Ratcliff v. Murphy

430 P.2d 627, 150 Mont. 31, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 263
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1967
DocketNo. 11199
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 430 P.2d 627 (Ratcliff v. Murphy) 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
Ratcliff v. Murphy, 430 P.2d 627, 150 Mont. 31, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 263 (Mo. 1967).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a jury verdict for the defendant, Jim Murphy, on his counterclaim, in an action brought in district court. The plaintiff,. Viola Ratcliff, commenced the action, seeking damages for injuries she received when the car, in which she was a passenger, struck two of a number of cattle being driven across a highway by the defendant. The driver of the car, John Ahern, also brought an action for damages, to which action the defendant counterclaimed for the loss of the two cattle. The two actions were consolidated for purposes of trial but on the first day of the trial John Ahern moved to dismiss his action, which motion was granted, but with terms as will appear more particularly hereinafter.

The plaintiff rode with John Ahern, her foster son, from Gar-diner, Montana, to Livingston, Montana, on November 22, 1963. John Ahern’s purpose in going to Livingston was to transact business for Montana Travertine Quarries, a corporation, of which he was president and the plaintiff was secretary-treasurer. There is conflicting testimony as to whether the plaintiff was aiding in the transaction of corporation business during the trip.

On returning to Gardiner on the evening of the same day, John Ahern drove through Emigrant, Montana, and approxi[34]*34mately a mile and a half south of Emigrant struck the defendant’s herd of cattle. At this time, although the sun had set, there was still a little light on the horizon. Mrs. Gail Anderson, who was aiding the defendant in the cattle drive, was in a car stationed on the side of the road fifty yards north of where the cattle were crossing the highway. The ear was facing toward the north, which is the direction from which the Ahern vehicle was approaching, and the headlights were on. Testimony indicates that Mrs. Anderson, on noticing the approach of the Ahern car, attempted to warn them of the danger existing by waving a flashlight at them and honking the horn on the car. John Ahern did not respond to the signals until almost on the cattle, at which time it was too late to avoid impact. Estimates of the speed of his car at the time he first responded to the warning ranged from fifty to sixty-five miles per hour. Both the plaintiff and John Ahern received injuries and his car was damaged. Two of the defendants’ cattle were killed.

Plaintiff and John Ahern filed separate actions, to which latter action the defendant filed his counterclaim. On stipulation of counsel the two actions were consolidated for trial. A pre-trial order was issued which contained the consolidation and noted the existence of the counterclaim. As previously indicated, on the day of the trial John Ahern moved to have the suit dismissed as to himself and the court granted the motion. An amended pre-trial order was then filed which deleted John Ahern as a party plaintiff, but which retained the allegation that defendant sought damages for the loss of the two cattle. At the opening of the trial the court stated: “This is the time set to try cause No. 11794, and any portions of the other cause that may be necessary, wherein Viola Orr Ratcliff is the plaintiff * * ®.” The verdict rendered by the jury was as follows: “We, the jury * * * find in favor of the defendant, Jim Murphy, on the counterclaim, and against John Ahern, and award the defendant, Jim Murphy, damages in the sum of $400.00 dollars.”

[35]*35Four issues present themselves on the appeal by the plaintiff.

(1) On what theory of law is the verdict based?

(2) Does the verdict foreclose the rights of the plaintiff?

(3) Against whom is the counterclaim directed and what is its effect? and

(4) Who is to bear the cost of the transcript on appeal?

We will answer these questions in the order presented including specifications of error.

Issue No. 1. The verdict does not specifically state what point of law it is based on. Had the plaintiff wished the jury to clarify this point he should have requested that the jury be returned to the jury room, with adequate instructions, to specify the theory of law on which the verdict was based. As we see it, there is only one possible theory of law which will support the verdict and we must presume that the jury reached its decision on that theory. The jury could not have found that the defendant was negligent because that would have barred recovery on the counterclaim. They could not have found that the negligence of John Ahern ivas imputed to the plaintiff because recovery on the counterclaim is directed only against John Ahem. The jury then must have found that the acts of John Ahern were the sole proximate cause of the accident and that neither the defendant nor the plaintiff contributed thereto.

The first three specifications of error raised by the plaintiff are directed toward questions of joint enterprise. But because the verdict must be based on the acts of John Ahern being the sole proximate cause of the accident, and because the weight of the evidence will support such a finding, the first three specifications of error would not affect the verdict nor the substantial rights of the parties, and therefore, under rule 61, M.R.Crv.P., would constitute harmless error.

Further we are not convinced that error occurred. The court refused to give plaintiff’s offered instructions 11, 12, 13, and [36]*3614 on joint enterprise on the basis that they appeared elsewhere in better form. We find no fault in the instructions actually given on joint enterprise which would cause us to overrule the court on this point.

Instruction 13, given by the court, instructed the jury that “one of the questions for you to determine in this case is whether plaintiff and John Ahern were engaged in a joint enterprise at the time of the accident in question.” In the Montana case of Hurly v. Tymofichuk, 139 Mont. 50, 359 P.2d 378, it was held that the district court had not committed error in ruling on joint enterprise as a matter of law, and refusing to submit the question to the jury. However, that case and the present case are distinguishable. In the Hurly case there were no facts in dispute as to any elements -which might indicate the existence or nonexistence of a joint enterprise. In this case both the plaintiff and John Ahern impeached themselves in testimony relating to elements of joint enterprise. A question of fact arose requiring submission to the jury for determination. As noted in Blashfield Automobile Law and Practice, § 62.25:

“While the question of what constitutes a joint enterprise or joint adventure is a question of law, the question of whether the driver of an automobile and a passenger therein are engaged in a common enterprise in the legal sense contemplated under this rule so as to render the passenger chargeable with the negligence of the driver is usually one of fact unless the evidence is of insufficient probative force to warrant submission of the issue to the jury.”

Issue No. 2. The fifth specification of error is failure by the jury to render a verdict on issues tried in the plaintiff’s case. R.C.M.1947, § 93-1301-7, subd. 18, states the following rebuttal presumption “That all matters within an issue were laid before the jury and passed upon by them * * We feel that this presumption has not been overcome, that the verdict [37]*37is responsive to the issues tried and that it is against the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 P.2d 627, 150 Mont. 31, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratcliff-v-murphy-mont-1967.