of her injury and hence whether she might be held guilty of contributory negligence. This court said:

*552 “Courts have, however, clearly recognized a distinction between a necessary antecedent and a responsible cause, and between the person without whose conduct the wrong could not have occurred and the last human wrongdoer. The proximate cause must have a natural tendency to produce, in the ordinary course of nature and of affairs, the result complained of. ‘There are two essential elements in contributory negligence, a want of ordinary care, and a causal connection between the act and the injury complained of. yyhen ¿foe act and the injury are not known hy common experience to he naturally and usually in sequence¡ and the injury does not, according to the ordinary course of events, follow from the act, then the act and the injury are not sufficiently connected to make the act the proximate cause of the injury. Cooley, Torts (2 ed.) 73; Beach, Contributory Negligence, 32.’ Shelby, J., in Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Prunty, 133 F. 20, 21, 66 C. C. A. 163.”

In the case at bar the result in the ordinary course of events was not the consequence of the plaintiff’s exposed position. Here as elsewhere in the law of negligence, the distinction between cause and condition is to be made. On the record in the case at bar it appears conclusively that a responsible agent (defendant Florence Greenberg) interposed her independent conduct between plaintiff’s exposure of himself and the natural sequence of events to be reasonably anticipated therefrom. Such sequence was interrupted by defendant so as to produce a result which ivould not otherwise have followed. Childs v. Standard Oil Co. 149 Minn. 166, 170, 182 N. W. 1000.

“It is well established by the authorities that the negligence of a person which merely furnishes the situation or condition whereby an independent, unforeseen and unanticipated agency causes his injury will not bar a recovery for such injury.” Matassarin v. Wichita R. & L. Co. 100 Kan. 119, 122, 163 P. 796, 797.

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Bluebook (online)
257 N.W. 649, 192 Minn. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guile-v-greenberg-minn-1934.