Krumvieda v. Hammond

27 N.W.2d 583, 71 S.D. 544, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 41
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1947
DocketFile No. 8891.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 27 N.W.2d 583 (Krumvieda v. Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krumvieda v. Hammond, 27 N.W.2d 583, 71 S.D. 544, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 41 (S.D. 1947).

Opinions

RUDOLPH, J.

Plaintiff, after permission granted, has appealed from an order of the trial court requiring that he proceed separately against certain defendants. The action is to recover damages plaintiff sustained as a result of a series of collisions involving a truck owned by plaintiff and trucks separately owned by two defendants. Plaintiff contends that the .liability of the defendants is a joint liability, and that he is entitled to a joint judgment against them. The trial court held that the complaint and certain testimony heard at the hearing on defendants’ motion to require a separate proceeding against each defendant, discloses that defendants’ liability, if any, is several only and that the liability is not joint.

The facts as stated in the complaint and testified to at the hearing, in the light most favorable to plaintiff, are as follows: Plaintiff, driving an empty stock truck, left Sioux Falls on the evening of February 4, 1946. It was dark, the *546 pavement was icy and visibility low, not to exceed fifty feet. Plaintiff drove at a speed of ten miles per hour, and as he approached the Skunk Creek bridge, about five miles west of Sioux Falls, he observed lights of an approaching vehicle from the west which was apparently encroaching upon plaintiff’s driving portion of the highway. To avoid a collision plaintiff turned to his right, partly off the highway, and as he did so his truck was “sideswiped” by the approaching vehicle, and struck the east end of the north abutment of the bridge. This approching vehicle was another stock truck driven by the defendant Clark as the agent of the defendant Porter. After striking plaintiff’s truck, Clark continued east on the highway up the incline leading down to the bridge, and brought his truck to a stop partly off the paved portion of the highway and about seventy-five yards from the point of collision. Plaintiff’s truck, following the collision, was about half on and half off the pavement with the front of the truck near the abutment of the bridge. The pavement was twenty feet wide and plaintiff’s truck occupied four feet on the north side. Plaintiff tried to back his truck away from the abutment but was unable to do so; he then got out of the truck and observed that the front bumper was bent and was resting against the right front wheel of the truck. He proceeded to try to pull the bumper free from the wheel and while in this process the rear of his truck was struck by the semitrailer truck driven by the defendant Hettich as the agent of defendant Hammond. This collision forced plaintiff’s truck ahead for a distance of thirty feet, dragging plaintiff under it, and caused extensive damage to his truck and serious personal injuries. Plaintiff suffered no personal injuries in the first collision and only slight damages to his truck. An interval bf two minutes occurred between the two collisions.

For our present purpose it must be conceded that plaintiff was not negligent. The question presented is whether the negligence of these two defendants was such that it created a joint liability whereby each is liable for the entire damage plaintiff suffered to his truck and person.

*547 This court has held that when an injury occurs through the concurrent negligence of two persons, and would not have happened in the absence of either, the negligence of both is the proximate cause of the accident and both are answerable. Chiles v. Rohl, 47 S. D. 580, 201, N. W. 154; Simmons v. Leighton, 60 S. D. 524, 244 N. W. 883; Petteys v. Leith, 62 S. D. 149, 252 N. W. 18; Wallace v. Brende, 67 S. D. 326, 292 N. W. 870. In each of the cited cases the separate acts of negligence occurred contemporaneously, and appellant contends that it is only in such cases that the rule should apply. We do not agree. Where each act of negligence contributes to the same harm or injury which would not have happened in the absence of either, it is a “concurrent” act of negligence within the meaning of the rule announced in the above cases, and whether the separate negligent acts are contemporaneous or successive is immaterial. The rule is stated in Yol. 4, Restatement of the Law, Torts, § 879, as follows: “* * * each of two persons who is independently guilty of tortious conduct which is a substantial factor in causing a harm to another is liable for the entire harm * * Commenting on this rule the Restatement says: “This is true where both are simultaneously negligent and also where the act of one either occurs' or takes harmful effect after that of the other.” Typical of the many cases which support the rule are the following: Thornton v. Eneroth, 177 Wash. 1, 30 P.2d 951; Barkman v. Montague, 297 Mich. 538, 298 N. W. 273; Mason v. Reynolds, 135 Neb. 773, 284 N. W. 257; Gibson v. Bodley, 156 Kan. 338, 133 P.2d 112; Holmberg v. Villaume, 158 Minn. 442, 197 N. W. 849. It appears, therefore that the question is one of proximate cause or casual connecton between defendants’ negligence, assuming they were negilgent, and plaintiff’s injuries and damage.

The complaint does not allege the extent of the damage resulting to plaintiff’s truck from the separate tortious acts of the defendants. If plaintiff sustained damage to his truck as the result of the first occurrence when Clark sideswiped his truck, and such damage is ascertainable, it is clear, we believe, that there is no casual connection between this damage *548 and the subsequent acts of the defendant Hettich. Whether such damage can be separately recovered in this action where the two are sued jointly, we need not determine. We are satisfied that if there is sufficient here to justify a verdict for a joint liability, for the injury and damage plaintiff sustained following the collision wherein Hettich was involved, the mere fact that plaintiff sustained some ascertainable and separate damage, solely as the result of the first occurrence, would not require separate actions against each, insofar as their liability is joint. The possibility of some separate damage, due solely to the acts of Clark, does not determine whether a cause of action for a joint liability has been stated. Such possibility only raises the question as to the elements of plaintiff’s recovery in this action.

We believe plaintiff has stated a cause of action for a joint liability as it relates to the injury and damage sustained following the Hettich collision. It is obvious that there is a casual connection between plaintiff’s injuries following the Hettich collision, and the assumed negligence of Hettich. The question is whether there is also a casual connection between Clark’s assumed negligence and these injuries. Defendants largely rely upon a series of cases decided by this court wherein it has been held that it is not the proximate cause of an injury to simply furnish a condition through which, by subsequent independent events, the injury results. Pierce v. People’s Telephone & Telegraph Co., 47 S. D. 463, 199 N. W. 241; Bruening v. Miller, 57 S. D. 58, 230 N. W. 754; Christensen v. Kruger, 66 S. D. 66, 278 N. W. 171. These cases were distinguished from the fact situation before this court in the case of Wallace v. Brende, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.W.2d 583, 71 S.D. 544, 1947 S.D. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krumvieda-v-hammond-sd-1947.