Rahja v. Current

119 N.W.2d 699, 264 Minn. 465, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 614
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 1, 1963
Docket38,603
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 119 N.W.2d 699 (Rahja v. Current) 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
Rahja v. Current, 119 N.W.2d 699, 264 Minn. 465, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 614 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

Rogosheske, Justice.

This is a personal injury action which arose as a result of an automobile’s striking a highway washout during the nighttime. The jury returned a verdict for defendant-driver. Plaintiff, a passenger and the owner of the automobile, appeals from a denial of her posttrial motions.

The essential problem is presented by plaintiff’s claim that a new trial should have been granted because of errors in the instructions to the jury.

Defendant, aged 70, a- retired service-station operator, is a neighbor of plaintiff, a widow aged 59. They reside at Hibbing. Plaintiff is an inexperienced driver who owns an automobile inherited from her husband and unused since his death nearly a year previous to the accident. On June 13, 1960, plaintiff readily accepted defendant’s offer to drive her in her automobile to Meadowlands, about 30 miles south of Hibbing, so that she could visit her sister. While driving there that afternoon, as they approached the village of Toivola, both plaintiff and defendant noticed and remarked about the hazard created by a rather large washout cutting into the opposite lane of travel of the highway. No further comment or investigation was then made, The only warning sign defendant observed was an amber flasher apparatus attached to a wooden sawhorse. This warning was placed some distance south of the washout and, because of the daylight, there was no indication that the flasher was operating.

The washout as described and shown by photographs was in the *467 nature of a cave-in or dropping away of the road surface and was semicircular in shape between 25 to 30 feet along the shoulder. It cut into more than half of the east lane of the roadway. The roadway at this point was straight, was nearly level, had a 24-foot blacktop surface, and, except for the washout, was in good condition.

There was evidence that it had rained sometime between the parties’ arrival at the home of plaintiff’s sister and their departure for Hibbing around midnight of the same day. When they left, a light rain or drizzle was still falling, necessitating the operation of windshield wipers and causing the roadway to be wet and to reflect the headlight beams. There were also noticeable patches of ground fog. No evidence was offered to prove that defendant appeared tired or that his familiarity with automobiles or his skill in driving was in any way affected, or that plaintiff’s acknowledged confidence in his ability to safely operate her automobile was in any manner reduced. As the automobile approached the washout area, defendant testified that he noticed a warning flasher some 100 or 150 feet from the washout. Apparently having forgotten both the existence and the location of the washout, he turned into the left lane to avoid what he thought was a truck pulled onto the side of the highway which appeared to display a type of warning signal he had previously observed during his driving experience. He noticed nothing other than the flasher which appeared to him to be located off or upon the edge of the highway. After driving approximately 75 feet at a speed of less than 35 miles per hour and seeing no other warning or danger, he began turning into his lane of travel. At this moment his right wheels dropped into the washout, whereupon he lost control and the automobile immediately began rolling over and settled at the bottom of a ditch a considerable distance below;, the surface of the highway. Before the impact, neither defendant nor plaintiff saw the many warning flags or delineators around the cave-in, or any other flasher signal farther down the road. The plaintiff testified that she was awake, although resting and listening to the radio at the time. A day following the accident, plaintiff admitted that she found no fault with defendant’s driving, asserting that he was a “very, very cautious driver.”

As is demonstrated by the foregoing brief recital of the evidence in *468 the light most favorable to defendant, plaintiffs claim that defendant’s negligence appears as a matter of law is without merit. 1 This contention and her other assignments of error, which we have reviewed, would not justify disturbing the verdict were it not for the impropriety of the court’s failure to affirmatively withdraw the issue of contributory negligence and of the instructions relative to unavoidable accident.

1. The defense of contributory negligence was both pleaded and urged by defendant throughout the trial. Cross-examination of plaintiff was directed toward emphasizing that it was her automobile defendant drove; that she was more familiar with the highway; and that because of the disparity in age between defendant and plaintiff she should have remembered the hazard and had greater vigilance as they were returning to Hibbing. Defendant’s request to submit this issue by proposed written instruction was as vigorously urged as was plaintiff’s proposed written request to affirmatively withdraw it. The court refused both and did not mention contributory negligence to the jury, thereby indirectly withdrawing the issue. Defendant on appeal persists in urging that evidentiary support exists for its submission.

We believe that the trial court’s decision not to submit the issue was correct. Upon the evidence viewed most favorably to defendant and under settled rules, the plaintiff cannot be charged with contributory negligence. A passenger has no duty to be a lookout for the driver; and the duty to exercise ordinary care for his own safety only requires active measures to protect himself — such as to give warning— when he becomes aware of a danger of which he knows, or should know, the driver is ignorant, and when it reasonably appears that such warning would be effective to prevent the accident. 2 Mere ownership of the automobile by the passenger neither permits charging the passenger with responsibility for the driver’s negligence nor provides sui- *469 ficient evidentiary basis upon which the personal negligence of the passenger can be predicated; nor would the added fact that the owner-passenger was being accommodated by the driver supply a sufficient basis. 3 There must be established some personal negligent conduct of the passenger. Here, if existent, it would be a negligent failure to warn. Under the facts and circumstances shown, there is clearly no evidentiary support upon which to base a finding that plaintiff was, or should have been, aware of the impending hazard and that she knew that the driver was ignorant of its existence.

However, under the circumstances of this case, we must conclude that reversible error was committed in failing to affirmatively withdraw the issue of contributory negligence. Where this defense is not only asserted by the pleadings but a good-faith effort is thereafter made to elicit proof sufficient to provide an evidentiary basis upon which the issue could be submitted, and where the parties are in contention as to the sufficiency of such proof, it is incumbent upon the court either to submit the issue — if justified by the evidence — or affirmatively to withdraw it by appropriate instructions. It is not enough to withdraw the defense indirectly by nonsubmission because that could —as it undoubtedly did in this case — mislead the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.W.2d 699, 264 Minn. 465, 1963 Minn. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rahja-v-current-minn-1963.