Jondahl v. Campbell

238 N.W. 697, 61 N.D. 555, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 307
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1931
DocketFile No. 5965.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 238 N.W. 697 (Jondahl v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jondahl v. Campbell, 238 N.W. 697, 61 N.D. 555, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 307 (N.D. 1931).

Opinions

*557 Birdzell, J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injury sustained by the plaintiff upon being struck by an automobile driven by the defendant. The plaintiff had judgment in the sum of $994 and costs. The instant appeal is from the judgment and from the order denying the defendant’s motion fox a new trial or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

In the evening of August 10, 1930, the plaintiff drove from Larimore towards Grand Forks on Highway No. 2. A companion named Balthazer was riding with him. After they had gone some distance they were stopped by reason of a flat tire on the left front wheel. They drove the car, which was a model A Ford roadster, to the right-hand side of the highway stopping' at about a foot or a foot and a half from the shoulder of the road which constituted the edge of a ditch on the south side of the highway. The evidence indicates that the front wheels were somewhat closer to the ditch than the rear wheels. The lights were turned on and the plaintiff and his companion set about fixing the tire. While they were thus engaged several automobiles passed going both east and west. The defendant, who was likewise driving from Larimore to Grand Forks, approached the plaintiff’s car from the rear just as the work of fixing the tire had been completed and as the plaintiff was letting down the jack. The defendant had observed the tail light on the plaintiff’s car for some distance as he approached but had not ascertained that the car was not in motion. As he approached he was meeting a car coming from the east; they met at approximately one hundred feet west of the plaintiff’s car. The defendant was then at the extreme right-hand side of the graded portion of the highway and he suddenly observed that the plaintiff’s car was not in motion. On account of being so close to the plaintiff’s car when he ascertained this fact, he could not readily pass to the left-hand side without striking it, so he turned toward the right, driving into the ditch, passing the car and driving back on to the road beyond. While Balthazer -was putting the pump in the rear end of the Ford car he saw Campbell’s car coming when it was about thirty or forty feet away. Balthazer, sensing the danger from the approaching car, ran across the road to the north ditch. As he did so he called the attention of the plaintiff Jondahl to the danger, and Jondahl, wrho was then engaged in letting down the jack, stepped quickly toward the south ditch and as he did so he was *558 struck by the defendant’s car, sustaining a comminuted fracture of the femur.

There were a number of specifications of error relating to the admission and exclusion of evidence; to which only slight attention is given by the appellant’s counsel in the brief and argument on the appeal; consequently, we do not feel called upon to deal with them seriatim. We have examined the rulings complained of and are unable to see where any prejudicial error was committed. The principal contentions here are that the evidence is insufficient to establish negligence on the part of the defendant and that the court erred, both in declining to give instructions requested and in the instructions given.

Concerning the contention that the evidence is insufficient to establish negligence, we are of the opinion that a reasonable view of all of the evidence would warrant the jury in concluding that the defendant was negligent in approaching as close to the plaintiff’s car as he did before discovering that it was not in motion, thereby creating the emergency out of which the plaintiff’s injury resulted. While the testimony shows that when the defendant first observed the tail light on the plaintiff’s ear he would have no reason to know whether it was in motion or standing still, and while it further shows that until he was within one hundred feet of the car his vision was more or less obstructed by reason of the lights of the car approaching from the opposite direction and further obstructed to some extent by dust, we think the circumstances shown create a question of fact for the jury as to whether in the exercise of reasonable care he should not have discovered sooner than he did that the plaintiff’s car was stopped. It must be remembered that the law recognizes the right of a driver of an automobile to stop upon a highway in emergencies, requiring him, of course, to display proper signals. (Chapter 162, § 24, Session Laws of 1921.) See Billingsley v. McCormick Transfer Co. 58 N. D. 913, 918, 228 N. W. 424, 426. So a burning tail light on an automobile upon a highway does not necessarily indicate a moving vehicle. Hence, when such a signal comes into view it is reasonable to expect a driver approaching from the rear to ascertain whether the car is moving or standing before coming within the zone of danger. We are of the opinion that under the evidence in the instant case it was for the jury to say whether or not the defendant was negligent.

*559 Counsel for the defendant prepared eleven instructions which be asked the court to give. A comparison of these requested instructions with the charge given shows that the requested instructions were utilized by the court in drafting bis charge. Upon the margin of the pages, containing the requests the trial judge noted that they were given in substance but not literally. Of course, it is not error to decline a proper instruction requested by a party to a suit where the substance of the instruction is embodied in the charge given, but it is contended here that in some respects the court entirely omitted to charge upon matter that was contained in the requested instructions and concerning which the instruction asked was a correct statement of the law. Request No. 1 is given as an illustration of this. It reads:

“The Court instructs you that when one is required to act suddenly and in the face of imminent danger, he is not required to exercise the same degree of care as if be bad time for deliberation and the full exercise of his judgment and reasoning faculties.”

The charge given contains this statement with reference to the degree of care to be exercised in an emergency:

“I charge you that if a person is met with an emergency while upon the highway, an emergency that be could not anticipate and did not-anticipate, and is suddenly confronted with it, be is not held to the same legal responsibility as a person that- is not met with an emergency and who has ordinary conditions to meet and who has time to consider and reflect; so if in this case the defendant came to the place and was confronted with an emergency, and be was in no way at fault about the emergency that was created or that met him, the fact that be turned to the right instead of the left, of itself, would not make him liable for negligence and liable to pay damages.”

It seems that the charge given did amply state the rule contained in the request.

Again counsel complain that requests Nos. 9 and 10, referring to contributory negligence, were not embodied in the charge. These requests are:

9. “The Court instructs you that if the plaintiff was guilty of any negligence, no matter bow slight which contributed to the accident, the verdict must be for the defendant.
10.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 N.W. 697, 61 N.D. 555, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jondahl-v-campbell-nd-1931.