Sundeen v. Barthel

63 N.W.2d 267, 241 Minn. 398, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 591
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 12, 1954
Docket36,203, 36,204, 36,205, 36,206
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 63 N.W.2d 267 (Sundeen v. Barthel) 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
Sundeen v. Barthel, 63 N.W.2d 267, 241 Minn. 398, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 591 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

The following four personal injury actions are involved in this appeal: (1) Action by Ruth Sundeen against her brother, Edwin *400 Sundeen, as host and driver, and William Barthel, owner and driver of the other car in the collision; (2) action by Joyce M. Geiser, a passenger in the Barthel car, against Edwin Sundeen; (3) action by Robert P. Geiser, a passenger in the Barthel ear, against Edwin Sundeen; (á) action by Luella Borchardt, a minor, a passenger in the Barthel car, against Edwin Sundeen.

After these actions were commenced, Edwin Sundeen, as defendant, obtained a joinder of William Barthel as a third-party defendant in the Geiser and Borchardt actions, which resulted in third-party pleadings being filed and issue fully joined in that manner. The cases were thereafter consolidated for purposes of trial. Defendant Sundeen moved for a directed verdict at the close of all the testimony, and this motion was denied by the court. The jury returned verdicts in favor of plaintiffs against both Edwin Sundeen and William Barthel in all four cases. The defendant Sundeen thereafter moved the court for an order for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or in the alternative for a new trial. This motion was denied by the trial court, and the appeal to this court followed. The relief sought by defendant Sundeen, defendant Barthel not having appealed, is an order from this court setting aside the verdicts and granting judgment notwithstanding the verdict in all the cases, and if this be denied, then an order granting a new trial.

A reading of the record in these cases discloses a set of facts which are conflicting and contradictory in every respect. The evidence is fairly clear, however, on the following points:

The collision occurred on the evening of September 7, 1952, sometime between six and seven o’clock. The cars were approaching each other from opposite directions on trunk highway No. 95 about three miles west of Almelund in Chisago county. Highway No. 95 runs in an east-west direction and is of black-top construction approximately 2á feet in width with three- to five-foot shoulders off each edge, bounded by somewhat shallow ditches leading out from the shoulders. There was no painted center line, and although respondents emphasize the testimony of the highway patrolman that tarvia highways are constructed half at a time and that where the *401 two sides meet a line is formed in the center, the patrolman further testified that this particular highway had been seal-coated a month prior to the accident thus leveling the road and removing any such sign of a line.

Edwin Sundeen was driving his Ford automobile in an easterly direction on the highway, accompanied by his sister, plaintiff Euth Sundeen, as his invited guest. William Barthel, owner of the other car involved, was driving his Chevrolet in a westerly direction on the highway, accompanied by plaintiffs Luella Borchardt, Eobert Geiser, and Joyce Geiser, and a child who does not figure in these actions. As the two vehicles approached each other, a tractor driven by one Marion Magnuson, also traveling west, was directly ahead of the Barthel car. The two automobiles were traveling from 40 to 45 miles per hour at the time of impact. Both cars were damaged on their left fronts, which indicates a head-on collision to that extent. Although the evidence is conflicting as to the time of the accident and the visibility at the time of impact, the highway patrolman called to the scene testified that he was notified of the collision at 6:44 p. m., only six minutes after sunset on September 7, and other testimony indicates that visibility was good although the sky was partially clouded over.

There is no impartial eye-witness account of the impact, since Marion Magnuson, the tractor driver, stated that the accident occurred somewhere close to the rear of the tractor after she had met and passed the Sundeen car, and that although she heard the crash she did not see it.

Whether Edwin Sundeen was negligent in the operation of his car and, if so, whether his negligence contributed to the cause of the accident, along with the established negligence of Barthel, depends largely on the position of the two cars at the time of impact; and it is on this point that the testimony is conflicting and contradictory.

Sundeen testified that, although his view was open and unobstructed, he recollected seeing the tractor and the Barthel car only when he was a quarter of a mile from them and that he did not *402 at any time see the Barthel car again either before the collision or at the time of impact.

Testimony of the parties in the Barthel car indicates that none of them saw the tractor ahead until within 80 to 100 feet from it. There is some controversy as to whether the tractor was being driven on the shoulder or whether it took up most of its own lane, but it is uncontested that at no time was the tractor in the wrong lane. Evidence discloses that the tractor was of normal size and no more difficult to see over than others commonly seen on our highways. Apparently Barthel applied the brakes and turned out with the intention of passing the tractor. The highway patrolman testified that after the accident Barthel had made a statement that on first seeing the tractor he applied his brakes and slowly skidded into the other lane. Only when he was partially in the other lane did Barthel see the Sundeen car coming toward him. The evidence is contradictory as to whether Sundeen was then driving in his proper lane. Ruth and Edwin Sundeen both testified that Sundeen had been driving in his own lane at all times, but the testimony of Barthel and Robert Geiser was that Sundeen was driving on or toward the center of the road immediately prior to the accident. Marion Magnuson, driver of the tractor, stated that she had seen both vehicles prior to the accident and that at that time both were in their proper lanes.

An attempt to discover the position of the cars at the impact by noting the location of the cars after the accident is hampered by the fact that the Barthel car was removed by a tow truck before the highway patrolman arrived at the scene. The testimony of witnesses who saw the cars while they were both in position is largely contradictory. Elmer Frestad, who arrived at the scene soon after the accident, testified that the Barthel car was three-fourths in the eastbound lane facing south with its front end one or two feet from the south edge. Harry Medin, the deputy sheriff, first testified that the front end of the car was over the center of the road into the eastbound lane but later said it was “just up to the center line.” Joyce Geiser testified that the Barthel car was on the eastbound *403 lane to such an extent that traffic immediately after the accident was forced to pass the cars on the north side of the highway. Much of the testimony of Marion Magnuson was confused and self-contradictory, and it is of little value on this point.

There is no controversy as to the location of the Sundeen car, which the evidence indicates was toward the outside edge of its own lane, with the right wheels on the shoulder.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.W.2d 267, 241 Minn. 398, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sundeen-v-barthel-minn-1954.