Irene v. Minneapolis Street Railway Co.

268 N.W. 866, 198 Minn. 79, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 705
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 11, 1936
DocketNo. 30,791.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 268 N.W. 866 (Irene v. Minneapolis Street Railway Co.) 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
Irene v. Minneapolis Street Railway Co., 268 N.W. 866, 198 Minn. 79, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 705 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

Devaney, Chief Justice.

Action by husband and wife to recover damages sustained by each due to personal injuries suffered by the wife in a collision. The defendants are the Minneapolis Street Raihvay Company and the Albert Johnson Coal Company. Hereinafter they avüI be referred to as the streetcar company and the coal company.

On November 15, 1933, Mrs. Useman Avas riding as a passenger on a streetcar traveling north along Chicago avenue in Minneapolis. At the intersection of Chicago avenue and East TAventy-fourth street the streetcar collided with one of the defendant coal company’s trucks Avliich Avas proceeding in a southerly direction along Chicago avenue. Mrs. Useman, avIio was seated in the streetcar, Avas thrown forward against the seat directly in front of her, thereby sustaining the injuries complained of. She Avas taken to a hospital in an ambulance where she remained until December 8, 1933, when she Avas permitted to return to her home.

*81 The actions came on for trial on March 27, 1935. The jury returned a verdict for Mrs. Useman against both defendants in the sum of $18,000, and a verdict for her husband in the sum of $2,000. Each defendant moved for a new trial, and both motions were denied. The appeals are from the orders denying defendants new trials.

Three questions are presented:

(1) Was there sufficient, evidence of negligence on the part of each of the defendants to sustain the verdicts?

(2) Were the court’s instructions proper?

(3) Are the verdicts excessive?

The accident occurred at about 2:30 o’clock in the afternoon on a bright, clear day. There had been some snow, and the streets were slippery. There were no obstructions or distracting circumstances at or near the intersection. The automatic signal at the center of the intersection indicated “go” for traffic on Chicago avenue when the truck and streetcar approached the intersection, traveling in opposite directions. The truck driver turned left at the intersection intending to proceed easterly along Twenty-fourth street. At the time of the impact the truck was almost entirely across the tracks, with the exception of the right rear wheel, which had not quite passed the easterly rail. The front end of the streetcar collided with the right rear of the truck. The force of the impact turned the truck around, and it came to rest against a trolley pole on the east side of Chicago avenue 23.7 feet north of the nórtherly curb line of Twenty-fourth street.

There is ample testimony to sustain the finding of negligence on the part of the motorman of the streetcar. The record shows that the streetcar increased its speed to 15 or 20 miles per hour when it was 25 to 50 feet south of the intersection. The driver of the truck had extended his arm indicating a left turn. By his own admission, the motorman failed to observe the extended arm. The testimony of a disinterested witness was to the effect that the motorman was not looking ahead, but was standing looking to the east. There is evidence that the motorman did not apply his brakes *82 or reduce his speed before the crash. It is apparent that the negligence of the defendant streetcar company was at least a question for the jury, and this court would not be justified in disturbing the verdicts on that ground.

Nor is there any justification for disturbing the verdicts on the ground that the truck driver’s negligence was not sufficiently established. The driver of the truck approached the intersection knowing of the oncoming streetcar. • He had ample opportunity to observe its speed. He knew that in making a left-hand turn he would have to cross the streetcar tracks on a slippery street. The testimony indicates that, despite all these facts, the truck driver turned suddenly. We have not overlooked the fact that he was preparing to turn before he arrived at the point where he did so and that he had SAVung out to the center of the street Avith that in mind. But the fact remains that he made the turn suddenly and sharply, and the record shows that he made the turn before he arrived in the intersection, that is, to the north of it. These facts, in the light of the truck driver’s own statements that he made no attempt to stop although he could have done so in the space of six or eight feet, and that after first observing the streetcar when he was 50 feet from the intersection he did not notice it again until just before the collision, are sufficient to sustain the finding of negligence on the part of the defendant coal company.

There were no formal requests for instructions submitted to the court by counsel for either of the defendants. There was, however, handed to the court by counsel for one of the defendants a copy of a charge delivered by another judge in an earlier case arising out of the same collision as the one involved herein. The court adopted substantially the phraseology of that charge on the question of negligence. No exception was taken to the court’s charge at its conclusion, but error Avas assigned by both defendants in their motions for neAV trials and is urged here as grounds for reversal, pursuant to 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 9327, which provides that the aggrieved party may be granted relief in case of error in the court’s instructions, even though no exception is taken, if the error is clearly specified in the notice of motion for a neAV trial. This *83 statute, however, is subject to an important limitation, namely, that counsel cannot take advantage of unintentional misstatements, verbal errors, or technical inaccuracies in matters of law on the part of the trial judge in his instructions to the jury where they are due to inadvertence and were not called to his attention in time so that they could be corrected. Steinbauer v. Stone, 85 Minn. 274, 88 N. W. 754; Fredhom v. Smith, 193 Minn. 569, 259 N. W. 80.

The defendant coal company claims prejudicial error in the following portion of the court’s charge:

“Even, however, one may have the right of way, he may not exercise that right of way if he sees that there is reasonable danger of a collision if he proceeds. If the streetcar was coming at such a rate of speed that it could not stop, then Hanson could not be permitted to go into the intersection in order to make the left-hand turn without being himself negligent if it should be reasonably certain that he did not have time, because of the speed of the streetcar, to complete the turn before the streetcar arrived at that point.”

The contention is that this instruction imposes upon the truck driver, Hanson, the duty of knowing the speed of the streetcar and ascertaining whether it ivas going at such a rate of speed that it could not stop. We do not believe that the objection to the instruction is Avell taken. The first sentence is to the effect that one may not exercise the right of Avay “if he sees that there is reasonable danger of a collision if he proceeds.” Considering this statement together with and in light of the paragraph as a whole, and with particular reference to the further statement that Hanson could not be permitted to go into the intersection to make the turn “if it should be reasonably certain that he did not have time, because of the speed of the streetcar,” to complete it, we are unable to conclude that the trial court committed any fundamental error.

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Bluebook (online)
268 N.W. 866, 198 Minn. 79, 1936 Minn. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irene-v-minneapolis-street-railway-co-minn-1936.