215 S.W. 788 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1919
This is an action seeking to recover damages for the death of one Charles W. Bright, alleged to have been caused by the negligent handling of an automobile owned by the defendant, Arthur Thacher, while the machine was being driven by his daughter, Theodora Thacher, also a defendant, said accident having occurred on July 13, 1915, at the intersection of Kingshighway and Washington avenue, in the City of St. Louis, Missouri.
In the petition, which was filed on the 15th day of September, 1915, the negligence assigned on the part of the defendants is that the defendant, Theodora Thacher, operated the automobile at a "high and dangerous rate of speed when she knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, that a number of pedestrians, including the said Charles W. Bright, were in the act of crossing Washington avenue on the west side of Kingshighway, immediately in the path of the said automobile, and that the said Theodora Thacher negligently failed to give any warning of the approach of the said automobile; that she saw the said Charles W. Bright in said street in time to have stopped said machine by the exercise of ordinary care without striking the said Bright, and that she negligently and carelessly failed to stop said machine, but on the contrary negligently *307 and carelessly continued to operate said machine at said high and dangerous rate of speed when she knew or by the exercise of reasonable care would and should have known, that she would strike and injury the deceased."
The petition alleges that the defendant, Theodora Thacher, is the daughter of the defendant, Arthur Thacher, and that at the time of the accident she resided with him as a member of his household; that she was operating the said automobile, on the said occasion with his consent, direction and permission, and as his agent, and in the performance of her duties as such agent.
The petition further alleges that the plaintiff is the mother of the deceased, Charles W. Bright, and that for many years prior to his decease, "plaintiff was dependent upon the said Charles W. Bright for her support, and that he contributed thereto;" that the deceased left no father, wife, or children surviving him; that the said plaintiff, Esther J. Bright, together with J.D. Bright, G.W. Bright and Oliver Bright, brothers, were, at the time of the death of the said Charles W. Bright, next of kin and heirs at law; and that plaintiff was duly appointed, qualified and acting administratrix of the estate of the deceased.
The petition further alleges that the plaintiff and the other heirs at law of the deceased have been damaged by his death in the sum of $10,000, for which sum judgment is prayed.
The defendants filed separate answers. That of the defendant, Arthur Thacher, contains a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence on the part of the deceased; while in the answer of the defendant, Theodora Thacher, it is set out that the accident was unavoidable and also alleges contributory negligence on the part of the deceased.
The case was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against both of the defendants in the sum of $7500. From a judgment rendered *308 upon this verdict each of the defendants in due course appealed.
The evidence introduced at the trial was substantially as follows:
The defendant, Arthur Thacher, is the father of the defendant, Theodora Thacher. Mr. Thacher's family consists of his wife, one son, and the said daughter, Theodora Thacher, defendant herein. Thacher was the owner of, and had bought for the pleasure of the family, an automobile which ever since Thacher has purchased the machine had been operated by both the son and the daughter.
On the day of the accident the defendant, Arthur Thacher, was, and for a week prior thereto had been, out of the city and had no personal knowledge whatsoever relative thereto. At the time of the accident Theodora Thacher, the daughter, was driving the car, purely for her own pleasure, accompanied by a friend, Thurston Farrar, and was riding in the car enroute to a picture show.
Kingshighway, in the city of St. Louis, runs north and south and is intersected by Washington avenue, which runs east and west. The daughter, with Farrar seated in the front seat beside her, drove the machine north on Kingshighway to a point where it intersects Washington avenue and there undertook to turn into Washington avenue. At the time she reached the intersection of these two streets, the deceased, Charles W. Bright, accompanied by a Mrs. Reamer, who had been walking along the sidewalk on the west side of Kingshighway, were in the act of crossing Washington avenue where it is intersected by Kingshighway. According to the testimony on the part of plaintiff the defendant, Theodora Thacher, was driving her machine at the rate of from ten to twenty-five miles an hour when she undertook to make the turn from Kingshighway into Washington avenue; she did not sound her horn, and the deceased and Mrs. Reamer had walked to about the middle of Washington avenue when deceased and Mrs. *309 Reamer first caught sight of the car and it was so close to them that Mrs. Reamer, believing she did not have time "to make it across" the street, "ran back, but Mr. Bright did not but hesitated and the car hit him, carrying him a distance, running over him, causing such injuries from the effects of which he died died two hours later."
Further, there was testimony on the part of the plaintiff tending to show that the defendant, Theodora Thacher, saw the deceased, Charles W. Bright, as he was in the act of crossing Washington avenue, and that she saw him in time to have stopped her machine without striking him.
With reference to the testimony as to the damage alleged to have been sustained by the deceased, the testimony adduced on behalf of the plaintiff was that the plaintiff, Esther J. Bright, was the mother of the deceased, Charles W. Bright, who at the time of his death was forty-nine years of age; that the plaintiff was duly appointed and acting administratrix of his estate. That the mother, at the time of the trial, was seventy-four years of age and had three other sons, G.W. Bright, J.D. Bright and Oliver Bright.
