Klas v. Fenske

22 N.W.2d 596, 248 Wis. 534, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 250
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 22 N.W.2d 596 (Klas v. Fenske) 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
Klas v. Fenske, 22 N.W.2d 596, 248 Wis. 534, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 250 (Wis. 1946).

Opinion

Rosenberry, C. J.

The facts in this case can be best understood by reference to a map, Exhibit 1, printed herewith.

The accident occurred on March 6, 1944, about 10 o’clock a. m., at the intersection of County Trunk Highways X and O, *539 in Green Lake county, County Trunk O, a gravel road twenty feet in width, running north and south. County Trunk X is a black-top arterial highway running east and west and is practically level. There is a sharp decline on County Trunk O from north to south as one approaches the intersection.

On the morning of the day in question, the plaintiff drove from his home to Randolph for the purpose of looking at the Williams farm near Randolph with the defendant Gehrung. On arriving at Randolph, Klas suggested that the trip be made in his car. Gehrung requested that they ride in the defendant Gehrung’s car because he, Gehrung, was. more comfortable in his car. It appears that he was a very large man and he had had the front seat set back three inches to accommodate him. *540 They drove from Randolph in Gehrung’s car north to County Trunk X and then west to the Williams farm where they remained for a short time and then started the return trip to Randolph, the defendant Gehrung driving, the plaintiff Klas seated on the right side of the front seat. About the time they started back, a wet, heavy snow started falling. The intersection in question is about two and one-half miles east from the Williams farm. While the Gehrung car was approaching the intersection from the west, the Fenske car was coming toward it from the north.

All the direct evidence in the record relating to the manner in which Gehrung operated his car comes from Gehrung, a witness, Erma Pollock, a woman forty-four years of age, who saw both the Fenske car and the Gehrung car before they collided. Emil Pollock, father of Erma, who was washing his hands, was called to the window by his daughter, but when he reached a point where he could view the scene of the accident, the accident was over.

No claim is made upon this appeal that Fenske was not negligent in all the respects found by the jury. On the other hand, the plaintiff and Gehrung contend that there is no evidence to sustain the finding of negligence as to Gehrung. All the parties concerned were familiar with the intersection. Gehrung testified that as they left the Williams farm the wet snow which had fallen was packed on the road. The blacktop was slippery, he drove from the Williams farm at a speed of from twenty-five to thirty miles per hour; he knew that as he approached the intersection he was traveling on an arterial highway and that the stop sign north of County Trunk X was approximately ninety feet north of the intersection; as he approached the intersection, he testified he reduced his speed to around fifteen to twenty miles an hour, until at a point when he was one hundred eighty to two hundred feet from.the intersection and could see up the road; there was no car between the mailbox and the intersection.

*541 The mailbox referred to was one hundred fifty feet north of the center of County Trunk X. He further testified that he went ahead a distance of seventy-five feet or so and saw the defendant Fenske’s car near the mailbox, about one hundred fifty feet north of the intersection. He estimated his distance from the intersection then around one hundred feet. Thinking that the Fenske car, would stop at the stop sign, he continued on for a short distance and then saw that the Fenske car was not going to stop at the stop sign. Gehrung then turned his car to the right and tried to increase his speed because he was afraid that he could not stop on the slippery pavement in time to avoid an accident. He estimates that he was about sixty feet west of the intersection when he determined that the Fenske car was not going to stop. He then guided his car entirely off and to the south of County Trunk X and at the time his car was struck by the Fenske car, his rear wheels were on the east edge of County Trunk O and the rest of his car was in the grassplot in the southeast quarter of the intersection about three feet south of County Trunk X. His car was struck on the rear of the left side, the rear wheels and just back of the door. At the time of the accident Gehrung estimates his speed at twenty to twenty-five miles an hour. Fenske testified that he did not see the Gehrung car until just an instant before the collision when it was about sixteen feet away.

There is some dispute as to the facts after the happening of the accident. Gehrung testified -that following the impact his car spun around three times in the road, and on the second turn the door sprung open on the right side and Mr. Klas fell out; that the rear wheels then struck Klas and he ended up in the. ditch on the southeast corner of the intersection. It is undisputed that Klas was thrown out and the rear wheel of the car struck him. The Gehrung car went through the ditch and went up the bank at the southeast corner of the intersection, about two or two and one-half feet high, backwards, and *542 ended up in the field just off the road, facing northwest. The Fenske car stopped about twenty-five feet south of the Gehrung car in the ditch on the east or southeast side of County Trunk O.

We will take up the questions for decision in substantially the same order that they were considered by the trial court. The questions are: (1) Were the plaintiff Klas and the defendant Gehrung engaged in a joint enterprise ? (2) Was the defendant Gehrung guilty of actionable negligence? (3) Was the negligence of the defendant Gehrung, if any, imputable to the plaintiff? (4) Was the court in error in directing judgment in favor of the defendant Fenske against the defendant Gehrung for contribution ? ( 5) Assuming that Gehrung was negligent, was judgment for thirty per cent of the damages and costs correct ? In the consideration of these questions additional facts will be stated.

(1) Joint enterprise. It appears that four or five years before the accident Gehrung desired to become a real-estate operator. To do so he had to have a license either as a broker or salesman. Pie applied to Klas to get a license as salesman under Klas. Klas gave him this permission. The license was procured. Gehrung ran his own business and did not operate as a salesman or employee under Klas. They were associated only in single transactions. If Gehrung had a buyer Klas might have suitable property for sale. On the occasion in question Gehrung had an option on the Williams farm. He approached Klas with the idea of having Klas purchase it. If Klas decided to purchase it, then .Gehrung wished to resell it for Klas, and if a profit was made, to get one half of the profit as his commission. If there was no profit there was no commission. If there was a loss Klas assumed it. It is considered that this relationship did not amount to a joint enterprise. The Restatement of 2 Torts, p. 1273, sec. 491, is as follows;

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.W.2d 596, 248 Wis. 534, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klas-v-fenske-wis-1946.