Mickelson v. Kernkamp

42 N.W.2d 18, 230 Minn. 448, 1950 Minn. LEXIS 635
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 31, 1950
Docket34,958
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 42 N.W.2d 18 (Mickelson v. Kernkamp) 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
Mickelson v. Kernkamp, 42 N.W.2d 18, 230 Minn. 448, 1950 Minn. LEXIS 635 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Magnby, Justice.

Plaintiff recovered a verdict in a personal injury action. Defendants appeal from an order denying their alternative motion for judgment or a new trial.

Franklin avenue in St. Paul, the street on which the accident happened, runs east and west. It is a fairly heavily traveled street. The nearest cross street east of the place of the accident is Berry street. East of Berry is Curfew street, which is 350 feet from the west line of Berry street. From Curfew to Berry there is a downgrade varying from two to three percent. West from Berry it is level. At the west line of Berry the pavement narrows to 36 feet. Crossing Franklin avenue immediately west of Berry and within a very few feet of it are three switch tracks of the Minnesota Transfer Railway Company. They serve the lumberyard and the large warehouse of the Weyerhaeuser Lumber Company. Franklin avenue is 66 feet wide. West of Berry it is paved to its full width.

On the day in question, April 10, 1946, a crew of the railway company was replacing the west rail of the most westerly of the three switch tracks. At the time of the accident the men were working in the center of the avenue. For their protection and as a warning to car operators, a barricade had been put up between the rails of the track upon which they were working and across the pavement. It was composed of two sections of sawhorse construction, each about 16 feet long and placed end to end. At the outer end of each *451 section was placed a red flag. About 125 feet east of the track upon which the men were working, a red flag had been placed a little off center toward the north. Beyond each end of the barricade was a space or lane extending to the edge of the pavement, over which traffic was moving. The driving space was 12 to 14 feet wide. The north-side lane carried westbound traffic and the south lane carried eastbound traffic. Between the two rails of each track was a fill of other rails, used instead of the usual planks. In order to replace a rail, the fill rail nearest to it had to be removed. After the new rail had been installed and before it had been fully spiked down, a timber was placed in the space which the All rail had occupied. This timber was about four or five inches in thickness, six inches wide, and about 12 to 14 feet long. When in place next to the rail of the track, the surface was about level with the other fill rails. At the time of the accident, the men had almost finished replacing a rail in the center of the avenues.

Sometime before one o’clock on April 10, 1946, three men were working directly west of the barricade, Nicholas Wagner, the foreman, Joseph E. Swanson, and plaintiff, the latter two being laborers. Plaintiff was lifting a timber such as described above out of the space where it had been used as a fill. It extended out into the •north driving lane about six feet. It was being removed so that spiking of the rail next to it could be completed. Plaintiff was working eight or nine feet in from the end of the barricade. When he had lifted the timber up to just below his knee, the part of the timber which extended out into the driving lane was struck by the wheel of an automobile, the timber in turn striking plaintiff’s leg, causing a severe injury. Plaintiff claims that the automobile which struck the timber was operated by defendant Edna Marie Kern-kamp and that it was operated negligently. Said defendant and her husband, codefendant Howard C. H. Kernkamp, were the joint owners of the automobile driven by Mrs. Kernkamp. For convenience, we shall refer to Mrs. Kernkamp as defendant.

Defendant was driving her car west on Franklin avenue. She had three women passengers. Her testimony was that she stopped *452 her car directly back oí a truck near Curfew street, and that she then followed the truck, about 10 feet from its rear, at a rate of 10 to 15 miles an hour, until she had crossed over the tracks. She said that she did not remember seeing the red flag in the street east of the tracks, nor did she see the barricade until she was going by it. She did not remember what kind of a barricade it was. She had a faint recollection of seeing men working to her left about a truck length away. She did not see the timber over which she drove. As she proceeded across the tracks, she said there was “quite a bump,” that she “experienced very bumpy tracks, a very bumpy road.” She worried about the old tires with which her car was equipped. Because of the bump, she stopped her car about 150 feet or less from the tracks, opened her car door slightly, and listened for escaping air from her tires. Hearing none, she closed the door and proceeded. When about to turn back again into the traffic, one of her passengers called her attention to an oncoming car from the east traveling 30 miles an hour or more. It is her contention that this passing car struck the timber and did the damage, and that she knew nothing of the happening of an accident until the following day.

Swanson, a fellow workman of plaintiff, said he saw the Kernkamp car when it was by the red flag, and that he continued to’ watch it. It was traveling at 30 miles per hour. When it stopped, he took its license number and wrote it down on the barricade. The car came very close to the barricade and struck the timber four or five feet from its north end. The timber was thrown to one side and struck plaintiff’s leg. Swanson testified that after he first saw defendants’ car at the flag plaintiff bent down to lift up the timber, and that he had picked it up when the car was coming down toward it, “just about ready to pass over.”

On the above testimony, probably unnecessarily detailed, defendants contend that the evidence establishes conclusively or so overwhelmingly that there was no negligence on the part of defendant, and that the court erred in not directing a verdict for defendants. In our opinion, defendant’s own testimony is more than *453 sufficient to support the charge of negligence against her. She said that she had no recollection of seeing the red flag near the center of the street, which had been placed there as a warning to automobile drivers that they were entering a zone of danger. It was what might be termed a danger flag. It warned automobile drivers that there was danger ahead, and that they would be required to use reasonable care of lookout under the circumstances. Neither did she see the barricade until she was going by it. She did not see the men working beyond the barricade, only a few feet from her lane of travel, until about a truck length away from them. There was no barrier between them and defendant’s lane of travel. She did not see the timber over which the wheels of her car passed. This is all from her own testimony, and clearly it indicates inattention to her surroundings. The jury could readily find that she was negligent.

She intimates that following a truck so closely prevented her from seeing things along and in the street. The presence of a truck is denied by plaintiff. She also claims that, even if her car was the one which struck the timber in question, testimony to the effect that the timber was raised about the time she approached it absolves her from negligence. Under all the facts, we are of the opinion that this court cannot say that defendant was free of negligence as a matter of law.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.W.2d 18, 230 Minn. 448, 1950 Minn. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mickelson-v-kernkamp-minn-1950.