Rеspondent was injured when an automobile in which she was riding came into collision with an automobile truck owned by appellant. She sued appellant, the Mayer Undertaking Company and The Reliable Auto Livery Company. The petition alleged the two last owned and were operating the automobile in which respondent was riding when hurt. With respect to appellаnt the petition alleged that the collision was caused by his negligence in that (1) “the said automobile truck was operated at a high and dangerous speed, to-wit, twenty-five miles per hour, at a time and place where said defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, that vehicles and pedestrians were likely to pass said interseсtion on said Gravois Avenue; and (2) by and through the carelessness and negligence of said defendant, Charles J. Becker, his agent and servant, in his failure to sound any horn or give any other warning of his approach to said Gravois Avenue, and (3) by and through the carelessness and negligence of said defendant, Charles J. Becker, his agent and servant in attempting to proceed аcross said Gravois Avenue, when by turning either to the right or left, after he saw, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have seep, the said limousine in a position of imminent danger, he could have avoided said collision,” and (4) in failing to stop after seeing the limousine in a position of imminent danger, and (5) in so operating the truck as to let his foot slip from its clutch while aрproaching Gravois Avenue. The several defendants filed general denials as answers. At the close of the trial appellant took an *553 involuntary nonsuit as to The Reliable Auto Livery Company; the jury returned a verdict against the Mayer Undertaking Company for $1500, and a verdict in favor of appellant Becker. The trial court sustained respondent’s motion to set аside the nonsuit against The Reliable Auto Livery Company, sustained the Mayer Undertaking Company’s motion for new trial, and sustained respondent’s motion for a new trial as against appellant Becker. It is from this last order that the appeal is taken.
The collision occurred at the intersection of Gravois Avenue and Chippewa Street. The limousine in which respondent was riding was traveling northeastwardly along the east side of Gravois Avenue, and the Ford truck was proceeding westwar'dly on Chippewa. The evidence discloses the situation at the time at the junction of the two streets, and there is the usual conflict with respect to rates of speed, distances, etc. The ground which the trial court gave for sustaining the motion for new triаl against Becker is that it erred in refusing an instruction asked by respondent. In his original brief appellant confined himself to the question whether the reason the court gave for its action was sound. In her brief respondent brought forward other reasons which she contends justify the order for a new trial. Several questions are presented.
I. The instruction which the court refused and upоn the refusal of which, as error, it expressly founded its order granting a new trial, reads as.follows:
“The court instructs the jury that if you believe and find from the evidence that on or about the '1.4th day of November, 1918, plaintiff was riding in a limousine mentioned in the evidence, on Gravois Avenue, at or near its intersection with Chippewa Street in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, defendant Charles J. Becker, by and through his agent and servant, caused or permitted an automobile truck owned by said defendant Becker to collide with *554 the said limousine, and if you further believe and find from the evidence that said defendant Becker, his agent and servant, was guilty of negligence in any one or more of the following párticulars and that such negligence of said defendant, his agent or servant, contributed to cause such collision, that is to say:
“That said automobile truck was operated at a high and dangerous speed while approaching and attempting to cross a public street, or that said defendant failed to sound any horn or to give any other warning of his approach to said Gravois Avenue; -or that said defendant Becker, his agent or servant, attеmpted to proceed across said Gravois Avenue, when by turning either to the right or left after be saw or by the exercise of ordinary care would have seen the said limousine in a position of imminent danger he could have avoided said collision (if you believe that by the exercise of ordinary care he could have seen said limousine in time to have avoided said collision), or in his failure to stop said automobile truck after seeing said limousine in a position of imminent danger (if you believe that by the exercise of due care on the part of the said defendant Becker, his agent and servant, the said automobile truck could have been stopped before said collision occurred), then if the jury so find your verdict must bе in favor of said plaintiff and against said defendant Charles J. Becker.”
Is it true that the rate of speed, alleged as it is in this case and was in the Hoagland and Davis cases, is required to be proved as a condition precedent to recovery?
It is not denied that if the matter alleged under the
videlicet
is rejected a cause of action is stated by what is left. In Hoagland v. K. C. Rys. Co.,
The ruling in the Moore Case is obviously based upon a record somewhat unlike that in this case, while the ruling in the first appeal in the Hoagland Case and in the Davis Case is out of accord with the liberal tendencies of the code and not supported by the applicable common law rule. It should not be followed. The instruction is good as against this first objection made by appellant.
*559
Since the negligence of Becker’s driver, if any, was Becker’s negligence, the trial court had the right to treat it so, and there is nothing in the way this would havе been done by the refused instruction which would have had any tendency to mislead a jury. If, in fact, appellant had desired to make it so clear that no possibility of mistake could have arisen, he could have asked an instruction explaining specifically the correct general language used. This third objection to the refused instruction cannot be sustained.
This dispоses of all the reasons given by appellant upon which he relies to show that the instruction was erroneous and the order granting the new trial, therefore, wrong.
*560
II. Respondent brings forward the instruction which is quoted under “3” in the preceding paragraph, which was given at appellant’s instance, and insists it was erroneous and that the order granting the new trial should be sustained for that reason. The instruction is obviously erroneous. For one thing, it requires that “plaintiff must,
by her evidence,
show that defendant was guilty of negligence.” This error was peculiarly harmful in this case. The Mayer Company and appellant were trying to show negligence on the part of each other. They were active adversaries, and there was evidence offered by the Mayer Company tending tо show negligence qn the part of appellant, and
vice versa,
to some of which reference has already been made. Appellant calls attention to the fact that the record fails to show that an exception was saved to the giving of this instruction. The trial court would have been authorized to grant a new trial on account of the giving of this instruction. He did not do so. If, in fact, no exception was taken by respondent to the giving of the instruction, this, of itself, may have been the ’reason the court did not found its order on the error in this instruction. It may well have concluded that the absence of the exception disclosed that respondent did not deem the error materially prejudicial, and the court may have concurred in that view. At any rate, it did not specify Instruction 7 as eliciting the order made. If, in fact, there was an exception, respondent could either have secured its incorporation in the bill of exceptions filed by appellant, or, perhaps, could have filed a separate bill in its own behalf. This court has said that either of these things may be done. [State ex rel. v. Thomas,
III. For the reasons given in Paragraph I, supra, the order granting a new trial is affirmed and the cause is remanded.
