Kellerman v. Nelson

122 N.W.2d 604, 265 Minn. 525, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 14, 1963
Docket38,599
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 122 N.W.2d 604 (Kellerman v. Nelson) 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
Kellerman v. Nelson, 122 N.W.2d 604, 265 Minn. 525, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 695 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Sheran, Justice.

The appeal is from a judgment entered against appellants and others in an action for personal injuries.

The facts essential to an understanding of the issues raised on appeal are these: On August 29, 1959, at approximately 6 p. m. Ruth J. Kellerman, a minor who was bicycling in an easterly direction on Trunk Highway No. 210 about 5 miles west of Aitkin, Minnesota, was struck and seriously injured by an automobile being driven in a westerly direction on this highway by Katherine M. Beal, 17, with the permission and consent of the owner, Phyllis Beal. Miss Beal had turned into the south lane of the 20-foot pavement to pass or avoid an automobile, also westbound, operated by Alden Nelson, 18, with the permission and consent of Sadie Nelson, the registered owner. The place *527 of the accident is identified as being 1,181 feet west of the AitkinCrow Wing county line on Highway No. 210. Weather conditions were normal. A firm shoulder approximately 10 feet in width was situated on each side of the concrete slab. The highway was relatively straight and level, although there was a slight grade ascending from the accident site easterly. One witness testified: “[I]t is about three-tenths of a mile back [east] from the scene of the accident to where you would get clear visibility.” Action was instituted in behalf of the injured minor, Ruth Kellerman, and by her widowed mother, Dagny Kellerman, against the owners and operators of the vehicles involved on the theory that the accident resulted from the concurrent negligence of both drivers. By answer, the owner and driver of each of the vehicles contended that the accident was caused by the negligence of the other automobile operator and the contributory negligence of, and the risks assumed by, plaintiff Ruth Kellerman. By cross-claims each owner and driver sought indemnity or contribution from the other owner and driver in the event of liability to plaintiffs.

The matter was tried before a jury, which returned a verdict against all defendants in favor of plaintiff Ruth Kellerman in the amount of $45,000 and in favor of plaintiff Dagny Kellerman in the amount of $12,000. The motion of defendants Nelson for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial was denied and they appeal from the judgment entered thereafter. The issues they raise here are these:

(1) Does the evidence reasonably sustain the jury’s finding that négligence on the part of Alden Nelson was a proximate cause of the injury and damage sustained by Ruth Kellerman?

(2) Does the evidence permit or require a finding, implicit in the verdict of the jury, that contributory negligence on the part of Ruth Kellerman was not a proximate cause of the accident?

(3) Did the trial court err in failing to instruct the jury with respect to Minn. St. 169.21, subd. 3?

(4) Did the trial court err in submitting to the jury the “sudden emergency rule” for consideration in connection with the claimed negligence of defendant Katherine Beal and plaintiff Ruth Kellerman?

*528 (5) Did the trial court err in its instructions concerning proximate cause?

In support of the argument that the evidence shows, as a matter of law, that the negligence, if any, of Alden Nelson was not a proximate cause of the collision here involved, defendants Nelson rely principally on Medved v. Doolittle, 220 Minn. 352, 19 N. W. (2d) 788. In the Medved case the driver of an automobile in broad daylight, seeing a truck ahead of him on the highway in his lane of travel when he was a little over a quarter of a mile distant from it, proceeded directly toward it, realizing that he was rapidly cutting down the distance between his car and the truck, first to 500 feet and then to 150 or 175 feet, and that he could have avoided a collision by either stopping or passing the truck by turning into another lane of travel then open and unobstructed, and did not do so, but turned sideways to look at a guest passenger when he was 150 or 175 feet from the truck and was so looking when the collision occurred. We held that the negligence of the truckdriver, if any, in permitting the truck to stand on the highway in violation of a section of the Highway Traffic Regulation Act prohibiting such parking, and in his violation of the provision of the act requiring flags to be set out in such cases, was not the proximate cause of the collision and that the conduct of the automobile driver was so culpable and extraordinarily negligent as to constitute a superseding, intervening cause of the collision, insulating any prior negligence in so parking the truck. In arriving at its decision this court said (220 Minn. 357, 19 N. W. [2d] 791): “An intervening cause is also a superseding one, relieving the actor of liability, where it consists of an ‘extraordinarily negligent’ act.” The court described the conduct of the automobile driver who was aware of the presence of the truck and nevertheless drove directly into the rear end of it without making any effort to move into one of the other lanes then open to him as (220 Minn. 358, 19 N. W. [2d] 721) “well-nigh suicidal as to himself and homicidal as to his wife.” Such conduct would not be reasonably foreseeable.

Whether the facts of this case make the rule of the Medved case applicable must be determined by an examination of the record in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs who were the prevailing parties below. *529 So considered, we find in the record the following testimony which distinguishes this case from the Medved case and places us in agreement with the trial court’s decision that the evidence made the question of whether defendant Nelson’s negligence was a proximate cause of the injury one for determination by the jury:

When struck by the Beal car, Ruth Kellerman was riding her bicycle along the south edge of the pavement and traveling in an easterly direction toward Aitkin. She was about 75 to 100 feet to the rear of her cycling companion, Kathy Peterson. Ruth saw a car (the Nelson vehicle) coming from the opposite direction. It reduced speed and stopped in the north lane when Kathy was about 5 feet from it. As Ruth was approaching the car, it “kept getting slower and then stopped.” No part of the Nelson car was on the shoulder. Ruth testified that Kathy Peterson pedaled past the Nelson car and “I kept going and trying to pass as fast as I could.” She testified that the occupants of the Nelson car “were hollering something, but I don’t know what they said.”

Katherine Beal testified that she had left Aitkin about 6 p. m., accompanied by her girl friend, Pat Howard, and her cousin, Gary Beal, and driving her aunt’s 1957 Ford automobile. She was 17 at the time. Her cousin was 4 years of age and in the back seat. Her friend was in the front seat with her. As Katherine approached the accident site from the east, her visibility was relatively unobstructed. She observed the Nelson car when she was about 600 feet west of it. She had been driving 50 to 55 miles per hour. As she came closer to the Nelson car, it appeared to be stopped. She was about a block, or 300 feet, from it when she came to that conclusion. It was on the north half of the pavement directly in front of her and was facing west. She put her brakes on “real hard” 150 feet east of the Nelson car but, nevertheless, it appeared that she was going to run into the back end of it.

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Bluebook (online)
122 N.W.2d 604, 265 Minn. 525, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellerman-v-nelson-minn-1963.