Kassela v. Hoseth

258 N.W. 340, 217 Wis. 115, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 30
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 258 N.W. 340 (Kassela v. Hoseth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kassela v. Hoseth, 258 N.W. 340, 217 Wis. 115, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 30 (Wis. 1935).

Opinions

Fritz, J.'>

Plaintiff appealed from''a 'judgment for the recovery from the defendant Hoseth of eighty per cent of the amount assessed as the damages sustained by plaintiff as the result of negligence of the defendant Hoseth, as well as of the plaintiff. That judgment also dismissed plaintiff’s complaint against the' defendant Brucker, and plaintiff ap[117]*117pealed because he contends that the court erred in dismissing his complaint against Brucker, and in holding that there was negligence on his part which contributed to his injury, and that because of that negligence his, damages, as assessed by the jury, were to be reduced by twenty per cent, which the jury found to be the proportion of contributing negligence attributable to plaintiff.

When plaintiff was injured on August 24, 1932, he was employed by Rusk county to operate a motorized road-grading machine on a state highway, which had a twenty-eight feet wide oiled-gravel surfaced roadway. Ahead of the grader blade on that vehicle there were scarifier teeth, which extended downward so as to break up the surface of the roadway. Shortly before the accident, as plaintiff was driving the grader westward on the south, which was-his .left, side of the roadway, he discovered that the teeth were not operating properly because the lower ends thereof were dull. Thereupon he stopped the grader on the south half of the roadway and got down under it to reverse the teeth, so as to use the other end thereof, which was sharper. That operation would have required from ten to fifteen minutes, but before he completed it, he was injured as the result of a collision between Hoseth’s motor-truck and the grader. Hoseth, driving eastward on the south half of the roadway, had seen the grader as he approached, but he claims that, as he was about to pass it, dust or a small pebble, thrown up by a passing west-bound automobile and striking his eye, caused him to close both eyes and take his hand off the steering wheel.

The jury found that Hoseth’s negligence as to speed and the manner in which he was driving was a cause of the plaintiff’s injury, and that the plaintiff was not negligent in-going under the grader, into a place of danger, where he might be injured. However, the court, in directing certain answers to some of the questions in the verdict, held that plaintiff was [118]*118negligent, as' a matter of law, in stopping the grader in a traveled portion of the highway, and in permitting it to remain there while making the changes and adjustments in the teeth; and that that negligence on plaintiff’s part was a cause of his injury. In respect to those findings, as directed by the court, the jury found that twenty per cent of the total negligence, which caused plaintiff’s injury, was attributable to plaintiff, and because of that finding the court, in ultimately ordering judgment for plaintiff against Hoseth, reduced plaintiff’s recovery to eighty per cent of the assessed damages.

As is disclosed by instructions given to the jury, the court fully recognized that, under sec. 85.18 (12), Stats., vehicles actually engaged in maintaining the highway are permitted to operate on the left-hand side of the highway when they are designated according to the standard method of marking such vehicles, as promulgated by the state highway commission; and that therefore, while the road-grader was traveling and operating on the highway, the plaintiff was not negligent in having it on the left-hand side of the road. But the court also instructed that,—

“independent of statute it was his [plaintiff’s] duty to be careful and so handle the grader that he had due regard for the rights of others and not to create any unnecessarily dangerous situation and to exercise ordinary care. He should obey the statute and then he should exercise ordinary care independent of statute;”

and, in that connection, the court directed the finding that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in stopping and permitting the grader to remain on the traveled portion of the highway while changing the teeth. Those directed findings by the court are challenged by plaintiff on the ground that the record presents no evidence to sustain those findings. The record Moes disclose, without any contradiction or conflict in the evidence, that at the time of the accident plaintiff was voluntarily stopping and permitting the [119]*119grader to stand on the roadway of a public highway, in an agricultural district, in order to change the scarifier teeth,— which was to require from ten to fifteen minutes, — although the defective condition of the teeth did not in any manner affect the motor and propelling mechanism of the vehicle. It was not disabled in any respect which interfered with its being readily moved on its power off the roadway, onto one of the nearby private farm driveways, in that locality. In thus permitting the grader to stand on the highway when it was practical to move and leave it off the roadway, plaintiff was negligent, as a matter of law, in that he clearly violated that portion of sec. 85.19 (1), Stats., which provides that—

“No person shall park, stop, or leave standing any vehicle, whether attended or unattended, upon any highway outside a business or residence district when it is practical to park, stop or leave such vehicle standing off the roadway of such highway. . .

Under that provision, the parking, stopping, or leaving of a vehicle on the roadway of a highway, outside of a business or residence district, is prohibited whenever it is practical to park, stop, or leave such vehicle standing off such roadway. As the only issue in that respect, under that provision, is whether it was practical to park, stop, or leave the grader stand off the roadway, the mere fact that it may have been inconvenient or less advantageous, in point of saving'time, or otherwise, to move the vehicle off the roadway, affords no excuse for failing to avoid a condition which obviously was considered such a source of danger to the traveling public that it was expressly prohibited by that safety statute. The necessity for avoiding such a menace is emphasized by the fact that it is further provided in sec. 85.19 (1), Stats., that even when it is not practical to park, stop, or leave a vehicle off of such roadway, it shall nevertheless in no event be parked, stopped, or left upon any highway,—

“unless a clear and unobstructed width of no less than fifteen feet upon the roadway of such highway opposite such [120]*120standing vehicle shall be left for the free passage of other vehicles thereon, nor unless a clear view of such vehicle may be obtained from a distance of two hundred feet in each direction along such highway.”

The only provision in sec. 85.19, Stats., which recognizes any legal excuse for leaving a vehicle standing on the roadway of a highway is in sub. (8), which provides that the provisions of sec. 85.19, Stats.,—

“shall not apply to the operator of any vehicle which is disabled while on the highway in such a manner or to such extent that it is impossible to avoid stopping or temporarily leaving such vehicle in such position.”

In the case at bar, that sub. (8) of sec. 85.19, Stats., is, however, inapplicable because the failure of the scarifier teeth to function properly did not disable the grader, in any manner or to any extent, so that it had become “impossible to avoid stopping or temporarily leaving” it on the roadway.

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Bluebook (online)
258 N.W. 340, 217 Wis. 115, 1935 Wisc. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kassela-v-hoseth-wis-1935.