Plаintiff has appealed from an order granting defendant a new trial after judgment for plaintiff in the amount of $15,450 in an action for damages resulting from an automobile collision. The motion for new trial was sustained on the ground that one of plaintiff’s instructions was erroneous.
The collision in question occurred on March 18, 1953 at the intersection of U.S. Highways 40 and 65 known as Marshall Junction. Plaintiff was driving his GMC pick-up truck eastward on Highway 40 and defendant was driving his Buick automobile southward on Highway 65. There were no stop signs on Highway 40, but there was a stop sign on Highway 65 located twenty or twenty-one feet north of Highway 40 which apparently had been placed there by the State Highway Commission.
As plaintiff approached the intersection he was driving twenty-five to thirty miles per hour. He saw a car on Highway 65, in front of defendant’s car, which had slowed down as thоugh to stop, but it did not stop and plaintiff had to apply his brakes to avoid hitting it. When that car went by plaintiff then proceeded across the intersection at about fifteen miles per hour. Plaintiff testified that he first saw defendant’s automobile when it was about ten feet north of the northern edge of Highway 40, that it kept coming and did not thereafter stop before entering upon Highway 40, and that it struck the left rear part оf his truck. The debris on the highway indicated that the point of impact was four feet east of the center line of Highway 65 and six feet south of the center line of Highway 40.
Defendant testified that as he approached the intersection of Highways 65 and 40 he saw a “considerable amount” of traffic on Highway 40 and he slowed down. After a car ahead of him drove out onto Highway 40 he “pulled up to the stop sign and stopped” with the windshield post of his car about even with the stop sign. After looking to the left and then to the right, and seeing no traffic, he proceeded forward, following the car ahead of him by twenty or thirty feet. By the time he reached Highway 40 he had gained a speed of about five miles an hour and could have stopped within “a couple of feet” of the northern edge of Highway 40. He admitted that after he started forward, and until he was one-fourth of the way across Highway 40, he did not again look to his right because “the highway seemed perfectly clear for hundreds of feet.” Plaintiff’s truck suddenly “loomed” in front of him and he quickly applied his brakes. He thought his automobile had stopped or that it came to a stop at the time of the collision. *887 Plaintiff testified that immediately after the collision defendant said to him, “It’s all my fault” аnd “when I did see it (plaintiff’s truck) it was too late. I put my foot on the accelerator instead of the brake.” Defendant did not know “exactly” why he could not see plaintiff’s approaching truck, but, in his words, “I think if one looks at the angle of that crossing, you can see why, when I looked forward past my passengers (there were two in the front seat) and looked to the right, how either the stop sign or the windshield post could have blurred out quite a considerable portion of that highway (Highway 40) from my vision, which I didn’t realize at the moment, because what I saw was perfectly clear.”
Plaintiff submitted his case on both primary and humanitarian negligence. Plaintiff’s instruction P2 submitted primary negligence, and after hypothesizing certain facts it contained the following languagé: “And if you further find and believe from the evidence that there was a stop sign at sаid intersection, warning drivers approaching said Highway 40 from the north to come to a stop before proceeding onto said Highway 40; and if you further find and believe that the said defendant, Koogler, did not stop but proceeded out into the traveled portion of said Highway 40 without stopping; and if you further find and believe that such failure on the part of the defendant to stop his said automobile before рroceeding into the traveled portion of said Highway 40 was negligence on his part, * * The trial court granted a new trial because “there was no evidence from which a jury could find that the defendant failed to stop at the stop sign mentioned in the evidence and that instruction allowed the jury to make such a finding and the instruction was not, therefore, supported by the evidence.”
Failure to obey a stоp sign at an intersection of public highways is an element for consideration by the jury in determining the question of negligence for the reason that one who fails to obey such warning sign is not exercising the highest degree of care required of the operator of an 'automobile. Section 304.010 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. Depending upon the local conditions the stop sign may be near to the common area of the two intersecting highways, or it may be back 20 feet as in this case, or for example it may be back as far as 90 feet as in George v. Allen,
The instruction in this case did not submit the question of whether defendant stopped at the stop sign, and a finding that defendant did not so stop was not essential to plaintiff’s submission of negligence by this instruction. The issues submitted by the instruction were whether there was a stop sign warning the defendant to stop before proceeding onto Highway 40, and whether the defendant proceeded into the traveled portion of Highway 40 without stopping. This means, of course, a proper and effective stop to carry out the purpose of the warning conveyed by the stop sign. It was immaterial in this case whether ‘or not defendant stopped “at the stop sign” as distinguished from some other exact location, and the trial court was not justified in granting a new trial for the specific reason stated.
