Morehouse v. Ylvisaker

446 P.2d 432, 152 Mont. 57, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 362
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1968
DocketNo. 11393
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 446 P.2d 432 (Morehouse v. Ylvisaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morehouse v. Ylvisaker, 446 P.2d 432, 152 Mont. 57, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 362 (Mo. 1968).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for defendant entered on a jury verdict and from an order denying a new trial.

Plaintiff brought an action on behalf of himself and his wife to recover damages for the wrongful death of their son David, age 4. David was struck and killed by an automobile driven by defendant.

On July 10, 1965, plaintiff, headed east, parked his auto about four feet off highway No. 2 at a turnout located near the old Fresno townsite. With him were his wife and four children, ages 2 to 8 years, or nearly 3 to 9. Plaintiff got out of the car and went over to the townsite to look for bottles and artifacts. He told his family to stay in the car. He did not want them wandering on the highway.

Highway No. 2 is a heavily travelled east-west highway. Weather was good and visibility clear. A freight train on nearby tracks was passing the plaintiff’s auto with attendant noise and attraction for children. There was an unobstructed view in both directions for about one-half mile.

A short time after plaintiff left his auto one of the children had to go to the bathroom. The mother told them to stay on the right hand side of the car so she could watch them. The children were ages two to eight. The mother remained in the [59]*59car; and, unnoticed two of the boys, David 4, and Kenneth, 7, crossed the highway to watch the train. The mother saw the boys across the highway but she remained in the car. She observed no traffic.

The defendant, a Lutheran minister, was driving his auto easterly on highway No. 2. He first noticed plaintiff’s auto parked off the road when he was about 1/3 mile away. At about 1/4 mile he recognized people at the parked car. At about 1/8 of a mile he recognized two figures across the highway on the north. The defendant saw the two children, facing the train to the north, standing north of the shoulder of the highway near the edge of the borrow pit. When he first saw the boys he blew his horn. He began slowing down. He continued to slow down. When he saw the larger of the two boys turn and start across the highway he “dynamited” his brakes. The larger boy made it. The younger boy, David, started, hesitated, and then ran across the highway. 204 feet of skid marks of defendant’s car were left on the highway surface. David was struck when he nearly reached plaintiff’s car and was killed instantly.

Up to this point there is no dispute in the evidence. But, as to the passing freight train with its attendant noise and the lapse of time while plaintiff left to search for bottles and artifacts, plaintiff argues that not more than one minute elapsed. Plaintiff bases this on the speed of the train from the distance travelled and elapsed time based upon railroad records. Yet those same records show two trains within ten minutes of each other. A reading of plaintiff’s testimony as to his walk from the auto over to the townsite where an old tavern had been, going behind the buildings and being east of the buildings when he saw his wife running towards the defendant’s ear, all indicated elapsed time to have been more than one minute. However, this conflict, if it be one, is not of significance.

The case was submitted to the jury after a motion to dismiss was denied and a unanimous verdict was returned for defendant.

[60]*60The issues for review are three-fold:

(1) Conduct of defense counsel.

(2) Conduct of trial court.

(3) Instructions given and refused.

The first issue concerns the final argument made by defense counsel in which he said among other things:

“The question is, shall plaintiff and wife profit from own wrong doing and Reverend Ylvisaker suffer a mental and financial punishment or shall the blame, if any there was, rest upon the mother and father, who knowingly permitted their children to go unattended in a place of known danger # * #
“Once again are the parents going to profit by their wrong doing? Is Reverend Ylvisaker going to be punished mentally and financially for doing what was reasonable and safe. You may decide who was at fault or perhaps that no one was at fault. No money can return this child, let us put this terrible tragedy to rest forever, let neither party bear the heavy burden of guilt, a verdict for the defendant will do this.”

After the conclusion of the final argument of both plaintiff and defense counsel, the following transpired:

“MR. BOTTOMLY. I would like to make a motion outside of the hearing of the jury.
“THE COURT: At this stage of the game, all right.
“(Whereupon, the jury was duly admonished by the Court and excused at 2:10 P.M.)
“MR BOTTOMLY: If it please the Court, on two occasions in the closing argument counsel for the defendant suggested that the defendant would suffer financial ruin or detriment and punishment as a result of any verdict. This is clearly improper and it is putting insurance in in reverse and there is a case directly in point where counsel got up and argued to the jury that it would ruin the jury (sic), but what counsel didn’t say is how much insurance the defendant had.
“THE COURT: He hadn’t said.
[61]*61‘MR. BOTTOMLY: But when the other counsel got up to ■argue the Supreme Court held that this was absolutely Court •error, he had to counter act so I am making the motion now.
“THE COURT: Are you going to make a statement to the jury as to how much?
“MR. BOTTOMLY: No.
“THE COURT: Because if you are going to you will get ■a mis-trial now.
“MR. BOTTOMLY: That is why I am making this motion right now, I am asking this Court to admonish this jury there is no evidence that the defendant will suffer any financial punishment as a result of any verdict that may be rendered •and admonish counsel concerning that statement.
“THE COURT: I am not going to do it, bring in the jury, your motion is denied.
“MR. BOTTOMLY: Is it proper for me to make a comment that there is no evidence that the defendant will suffer financial detriment before the trial?
“THE COURT: If you draw in the question of insurance there will be a mis-trial.
“MR. BOTTOMLY: I won’t.
“AFTER RECESS, 2-15 P.M.
“THE COURT: Stipulate that the jury are all present ?
“MR. BOTTOMLY: Yes, sir.
“MR. MORRISON: So stipulated.
“(WHEREUPON, Mr. Bottomly makes the closing argument for the plaintiff.)”

The foregoing exchange perhaps only makes sense in the context of the opening of the case when defense counsel moved to dismiss a subpoena duces tecum issued immediately before trial for a Mr. Hitt, an insurance adjuster. In an exchange then, the trial court warned plaintiff’s counsel not to involve insurance. While the court did not rule on the motion, Kitt was never called as a witness and no suggestion or offer of proof was made as to any relevancy or materiality his presence [62]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
446 P.2d 432, 152 Mont. 57, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morehouse-v-ylvisaker-mont-1968.