Serr v. Biwabik Concrete Aggregate Co.

278 N.W. 355, 202 Minn. 165, 117 A.L.R. 1009, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 810
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 11, 1938
DocketNo. 31,285.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 278 N.W. 355 (Serr v. Biwabik Concrete Aggregate Co.) 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
Serr v. Biwabik Concrete Aggregate Co., 278 N.W. 355, 202 Minn. 165, 117 A.L.R. 1009, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 810 (Mich. 1938).

Opinions

1 Reported in 278 N.W. 355. Defendant appeals from an order denying its blended motion for judgment notwithstanding or new trial.

The facts viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff may be summarized in this fashion: Defendant over a period of years had *Page 168 been engaged in operating a gravel plant near highway No. 35 between Aurora and Biwabik. In carrying on its work it had occasion to use horses. A few days prior to July 30, 1930, it had borrowed a horse from a near-by farmer and was using it with one of its own. Both animals were in its exclusive care and possession, the man in charge being one Korenich. On the day mentioned the borrowed horse had been used with one of defendant's own horses at the plant. At quitting time, about five o'clock that afternoon, Korenich took the horses to the company's barn for the purpose of unharnessing them. He tied and unharnessed the company's horse first. Without tying the horse here involved, although there was a halter rope attached to it, he proceeded to take off its harness. As the harness was removed the horse turned around and calmly took a walk out of the barn. Korenich made some futile efforts to catch it, but the horse kept "turning around and wouldn't let me catch him. I tried to catch him a couple of minutes, or a minute or to, I tried to catch him so as to put him back in the barn." Having failed to accomplish his purpose, he concluded to also let loose the other horse, it being his idea that if the horses were together they probably would not stray far. Another horse owned by defendant but not in use that day had been permitted to roam outside all day. As quitting time had arrived Korenich made no further effort to secure any of the horses but left for his home some distance away.

Mr. Taylor, president and active manager of defendant company, was at the office near which the barn was located. He stayed until about six o'clock but claims he did not see the horses. There was no fence between the company's property where the horses were grazing and the highway, so the horses could "go anywhere they wanted to."

Shortly after nine o'clock that evening, the night being "pretty dark," the accident happened. Plaintiff, as a guest passenger, was riding in a car driven by one Strutzel, she and two other girls occupying the rear seat, one Zimmerman occupying the front seat with and to the right of the driver. Strutzel testified that he was driving upon this highway, which is a paved and much used one, at *Page 169 a rate of about 35 to 40 miles an hour. He describes the road as wide, the country as hilly. He noticed a car coming from the opposite direction. Both cars were lighted. As the two cars were approaching each other Strutzel was "blinded by the other driver's lights to a certain extent." As the approaching car "was just about passing me, it had just probably got alongside of me and passed me, I noticed this object that loomed up in front of me; it probably had come from behind the other car. I was momentarily blinded as you are when a car passes you. * * * Well, as soon as I saw this object loom up in front of me, probably not over 10 or 12 feet away, I sharply, quickly, turned to the right over on the shoulder to avoid the accident, but the horse hit the left side of the car." The object to which the witness referred was the borrowed horse. As a result both windows on the left side of the car were smashed and the horse instantly killed. The witness noticed that plaintiff "was quite badly cut up" from the shattered glass. She was taken immediately to a doctor for treatment and thereafter taken to her father's home not far distant from the place of accident.

Plaintiff's father was an employe of defendant. He testified that the day after the accident Mr. Taylor, acting for defendant, talked to him about the accident. He told Taylor that his daughter "was hurt pretty bad." A few days later Taylor and one Campbell, also an officer of defendant, again talked to plaintiff's father, the former suggesting "if your daughter would like to do any settlement about that accident case" to come around to the office. Accordingly, plaintiff and her father called there a few days later. The father told Taylor: "Mr. Taylor, I bring her over now. If you got anything to do with it." Replying, Taylor is quoted as saying: "She looks pretty terrible, but I don't know if I got anything to do with it." Apparently nothing was done that day. The visit was short. Plaintiff testified that Taylor "looked very angry" and said, "I haven't anything to do with that. I didn't have anything to do with that accident." Something like a week or more thereafter Taylor drove up to her father's house bringing with him a young lady, a notary, and asked plaintiff to get into the car with them so that they might go to the bank. This was Saturday afternoon, *Page 170 August 18. The only persons at the bank were Taylor, the young lady notary, and plaintiff. Plaintiff testified: "Mr. Taylor told me that he had talked to the doctor and asked him about my injuries, and the doctor told him that I would be all right pretty soon and my scars would disappear in time, and he was offering me $100, which he thought was enough to cover my doctor bills and pay my expenses, pay for my clothes that were ruined." She also testified that she had been seeing the doctor every day since the accident and that she had inquired of him, "if I would be all right or not, or the way I should be, and if my scars would disappear, and he said, 'Yes, they will take a little time, but they will gradually disappear.' " A $100 check had been prepared before this date by Mr. Taylor, also a contract of release and indemnity. Plaintiff testified as follows: "He had a check already prepared, all written out; he said he was offering me that check for $100, and he thought that was enough to cover my expenses." Plaintiff thought this settlement was fair, as she "never dreamed I had anything like that in my head," referring to the piece of glass in her head to which reference will be made later. The release, a typewritten instrument of two pages, was handed to her folded in such fashion as to disclose only a few lines above the places for the signature of all the occupants of the Strutzel car. Plaintiff signed the release without reading it, nor was it read or explained to her. She was still suffering from the shock caused by the accident. She accepted the check the same day, August 18, 1930, and indorsed and cashed it some eight or nine days later. The check bears date August 16, the release August 11, 1930. The release appears to have been acknowledged August 18, and all occupants of the car apparently have signed it.

She remained at home with her parents until sometime in September, receiving treatment from time to time. But she experienced great pain, became nervous and fidgety. Nevertheless she took on the job of teaching school in South Dakota and remained there, and later was married. A child was born to her about a year and a half after the marriage. She continued to suffer pain in the region of that side of her head where she was most badly cut *Page 171 by the flying glass at the time of accident, and sought treatment from various medical men in the hope of getting relief. She was advised to use glasses. But this did not improve her condition. Finally her condition became so bad that she concluded to go to Rochester. On her way there she stopped at Minneapolis. While there she was informed about the Nicollet Clinic, and she went to it.

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Bluebook (online)
278 N.W. 355, 202 Minn. 165, 117 A.L.R. 1009, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/serr-v-biwabik-concrete-aggregate-co-minn-1938.