Defendant now asserts that there was no evidence to support a finding that defendant “did not stop in compliance with the admonition of the stоp sign before proceeding onto the traveled portion of Highway 40.” In determining this question the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff at whose instance and request the instruction was given. Palmer
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v. Lasswell, Mo.Sup.,
In addition to the above conclusion, defendant is in no position to object that the instruction was not supported by substantial evidence. Instruction D5 given at the request of the defendant contained this language: “The court instructs the jury that even if they find from the evidence that at the time and place mentioned in the evidence the defendant, Paul Koogler, failed to exercise the highest degree of care and was negligent in that he failed to come to a stop before proceeding into Highway 40, as set out in instruction P2 * Defendant cannot complain of an alleged defect in plaintiff’s instruction which is common to his instruction, Palmer v. Lasswell, Mo.Sup.,
Defendant has briefed other points, which it is claimed will sustain the granting of a new trial. He first contends that plaintiff was guilty of negligence as a matter of law and therefore is not entitled to recover on primary negligence because plaintiff admitted that “he did not see defendant’s car until plaintiff himself was in the middle of the intersection, even though from any point 125 feet west of the intersection he could have seen a car on Highway 65 at any point within 200 feet of the interseсtion.” Defendant cites several cases, all of which hold that a failure to look on the part of a plaintiff, where a duty to look exists, and a failure to see what is plainly visible when he looks, constitutes contributory negligence as a matter of law. However, the cited cases are distinguishable on their facts, and Branscum v. Glaser, Mo.Sup.,
When we accept the facts to be as contended by defendant, plaintiff was in the intersection when he first saw defendant’s automobile, and at that time defendant’s automobile was about ten feet north of Highway 40 proceeding at not more than five miles an hour and, according to defendant, capable of being stopped before it reached Highway 40. Plaintiff approached the intersection from the defendant’s right in full view of the defendant and entered the intersection first. In compliance with the warning of the stop sign defendant was not to enter the intersection unless it was safe to do so. Although a motorist first
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entering an intersection does not have the right to proсeed regardless of the conditions confronting him, Wilson v. Toliver, Mo.Sup.,
Plaintiff’s instruction 6 submitted humanitarian negligence and defendant contends that it was erroneous because there was no evidence when plaintiff reached a position of peril, and therefore it cannot be determined whether defеndant could have then taken action to avoid the collision. Defendant admits that “at some time plaintiff entered a position of imminent peril,” but he contends that to determine that time the jury had to resort to surmise, speculation and onesswork
Under the humanitarian doctrine, defendant was under no duty to take action to avoid a collision until plaintiff came into a position of imminent peril, Claridgе v. Anzolone,
It is true that plaintiff’s instructions on primary negligence do not make specific reference to defendant’s counterclaim based on humanitarian negligence, but in Hangge v. Umbright, Mo.Sup.,
In determining the correctness of instructions, all of each instruction should be considered and parts should not be isolated from their context. All the instructions should be read as parts of a single charge. Sauer v. Winkler, Mo.Sup.,
Defendant’s next contention is that all of plaintiff’s instructions were erroneous because they improperly assumed that plaintiff was the owner of the truck he was operating. Plaintiff testified that he had purchased the truck new and that he was the sole owner. There was no evidence to the contrary. The case was tried and submitted to the jury by both parties on the theory that plaintiff was the owner of the truck. Instructions should not assume controverted facts, George v. Allen,
What we have said previously disposes of the remaining two points, the first of which is that the trial court erred in refusing to strike out the testimony of the plaintiff that the defendant failed to stop before entering the intersection for the reason that “it was obvious from his testimony that plaintiff did not and could not know whether or not defendant did make such a stop.” The second and last point is that the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s motions for a directed verdict because “there was not sufficient evidence presented from which a jury could find a verdict for plaintiff on any theory of negligence pleaded.”
The cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to set aside the order granting a new trial, to reinstate the verdict of the jury and to enter judgment thereon in plaintiff’s favor in the amount of the verdict as of the date of its rendition.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by STOCKARD, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All concur.
