DocketNumber: No. 35,670
Citation Numbers: 237 Minn. 253, 54 N.W.2d 777, 1952 Minn. LEXIS 721
Judges: Gallagher, Matson
Filed Date: 7/11/1952
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
In each of two actions, one on behalf of Charles J. Steinke, a minor, for damages for personal injuries sustained when his bicycle collided with defendants’ truck, and the other by plaintiff’s father to recover medical and hospital expenses incurred in treating his son’s injuries, plaintiffs appeal from orders denying their motions for a new trial after a directed verdict in each case for defendants.
This litigation arises out of a collision between a bicycle on which Charles J. Steinke, a 15-year-old minor, was riding and a gasoline transport truck leased by defendant Indianhead Truck Line, Inc., and owned and driven by defendant Joseph Riester as an employe of the truck line. The accident occurred about noon on Saturday, May 28, 1949, near the west limits of the city of Winona, Minnesota, on a triangular piece of ground formed by the junction of U. S. highways Nos. 14 and 61. Highway No. 14 runs straight west from Winona. In the western part of Winona, highway No. 61 coincides with highway No. 14, but near the city limits the former branches off in a northwesterly direction. A short distance westerly beyond the junction point, the two diverging highways are connected by a short, curved crossroad. As a result, the highways and the crossroad encompass a triangular plot of ground with its apex pointing to the east and with its south side extending 197% feet along highway No. 14 and its north side extending along highway No. 61 for about 188% feet. The base of the triangle formed by the curved connecting road is about 75 feet across.
The triangle itself has a gravel surface. It had been used for many years as a temporary parking place for trucks when the drivers stopped to eat at the nearby eat shop located directly across highway No. 14. On the day of the accident, a tractor-trailer semi unit about 40 feet long and 8 feet wide was parked on the triangle parallel to highway No. 14 about 35 feet east of the west end or base of the triangle and 15 to 25 feet from the edge of highway No. 61. Defendant Riester was driving his gasoline semi unit fully loaded on highway No. 14 in a westerly direction. He was traveling about 20 miles per hour and admits that he saw the slow sign, several hundred feet east of the junction, the turn sign on the triangle, and the barricade across highway No. 14. He proceeded to the right of the turn sign and then turned left onto the gravel triangle. He was following some distance behind another truck which had just gone through the triangle. The path which Riester followed was well packed and defined and was much used during the construction operations, although one of plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that it was not supposed to be used as a thoroughfare and that some cars which had entered had been turned back. Riester continued across the triangle at about 18 to 20 miles per hour, passing between the dirt pile and the parked semi unit along a line parallel to highway No. 14 and about six feet south of the parked semi unit. He then swung around the dirt pile and back
Charles Steinke was 15 years old, in perfect health, and a good student in second year high school at the time of the accident. He lived in the vicinity where the accident occurred. During the preceding year, he had been employed in the summer and — during the school year — after school and on Saturdays and Sundays at the eat shop south of the triangle on highway No. 14. He began riding a bicycle at the age of five or six years and had a bicycle of his own at the age of nine. In short, he was an experienced bicycle rider who was thoroughly familiar with the area and its traffic conditions.
Immediately prior to the accident, Charles was riding his bicycle en route to work at the eat shop at a speed of five or six miles per hour. His selected route of travel led in a southeasterly direction across the triangle. When he approached the area, he rode southeasterly on the shoulder of highway No. 61 until he reached the connecting road, which forms an arc and is the base of the triangle. He then cut across the connecting road, and when about halfway across he looked and saw defendants’ oil truck approaching at an undetermined distance east of the junction. Charles, without taking further observation of the truck, proceeded across the connecting road and entered the triangle at a point on its base line approximately 15 or 20 feet from its northwesterly corner. He then followed a route across the triangle which took him to a point about 8 or 10 feet west of the parked semi unit. The parked semi unit obscured his vision to the east. From the time when Charles first saw defendants’ truck east of the junction, he did not look for or again see it until he emerged from behind the parked semi unit and saw the truck at a distance of only about 25 feet away. Although he traveled forward 8 or 10 feet before colliding with' the truck, Charles testified that he did not have time to stop or turn, although he attempted to do both. There is some dispute as to the place on the truck where he came in contact with it. A broken clearance light and fresh scratches would indicate that the point was somewhere near the middle of the trailer part. Taking, as we must, the view of the evidence most favorable to plaintiffs, Charles’s
At the close of all the evidence the trial court granted defendants’ motion for a directed verdict. Assuming — but without so deciding — that defendants’ negligence presented an issue for the jury, we pass directly to the question whether 15-year-old Charles was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
Under the circumstances, it is of no significance whether the area of the triangle is or is not considered a part of the highway. In any event, a well-defined and frequently used traffic route existed across the triangle. It may be assumed that a bicycle rider had as much right to use the area for travel as a motor vehicle driver and vice versa.
It is of no little significance that Charles was a bright and experienced bicycle rider who was thoroughly familiar with the entire area where the accident occurred — with the traffic conditions and the construction operations. He had worked almost daily for a year at the nearby eat shop. He reasonably knew that truck drivers frequently drove across the triangle when they stopped, as they often did, to eat in the very place where he worked. He reasonably knew, or reasonably ought to have known, that during the sewer construction operations, trucks and other vehicles used the well-defined path across the triangle. A short time prior to entering the triangle, he looked both ways and saw defendants’ truck approaching at some distance east of the highway junction. Although he could not then possibly know from this one observation
Charles was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and the orders of the trial court denying plaintiffs’ motions for a new trial after the direction of verdicts for defendants must be affirmed. It becomes unnecessary, therefore, to discuss the evidence relating to defendants’ negligence. Even though it should be determined that they were negligent, contributory negligence bars all recovery. Equitable and desirable as it may be to apportion damages where both plaintiff and defendant are negligent, the rule is otherwise in this jurisdiction, and any change of that rule is not to be effected by judicial erosion but by legislative action.
The orders of the trial court are affirmed in both actions.
Affirmed.
As to unusual traffic movements not specifically authorized by the state highway traffic regulation act, see Carlson v. Peterson, 205 Minn. 20, 284 N. W. 847.
Demmer v. Grunke, 230 Minn. 188, 42 N. W. (2d) 1.
See, 2A Blashfield, Cyc. of Auto. Law and Practice (Perm, ed.) § 1474.