Johnson v. Sunshine Creamery Co.

274 N.W. 404, 200 Minn. 428, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 788
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 2, 1937
DocketNo. 31,343.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 274 N.W. 404 (Johnson v. Sunshine Creamery 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
Johnson v. Sunshine Creamery Co., 274 N.W. 404, 200 Minn. 428, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 788 (Mich. 1937).

Opinions

1 Reported in 274 N.W. 404. Plaintiff appeals from the order denying a new trial after a directed verdict in favor of the defendant Sunshine Creamery Company and its employe, Joseph Salmen.

At about 5:30 p. m., November 27, 1935, a mile south of Johnsville, on trunk highway No. 65, a delivery truck of the Sunshine Creamery Company, driven south by Salmen, collided head on with a cattle truck driven north by defendant Mike Sweet. The evening was dark and blustery. Sleet mixed with some snow made visibility poor and the roadway slippery. The trucks became fastened together and blocked travel on the pavement. There is testimony that all lights on both trucks were out. However, one or two testified that the rear light on the Sunshine Creamery Company's truck, *Page 430 hereinafter referred to as the Sunshine truck, was burning. The second car, a truck, that came up after the collision, had three K.K. flares, and these the driver, Edmonson, lit and placed one on the west shoulder of the highway some 75 feet to the north of the Sunshine truck and one on the east shoulder about the same distance south of the Sweet truck, and one near the end of the latter, since it had some boards that stuck out to the rear. A fireman from Minneapolis, Maybee, was about the third driver who came up from the south. Maybee noticed the flare and slowed down, but did not discover the Sweet truck in time to avoid having his windshield pierced by its projecting boards. He backed out and parked his car on the east shoulder. One man was then set to swing down traffic coming from the south with the south flare, and Maybee, seeing a car approaching from the north, ran to get the north flare for the purpose of swinging down traffic from the north. He could not reach the flare before this car passed and ran into the Sunshine truck. In this car, a closed Ford truck, driven by defendant Bunker, plaintiff, a doctor, was riding, attending one Oftel, who had been severely injured in an accident shortly before and was being conveyed to a hospital in Minneapolis. Oftel was on a stretcher, and plaintiff was seated on a folding chair alongside. This car will be referred to as the ambulance. Bunker estimated his speed to have been 40 to 45 miles per hour. Others place it higher. He, like Maybee, took the flare to mean a hole in the shoulder. As he came close to the obstruction he realized that the string of cars whose headlights he noticed were not moving, but were parked on the east shoulder. He testified that there was no light on the rear of the Sunshine truck, and he discovered the truck's presence too late to avoid the collision. Plaintiff was severely injured and sues to recover damages.

Those who first arrived after the collision of the Sunshine and Sweet trucks quickly realized the dangers to which travelers were exposed by the position of the trucks. They did what they could to warn oncoming drivers of cars. The flares as placed proved inadequate under the weather conditions then existing. An attempt was made to increase the effectiveness of the flares by swinging *Page 431 them, but unfortunately the attempt was made too late in respect to the north flare. It is not necessary at present to go into the evidence more in detail in order to understand the legal propositions presented for review. The complaint charged that both Salmen and Sweet negligently and carelessly drove their trucks at excessive speeds and failed to keep them upon the proper side of the highway, thus causing their collision and an obstruction thereon, and that, after the collision created the obstruction, said drivers of the trucks and the Sunshine Creamery Company failed to use due care and were negligent in not placing red lighted fuses similar to those used by railroad companies at the proper distance from the end of each truck.

There are many assignments of error, but it will not be necessary to consider all, for there should be a new trial on the ground of two rulings on the admission of evidence and also on the ground that there was evidence to go to the jury upon the issue of respondents' negligence as the proximate cause of plaintiff's injuries.

Plaintiff called Sweet as a witness and proved by him that Salmen drove the Sunshine truck over onto the northbound lane of travel right head on into Sweet's truck. On motion of respondents, this testimony was stricken on the ground that the collision between these two trucks had no causal connection with the plaintiff's injury. To this ruling plaintiff excepted. We think the court erred. Had the ambulance, in which plaintiff was riding, followed the Sunshine truck at such a distance that its driver, Bunker, could not have seen Sweet's truck approaching or its collision with the Sunshine truck, and then collided with the obstruction caused by the sole negligence of Salmen, there could be little doubt of the causal connection of such negligence and plaintiff's injury. The fact that the ambulance did not reach the obstruction until about an hour after its creation would not seem to break the chain of causation as a matter of law. Or, suppose Salmen's negligence had been the sole cause of the collision with Sweet and both drivers had been so injured as to be incapable of doing anything in the way of warning others of the condition created, and then the ambulance had run into the obstruction, we apprehend a causal connection *Page 432 between Salmen's negligence and plaintiff's injury could be found even though the first collision occurred more than an hour before the second. If Sweet's testimony was true, the sole negligence of Salmen created the obstruction in the highway which caused plaintiff's injuries, unless Bunker's negligence could be said to be an intervening independent cause. It occurs to us that this would be a jury question and that a jury might find that the negligence of those concerned in the first collision contributed to cause the second. The following cases appear to lead to this conclusion: Holmberg v. Villaume,158 Minn. 442, 197 N.W. 849; Brown v. Murphy Transfer Storage Co. 190 Minn. 81, 251 N.W. 5; Wedel v. Johnson, 196 Minn. 170,264 N.W. 689.

Respondents called one Corcoran, a worker in the highway patrol department, who, over plaintiff's objection, was allowed to testify that the highway department had approved the K.K. type of flares, the kind here placed on the shoulders by Edmonson. He was also permitted to testify, over plaintiff's objection, that the flares prescribed by L. 1933, c. 252, 3 Mason Minn. St. 1936 Supp. § 2720-54 1/2, are impractical as safety signals. The here pertinent part of that law provides that when for any reason a motor truck is left standing on a trunk highway in the nighttime the operator thereof shall cause to be placed at least 50 feet from each end thereof a lighted red fuse similar to fuses used by railroad companies, * * * and each motor truck or motor bus shall carry with it as a part of its equipment the facilities for carrying out the provisions of this section." By Salmen plaintiff proved that the Sunshine truck carried no fuses such as called for by the quoted statute, nor any other means for signal by light of the presence of the truck if stopped after dark on the highway.

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Johnson v. Sunshine Creamery Co.
274 N.W. 404 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 N.W. 404, 200 Minn. 428, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-sunshine-creamery-co-minn-1937.