Wozniak v. Luta

103 N.W.2d 870, 258 Minn. 234, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 604
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 10, 1960
Docket37,851
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 N.W.2d 870 (Wozniak v. Luta) 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
Wozniak v. Luta, 103 N.W.2d 870, 258 Minn. 234, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 604 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Frank T. Gallagher, Justice.

Appeal from a judgment and from an order denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial or for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

At about 1 p. m., March 26, 1956, the defendant Evelyn Luta was driving a 1952 Plymouth 2-door coupe jointly owned with her husband, defendant Leonard Luta. She was proceeding north on 20th Avenue South, which runs generally north and south in Minneapolis. About one and a half blocks north of Washington Avenue South, approximately midway between First Street and Second Street, there was an impact between her car and the plaintiff Danny Wozniak, then 5 years old. This action was brought in his behalf by Mary Wozniak, his mother and natural guardian.

The neighborhood where the accident happened was partially residential and partially industrial; in the block where the impact occurred *236 there were homes on the east side of the street and the other side was industrial.

The paved portion of 20th Avenue South was 32 feet wide from curb to curb. The weather was clear and the surface of the street was dry and free of obstructions. The street had a black-top surface and was level, with no grade.

There were cars parked quite solidly along both sides of the street. In addition, on the west side of the street there was a second row of cars parked on the boulevard, and in some places the parked cars were three deep.

Approximately 25 feet from the west curb of 20th Avenue adjacent to the point of impact, there was a gas company building with a metal platform on the side facing 20th Avenue. The platform was about 4 feet square, with an iron railing, and about 5 feet above the ground level. There were steps leading to the ground. It was visible from Second Street even with cars parked in front of it.

At the time of the accident, and immediately prior thereto, there were no other cars traveling on 20th Avenue in either direction in the area involved. As she passed Second Street going north and approached the point of impact, Mrs. Luta was driving near the center of 20th Avenue with the left wheels of her car about 2 feet over the centerline. As she entered the block where the accident occurred, she testified that the speed of her car got up to 12 to 15 miles per hour.

As she proceeded up the block to the point where the accident occurred, Mrs. Luta saw several children playing on the gas company platform when she was approximately one car length, or 17 or 18 feet, south from the platform. When she noticed the children, she said that she saw one of them jump from either the platform or the steps, and that she immediately applied the brakes on her car. She claims that the child was “lost in the cars” and that she waited to see where he was going to come out. She said that when she again observed the child he was pretty close to the street to her left, “running with all his might.”

At the time that she made her second observation she said she was applying the brakes on her car, which was still moving. When asked about speed, she replied, “Well, at that time it wasn’t very much, be *237 cause that was almost when — it happened so quickly. He hit the side of the car and I was stopped at the same time.” She said that when she made that observation it was just a couple of seconds before the impact; that she thought her car was almost stopped at that time; and that she was driving “practically in the center of the street.”

She claimed the boy hit the side of her car back of the bumper at the left front fender. She said her car did not travel after the collision; that when the boy hit the car he fell down; that she got out of the car immediately, picked him up, looked around to see if there was someone else in the area but no one was there.

She walked around back of the car, carrying the boy, and then talked with his mother and a Mrs. Rush, who came out about that time from the rear of their homes, on the east side of the street near the scene of the accident. Among other things, she claimed that the boy’s mother said to him, “Danny, I told you you were going to get hit one of these days.” At approximately that time a taxicab appeared and Danny, accompanied by his mother, was taken to the hospital.

Plaintiffs contend that there were conflicts between Mrs. Luta’s testimony at the trial and her deposition taken previously, when, according to plaintiffs, she testified that she coasted or glided her car until the boy actually darted out from between the parked cars and that was when she applied her brakes.

In any event, Mrs. Luta testified at the trial that Danny “came out from between the cars somewhere”; that he “was running just as fast as his legs could carry him”; that “he hit the side of the car”; and that the part of her car that was involved was the left front fender back of the bumper. She further said that, “he hit the car and fell down” and that when she saw him after the accident, “he was right there next to the car.” She did not recall whether she blew the horn on her car.

Mrs. Wozniak, the boy’s mother, said she was at the back of her house when she heard a loud squealing noise from an automobile. She then went to the front sidewalk and saw Mrs. Luta carrying Danny. She described some of his injuries and said that she went to the hospital with him. She claims that she never told Mrs. Luta that her boy ran out on the street quite often nor that he had almost been hit before. The *238 only thing she recalled saying to Mrs. Luta was, “What you doing to my boy?”

Mr. Widlund, a Minneapolis police officer, was called to the scene of the accident about 1 p. m. When he got there he was met by Mrs. Luta who told him about hitting the boy and that he had been taken to the hospital. She pointed out to the officer where the car was and approximately where the accident took place. When he asked her if she had seen the boy prior to1 the accident, he said Mrs. Luta told him that she was not sure if it was that boy or another as there were children playing on the west side of the street.

The officer examined heavy, black skid marks on the street, which marks he approximated to be about 12 paces or 35 to 36 feet long. Mrs. Luta told him that the marks were left by her car. Testimony of the officer, however, made it clear that the car did not actually skid 36 feet. He pointed out that the marks left by the car wheels behind the car were less than a car length. In that connection he was asked:

“Q. So that actually behind the vehicle there was skid marks of only about half a car length.

“A. Yes, less than, yes about half a car length.

“Q. So that actually this automobile from the time the brakes took hold on the street traveled about half a car length to the point where it came to a stop.

“A. I [it] traveled about a car length * * *.”

Mrs. Norma Rush, living in the immediate vicinity of the accident, was hanging clothes in her backyard when she heard a loud screech of brakes, which lasted about 2 seconds. She ran to the side of her house and, while she did not remember clearly what happened, she thought the next thing she saw was Mrs. Luta with Danny in her arms.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Becker v. Mayo Foundation
737 N.W.2d 200 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2007)
Thompson v. Thompson
605 S.E.2d 30 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2004)
Kenko, Inc. v. Lowry Hill Construction Co.
392 N.W.2d 18 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1986)
State Ex Rel. Lucas v. BOARD OF ED., ETC.
277 N.W.2d 524 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1979)
Daigle v. Twin City Ready Mix Concrete Co.
128 N.W.2d 148 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1964)
Herbst v. Suilman
107 N.W.2d 45 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 N.W.2d 870, 258 Minn. 234, 1960 Minn. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wozniak-v-luta-minn-1960.