Vasatka v. Matsch

13 N.W.2d 483, 216 Minn. 530, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 645
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 3, 1944
DocketNos. 33,590, 33,591.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 N.W.2d 483 (Vasatka v. Matsch) 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
Vasatka v. Matsch, 13 N.W.2d 483, 216 Minn. 530, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 645 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

Thomas Gallagher, Justice.

Plaintiffs brought actions against defendants for damages arising out of an automobile collision. The cases were consolidated for trial, the jury returning verdicts for defendants. Subsequently, plaintiffs’ motions for new trials were denied. Judgments were entered, following which plaintiffs, with the court’s consent, moved to vacate the same and for new trials on the ground, among others, of newly discovered evidence. The court thereupon ordered the judgments vacated and granted plaintiffs new trials. From such orders these appeals are taken.

The facts are as follows: On September 10, 1941, plaintiff Edward Vasatka was driving his automobile west toward Minneapolis from Hastings, on paved highway No. 55, after dark, about 8:30 p. m. Defendant Robert Matsch, accompanied by his mother, Mildred Matsch, and his aunt, Dorothy Nesbitt, was driving east on said highway toward Hastings. The weather was clear and the pavement dry. The highway was “zoned” for 50 miles per hour at the time in question. About a mile west of Hastings, Robert, in attempting to pass an unlighted hayrack and team of horses driven by one Draeger, also traveling east on said highway, crossed over onto the north side of the center of the highway “a couple of feet.” In consequence, the Matsch' car collided with the westbound Vasat-ka car, causing damages to the latter and injuries to Vasatka and his wife, Florence, a passenger, for which the Vasatkas brought these actions.

Title to the automobile driven by defendant Robert Matsch was in the name of his brother, defendant Loren Matsch. The latter denied ownership thereof and asserted title had been placed in his name merely as a favor to his brother Robert, who at the time the car was purchased was under the age of 18 and whose parents *532 would not sign the contract purchase agreement for him nor consent to register the car in the name of either.

The parents of defendants, to wit: Louis and Mildred Matsch, also commenced actions against them and against Edward Vasatka, for damages and injuries arising out of said accident. Their cases were tried subsequent to the cases here involved and after the court’s denial of plaintiffs’ first motions for new trials herein. In the parents’ actions the jury likewise returned verdicts in favor of all defendants.

Plaintiffs’ second motions for new trials were in part based upon newly discovered evidence, which, they asserted, was discovered as a result of the trial of the parents’ actions. In this connection, plaintiffs claimed that in the trial of the Vasatka cases Robert Matsch testified that he was traveling between 45 and 50 miles per hour; that in the second actions, brought by his parents, his father, Louis Matsch, testified that following the accident, on. two separate occasions, Robert had’advised him that the accident was caused in part by his speed at the time — that he had stated “he was driving awful fast and that he could not avoid hitting either the hayrack or this [the Vasatka] car”; that still later, while he was riding with Robert in another car and requested him to reduce his speed of 60 miles per hour, Robert had replied: “If you think this is fast, you should have been with me the night of the accident.”

Later in the second actions, when Robert was questioned about these statements, he admitted making them, but reiterated his statements made in the trial of the Vasatka actions that his speed was between 45 and 50 miles per hour at the time of the accident, and asserted that the aforesaid statements to his father were made in the light of his best judgment that his speed at the time of the accident had been between 45 and 50 miles per hour.

In the second actions, in response to special interrogatories submitted to it, the jury specifically determined that Robert Matsch rather than Loren Matsch was the owner of the Matsch car at the time of the accident.

*533 . Plaintiffs’ motions to vacate the judgments and for new trials were based on their claim that at the time of trial of the second actions plaintiffs learned they “could have proved by Louis B. Matsch, one of the plaintiffs, and by the admissions of Robert G-. Matsch upon the witness stand” that said Robert Matsch had testified falsely in the trial of this cause with respect to the following particulars:

“(a) That he was driving at 45 or 50 miles an hour at the time of the accident.
“(b) That while driving at said rate of speed a hayrack loomed up in front of him and he turned out to pass to the left of it.
“(c) That he turned to the left of the center of the highway to avoid smashing into the back of the hayrack.”

Presumably subparagraphs (b) and (c) were dependent upon whether there was additional evidence as to excessive speed, since otherwise exactly the same account of the points covered -by these paragraphs was related by Robert in both actions.

In their motions, plaintiffs also claimed that the court erred in instructing the jury as follows:

“One suddenly confronted by a peril through no fault of his own who in an attempt to escape does not choose the best or safest way shall not be held negligent because of such choice unless it was so hazardous that an ordinarily prudent person would not have made it under similar circumstances.
“The burden of proving that a driver being upon the wrong side of the highway was not due to any negligence or lack of care on his part but because of an emergency which justifies his position on the wrong side of the highway, that is upon the defendant driver.”

As a part of the orders granting plaintiffs’ motions, the court’s memorandum stated:

“Perjury is abhorrent to any court.
“* * * if the jury * * * had knowledge that Robert was going *534 to testify in the second cases under oath to a different state of facts, would the jury have reached the verdict which it did?
*****
“* * * the court is of the opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to an order vacating and setting aside the judgment * * * and for an order * * * granting * * * a new trial on the grounds of material evidence newly discovered which * * * would tend to prove perjury. That a new trial will likely change the results.”

On appeal, defendants’ principal contentions are: (1) That since the alleged newly discovered evidence did not relate to the title of the automobile and since, in addition, the jury’s special verdicts in the second actions foreclosed the question of ownership of the car, it was error to grant new trials as to defendant Loren Matsch; (2) that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering new trials on the ground of newly discovered evidence, since no proper showing was made that such evidence could not have been obtained prior to the first trials and since such evidence did not differ from the evidence adduced at the first trials or in any respect indicate perjury; and (3) that the court erred in instructing the jury on the “sudden emergency” doctrine as above indicated.

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.W.2d 483, 216 Minn. 530, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vasatka-v-matsch-minn-1944.