DocketNumber: No. 31,146.
Citation Numbers: 274 N.W. 180, 200 Minn. 272
Judges: Gallagher, Loring, Stone
Filed Date: 6/18/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The collision in which plaintiff's intestate was killed occurred on the morning of January 18, 1935, at about 9:10 a. m. at a point approximately seven miles north or northeast of Virginia on highway No. 169, which extends toward Tower. Plaintiff's intestate was riding with another man in a Ford truck belonging to the Minnesota Power Light Company, for which company they both worked. They were going northeasterly on company business. At a point about seven miles northeast of Virginia, where smoke from some brush fires obscured their vision, they collided with the Greyhound company's bus, driven by Leviska. Both men in the power and light company's truck were instantly killed and the truck demolished.
In 1934 the defendant Maturi had contracted with St. Louis county to grade that portion of highway No. 169 where the accident occurred. His contract required the removal of brush from the right of way. The contract left it discretionary with Maturi to burn the brush or haul it away. He chose to burn it but could not safely do so in the fall of 1934 and awaited the coming of snow in order to burn it with safety. He then engaged John Stokke to burn the numerous piles for the sum of $30, Stokke to furnish his own kerosene and transportation. Maturi retained no control over how or when the brush should be burned. Stokke engaged another man to assist him and burned part of the brush piles on January 17. Such wind as there had been on the 17th was from the northwest, and Stokke, who was called by the plaintiff, testified that the wind was still from that direction when they started burning the brush piles about 7:30 a. m. on the 18th. There was a heavy blanket of snow on the ground and on the brush piles, and that upon the brush *Page 275 piles had to be removed before the fires were started. On the morning of the 18th there remained to be burned some eight or ten piles of brush on the southeasterly side of the road, and fire had been set to all of these prior to the time of the collision. There is a dispute in the evidence, and the jury might have drawn the conclusion that the wind changed prior to the time when the last fires were set. At any rate, the last fire was set shortly before the collision occurred, and at the time of the collision the wind was carrying the smoke across the highway. Entering from the northeast, the smoke from the first two or three piles was not so dense as from the fourth pile. The driver of the bus could see the smoke for half a mile before he entered it. From the evidence the jury might well have believed that he then slowed down his bus and put on his headlights; that he kept on his own side of the road and was going not to exceed 15 or 20 miles per hour as he passed through the smoke. The piles of brush were from 30 to 50 feet apart, and they were about 30 feet from the center of the highway so that the smoke was not continuously dense but there were spaces between the smoke clouds which, if not clear of smoke, were of much less density than the smoke opposite each pile. The wind was gusty so that the density and drift of the smoke varied. While the bus was going at between 15 and 20 miles per hour between the third and fourth pile, the Ford truck of the power and light company suddenly appeared to the bus driver out of the dense smoke from the fourth pile. It was coming very rapidly (estimated at 40 miles per hour) toward him in the middle of the highway astride the center line. Before its entry into the smoke the truck had been seen traveling fast (at least 40 miles per hour) and in the middle of the road. The collision occurred instantaneously. The bus driver was engaged in preventing one of the passengers from going through the windshield, his foot was shaken from the brake pedal, the steering tie rod was broken, and he did not again get his foot on the pedal until the bus had about reached the point where it stopped in a snow-bank. The truck rolled off opposite the fourth brush pile, counting from the northeast. *Page 276
1. Quite obviously the bus driver's negligence was a question for the jury. Reasonable minds might conclude that a man of ordinary prudence under the circumstances might have undertaken to do just what he did. He might have concluded that by slowing down to the speed of 15 or 20 miles per hour and turning on his lights and keeping to the right of the center line of the road he could pass through the smoke with reasonable safety. Salera v. Schroeder,
This case does not come within the rule laid down in Orrvar v. Morgan,
2. The trial court directed a verdict in favor of Maturi, the contractor. It was contended by Maturi that his contract with Stokke made Stokke an independent contractor. The evidence is clear and conclusive upon that point and relieves Maturi of liability unless *Page 277 the subject matter of the contract was of such a character as to render its performance so ultrahazardous to the person and property of others that the exercise of the utmost care could not eliminate that risk. Restatement, Torts, § 427. We are inclined to the view that the burning of the brush was not such an ultrahazardous activity that the risk could not have been eliminated by the exercise of a high degree of care. It would have been practicable for those in charge of the situation to have made appropriate arrangements for traffic to be handled in such manner as to eliminate the risk of collision. Stokke may have been negligent in not making such an arrangement, but if his contract was an independent one, Maturi would not be liable.
Nor do we think the character of the work was of such a nature that no independent contract could be made with regard to it. Plaintiff contends that our holdings under the workmen's compensation act compel a finding that this was menial labor and not subject to an independent contract. In our opinion, this work was no more menial than any other part of the road construction work. The word "menial" in its true sense relates to domestic servants. Century Dictionary; Funk Wagnall's Dictionary; Webster's International Dictionary. If one were to contract for the clearing of a farm by the acre or by the entire tract or as a separate part thereof, for the burning of the brush for a lump sum as was done here, it could not be called menial in its true sense. Hence our cases under the workmen's compensation act are not in point.
3. The plaintiff took exception to the court's charge that the jury must find that the negligence, if any, of the defendants was the proximate cause of the accident and that by that it meant the immediate direct cause without the interposition of any other sufficient cause. Under the circumstances of this case, where the evidence was sufficient to sustain a finding either way on the negligence of the bus driver and where there was abundant evidence to sustain the finding of the interposition of an efficient cause sufficient to insulate the bus driver's negligence, if any, in the form of the negligence of the driver of the power and light company's truck, we think the charge was justified and stated the law. The court *Page 278 also charged the jury that if they found that the negligence of the power and light company was the sole proximate cause of the accident then they could not find a verdict against the defendants bus company and driver. This charge was, of course, obviously sound.
The court also charged that if the jury found that the bus driver was negligent and his negligence a proximate cause of the accident and if they did not find that the power and light company was negligent and its negligence the sole proximate cause of the accident their verdict should be in favor of the plaintiff. This was equivalent to charging the jury that if the negligence of the power and light company and that of the bus driver concurred in producing the accident, their verdict should be for the plaintiff.
The court also refused to charge, at the request of the plaintiff, that it was the duty of the bus driver when the bus approached the smoke to exercise reasonable care in keeping the bus under proper control, taking into account all of the circumstances and conditions existing. It would have been preferable if the court had given this request, but in the light of its general charge as to what constituted negligence we would not reverse for failure to give this request. We think from the tenor of the general charge that the jury fully understood that the bus driver was required to exercise such care as the presence of the smoke would dictate to an ordinarily prudent person.
4. Nor do we think that the matter of workmen's compensation was at all prejudicial to the plaintiff in view of the court's charge. In fact the plaintiff requested that the court tell the jury why she could not sue the Minnesota Power Light Company. The court fully advised the jury that it was not to take into consideration the fact that the plaintiff might be entitled to compensation from her deceased husband's employer.
The order appealed from is affirmed.