Zahn v. Ford Motor Company

164 F. Supp. 936, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3915
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedAugust 13, 1958
Docket5-57 Civ. 7
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 F. Supp. 936 (Zahn v. Ford Motor Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zahn v. Ford Motor Company, 164 F. Supp. 936, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3915 (mnd 1958).

Opinion

DONOVAN, District Judge.

In this diversity case plaintiff at trial had a verdict in the sum of $26,350 against the Ford Motor Company (hereinafter referred to as Ford). The third party defendant, Clarence A. Dailey (hereinafter referred to as Dailey), was exonerated from liability to Ford by special verdict.

Ford has moved in the alternative for judgment in its favor, or for a new trial, upon the following grounds:

1. The verdict is contrary to the evidence;

2. The verdict is contrary to the law;

3. Misconduct of counsel; and

4. Excessive damages.

The instant case was tried to court and jury at the May 1958 general term. The motions were orally argued by counsel at the June 6, 1958, special term. Briefs (the last of which was received July 17, 1958) by all parties followed in due course and the points and authorities relied on are before the court and will be discussed under the four heads above relied upon by movant.

1. Sufficiency of the Evidence.

Plaintiff, 27 years of age and a guest in Dailey’s Ford automobile, met with *938 personal injury on April 28, 1956, causing loss of sight in his right eye. The facts are simply to the effect that as plaintiff sat to the right of Dailey, between two and three o’clock on a clear afternoon, with Dailey driving at a rate of 45 to 50 miles per hour on a tarvia surfaced highway (Highway 218) in Minnesota, a car was observed approaching on a cross road to the left of 218 and towards a stop sign (there being stop signs on both sides of 218 against cross traffic). Visibility was good. Dailey saw the car approaching the arterial highway from his left and assumed the driver of the car would stop as required. 1

The stranger drove through the stop sign with the result that when Dailey applied his brakes and swung his car to avoid what seemed to be an imminent collision, plaintiff, who at the time was bending forward to deposit the ash of a cigarette in the receptacle provided therefor 2 , was thrown to the side and forward, striking the ash tray with such force as to knock it off its base to the floor of the car. Dailey testified the ash tray was examined by him following the accident and then for the first time he discovered “a jagged edge on the right side.”

Plaintiff was taken by Dailey to a hospital in Brainerd “instead of trying to catch this other car”, said Dailey. Upon rendering first aid at the hospital, the attending physician referred plaintiff to Dr. W. T. Wenner, a qualified medical doctor specializing in matters of the eye. Plaintiff was examined by Dr. Wenner at the hospital in St. Cloud, Minnesota, on the day of the accident, and Dr. Wenner describes what he ob served and what followed in these words

“The right eye was markedly injected, painful and tearing — of course the eye had a patch which I removed. * * * Yes, he had a laceration of the cornea of the eye —the cornea is the window of the eye — from 3:00 o’clock right across to 9:00 o’clock — so that the laceration extended the entire width of the cornea. It was a penetrating wound and it was gaping and the part of the iris which is the colored part of the eye was in the wound and so was some of the lens material and vitreous. The anterior chamber was collapsed, evacuated, the aqueous being entirely gone. He did have a light perception and surgery was done later on that afternoon or early evening, I forget just when it was, and of course he was given antibiotics, tetanus and anti-tetanus to prevent infection setting in. * * *. The incarcerated portion of the iris was removed, the cornea was sutured and the conjunctival portion string flap was made * * to save the eye.
“When the eye was injured, the iris was injured and as the aqueous escaped it carried the iris forward and it was caught in the collapsed wound. * * * [The wound] traversed the cornea, anterior chamber and onto the lens of the eye. * *
“I found a penetrated wound of the cornea. The object that lacerated the cornea also extended onto and injured the lens of the eye. * * *939 He left the hospital on the 5th of May the first time. * * *
“The purpose of the sewing, of suturing the cornea wound was to avoid the continuous escape of aqueous, the aqueous is continuously being formed in an eye and continually being evacuated and the suturing was made to avoid the escape of this aqueous and also to cover the wound, close the wound, and the flap did not retract until the day prior to his leaving the hospital, at which time the eye was still markedly injected. Eye was red. He had a traumatic cataract and he was sent home with drops to use in the eye and he was back again in the hospital on the 1st of June until the 3rd of June, back again June 22 to the 24th of June and back from the 29th of June until the 8th of July due to complications. * *. Inflammation and hemorrhage — the last time he was in the hospital with a hemorrhage into the anterior chamber. * * *. When the iris— the iris is the most vascular portion of the eye — and when that was torn of course it opened up blood vessels and following an iris tear you are always confronted with hemorrhage. *
“I saw Mr. Zahn after that — the last time I saw him was in November of ’56. * * * The eye was blind, he had no light perception and the eye was starting to shrink and he was developing what we call phthisis bulbi. * * *
“He has a blind eye,' shrunken eye, and it should be removed. * *. He has total loss of vision of that eye; he has loss of depth perception ; he has loss of peripheral field. * * * He has only one eye. When people lose an eye at the age of Mr. Zahn that depth perception is difficult to acquire. We have children who are born with vision of one eye, but by practice and adjustment they do acquire some depth perception, but if you lose vision in one eye in adult life, it is more difficult to acquire depth perception.
“ * * * [The disability] is estimated loss of one eye resulting in loss of y6 of the field of vision so that Mr. Zahn has loss of y6 of his field of vision. * * *
“The injury was caused by a sharp object striking the eye. * * *”

At the time of the accident plaintiff’s employment was that of “an equipment operator on construction projects, highway construction and power lines, * * running cats, bulldozers and heavy trucks.”

That Ford manufactured and sold to Dailey the automobile in which plaintiff was riding is not disputed. Ford contends “that Dailey’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of the injury to Zahn’s eye.” 3

Confronted with the facts of the instant case, the question of causation was one wholly within the province of the jury.

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

Related

Owen v. United States
251 F. Supp. 38 (S.D. California, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 F. Supp. 936, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zahn-v-ford-motor-company-mnd-1958.