W.G.O. v. Crandall

640 N.W.2d 344, 2002 Minn. LEXIS 141, 2002 WL 356290
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 7, 2002
DocketC2-00-1266
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 640 N.W.2d 344 (W.G.O. v. Crandall) 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
W.G.O. v. Crandall, 640 N.W.2d 344, 2002 Minn. LEXIS 141, 2002 WL 356290 (Mich. 2002).

Opinion

*345 OPINION

STRINGER, Justice.

A.W.O. (respondent) 1 was injured when the bicycle he was riding was struck by an automobile driven by Mary Crandall (appellant) in August of 1993, when respondent was twelve years old. W.G.O., respondent’s father, filed suit against appellant in October of 1998, alleging that appellant’s negligence caused physical and emotional injury and financial damage to respondent. Appellant denied these allegations and asserted the affirmative defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of the risk. A jury concluded that appellant was 80% at fault and respondent was 20% at fault and awarded $391,683.16 in damages.

Appellant moved for a new trial or, in the alternative, judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) arguing that the jury should have been instructed on the “emergency rule” which at the time of the trial was expressed in CIVJIG 110, providing:

A person confronted with an emergency through no negligence of [his][her] own who, in an attempt to avoid the danger, does not choose the best or safest way, is not negligent because of such choice unless the choice was so hazardous that a reasonable person would not have made it under like circumstances.

4 Minn. Dist. Judges Ass’n, Minnesota Practice Jury Instruction Guides, Civil, CIVJIG 110 (3d ed.1986) (since modified and currently found at CIVJIG 26.35 (4th ed.1999)). 2 Appellant also asserted that respondent’s accident reconstruction expert was allowed to express opinions as to average driving speed and appellant’s braking not based on proper foundation. Appellant’s motion was denied and she appealed. The court of appeals, in a split decision, concluded that the trial court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury on the emergency rule because the emergency situation was created, at least in part, by appellant’s own negligence. The court also ruled that the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of respondent’s expert, but concluded the error was not prejudicial. The dissent disagreed, contending that prejudicial error resulted from both the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on the emergency rule and its improper admission of testimony from respondent’s expert witness. 3 We reverse and remand for a new trial as to liability only. 4

On the afternoon of August 3, 1993, appellant left her local country club in Austin, Minnesota after playing tennis and eating lunch. She admitted sampling two to four ounces of wine along with her meal *346 approximately one hour before the accident occurred. Appellant exited 1-90 and proceeded in the left lane of the two southbound lanes of Oakland Place heading in the direction of Eighth Avenue. At about the same time, respondent and a friend were riding their bicycles in an easterly direction on Eighth Avenue N.E. toward the intersection of Oakland Place where a stop sign controls the Eighth Avenue traffic. Traffic exiting westbound 1-90 is channeled directly onto Oakland Place which consists of four lanes, two in each direction, separated by a grass median. Vehicles traveling south on this stretch of Oakland Place are not subject to any stop or yield sign; as the investigating police officer testified, this is a “limbo area” with regard to speed as drivers exiting 1-90 onto Oakland Place are likely driving somewhere between the 55-mph highway speed 5 and the 40-mph speed limit posted just beyond the Eighth Avenue intersection. 6 Both parties testified that they were familiar with other traffic at this intersection: appellant acknowledged that she was aware that children frequented the area as there was a lake in the vicinity, and respondent, an experienced biker, knew that cars traveling south on Oakland Place were exiting at freeway speed from nearby 1-90.

From the top of the overpass, about 500 feet from the intersection of Eighth Avenue, appellant noticed respondent and his friend approaching the stop sign at a moderate speed. According to appellant’s testimony, the boys were about 45-75 feet from the intersection when she first saw them. Appellant testified at trial that she was probably going about 50-mph as she exited the freeway, slowing to approximately 40-45-mph on the stretch just before the accident, and that she slowed down when she noticed respondent and his friend in the distance.

Although there is disagreement as to whether respondent stopped at the intersection, it is undisputed that he was looking to the right talking to his friend when he entered Oakland Place and did not see appellant’s car approaching on his left until immediately before impact. Appellant testified that she observed the boys for more than ten seconds, and that she had no indication that respondent was not going to stop until she saw him enter the intersection. At that point appellant put on her brakes and thought she had almost stopped before hitting him — she came to a complete stop about 10-15 feet after the point of impact.

Respondent’s accident reconstruction expert testified that appellant was traveling at a rate of at least 30-mph at the time of impact and that respondent was thrown approximately 60 feet as a result of the collision; appellant’s reconstruction expert estimated appellant’s traveling speed at about 20-mph and estimated that respondent was thrown about 25 feet upon impact with appellant’s vehicle.

According to appellant’s testimony and the police report, there was damage to the front left driver’s side of the vehicle and to the far rear end of respondent’s bicycle, *347 suggesting that appellant’s car just clipped the back of respondent’s bicycle as he was crossing the street. The police officer testified that there was no physical evidence with regard to skid marks or point of impact, and no indication of evasive or defensive maneuvers by either party. Based on his knowledge of average reaction time and stopping distance, the officer concluded that appellant was not traveling at an excessive speed at the time of the accident. Although appellant acknowledged that the accident would not have occurred if she had been just 1 ⅛ feet farther to the right, she claimed she had no time to swerve or even honk her horn. Consistent with that testimony, respondent’s friend, biking with him that day, testified that he did not hear any car honk and that he did not hear the sound of brakes until after respondent was hit.

Respondent sustained serious injuries to his lower left leg as a result of the accident: he had an open fracture, massive soft tissue injury, and required skin grafting on a 26 x 15 cm wound using a donor site on his thigh. Complications from these initial injuries, including skin infections and two subsequent leg fractures, prolonged his recovery for over a year.

On October 16, 1998, respondent’s father filed this lawsuit on respondent’s behalf alleging that appellant’s negligence in driving too fast and failing to yield caused severe physical injury, emotional harm, and significant financial expense to respondent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
640 N.W.2d 344, 2002 Minn. LEXIS 141, 2002 WL 356290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wgo-v-crandall-minn-2002.