Mrs. Bright testified that for many years prior to his death her son, Charles W. Bright, had regularly contributed to her support, she living with him in a home for which he paid the rent and kept up the household expenses; that he expended, in keeping up the house, from $100 to $125 per month; that in addition to furnishing her with a home the said son had always given her sums of money, from time to time, upon her request; averaging about $50 a year; that her youngest son had come to the home for short periods of time amounting to perhaps three months per year, during which period of time he had contributed something toward the maintenance and upkeep thereof, but that amount she did not testify to; she further testified that she drew a small pension amounting to $12 per month. *310
According to the testimony of the defendants, the machine at the time of the accident was going at the speed of about ten or eleven miles per hour, and the defendant, Theodora Thacher, had not applied either the foot or emergency brake at the time she struck the deceased, Charles W. Bright, but that the accident would not have occurred but for the act of the deceased's companion, Mrs. Reamer, who, when the automobile approached her, when she was in the center of Washington avenue, suddenly ran back to the south side of Washington avenue, directly in front of the machine, and that the defendant, Theodora Thacher, believing she was going to strike Mrs. Reamer, and in order to avoid her, turned her machine to the right and in so turning to the right the automobile unavoidably struck the deceased.
There was testimony on the part of the defendants tending to show that had the deceased, Bright and his companion, continued to proceed north on Washington avenue at the rate at which they were going, the accident would have been avoided.
Defendants introduced testimony to the effect that the expectation of life of a man who has reached the age of seventy-four years is 6.68 years, and that the expectation of life of a woman of that age was slightly greater, and that an annuity of $530 per year, payable monthly, for the remainder of the life of a woman aged seventy-four years, could be purchased for a single premium of $4000.
First. That there is no averment of any pecuniary loss suffered by the respective beneficiaries for whom the plaintiff sues.
Second. In that plaintiff's petition wholly fails *311 to state the age, relationship, and the pecuniary loss of the respective beneficiaries.
Third. In that there is no averment of any kind in the petition showing that the plaintiff instituted her suit within the statutory period allowed her.
As to the first, the petition specifically alleges, "that at the time of the death of the said Charles W. Bright, and for many years prior thereto, plaintiff was dependent upon the said Charles W. Bright for her support and that he contributed thereto, and that she and the other heirs at law of the said Charles W. Bright have been damaged by his death, as aforesaid, in the sum of $10,000, for which sum plaintiff prays judgment," which, we hold, is sufficient averment of pecuniary loss suffered by the beneficiary for whose benefit the suit is brought.
As to the second, we have already shown that the relationship and pecuniary loss of the respective beneficiaries are shown in that the petition sets forth the allegation that Esther J. Bright, one of the beneficiaries and heirs at law of the deceased, was dependent on the said Charles W. Bright, deceased; that he contributed to her support at the time of his death, and had done so for many years prior thereto; and as to the allegation of relationship, in another part of the petition we find the allegation that the deceased, "left no father, wife, or children surviving him; that plaintiff, Esther J. Bright, his mother, J.D. Bright, G.W. Bright and Oliver Bright are and at the time of his death were the next of kin and heirs at law of the said Charles W. Bright." That the petition fails to set forth the ages of the respective beneficiaries is a matter which we hold in this case is of no consequence.
While it is true that the petition fails to state that plaintiff instituted her suit within the statutory period, it is however alleged in the petition that the said Charles W. Bright departed this life on the 13th day of July, 1915, and the record shows that the suit was instituted on the 15th day of September, 1915. In light, therefore, of the fact that the petition states the date of decedent's *312
death, and the fact that the record shows the date of the filing of the petition, it is clear that the suit was brought within the period of time allowed by statute and this we hold is sufficient. This same point was raised in a case recently before us in which we held the contention to be without merit. [See O'Hara v. Lamb Const. Co.,
We hold this point is well taken. Irrespective of the result reached upon the question in issue in other jurisdictions, it is no longer open to question in this State that the ownership of an automobile purchased by a father for the use and pleasure of himself and family does not render him liable for damages to a third person injured through the negligence of a member of his family while operating the automobile in furtherance of that member's own pleasure; and the fact that the member of the family had the father's special or general permission to use the car for his pleasure is wholly immaterial. [Hays v. Hogan,
According to all the testimony upon this point, adduced on behalf of the plaintiff, as well as that of the defendants, the automobile was purchased primarily for the pleasure of the family. The daughter, who is a defendant, and the son had been given permission by the *313 father to use and operate the machine for their own pleasure whenever they desired.
On the day of the accident the father was absent in Colorado and had no knowledge that the daughter intended to use the machine on that day, though, as stated above, he had granted her general permission to use it for her own pleasure at will. The daughter, in the present case, took the machine for her own pleasure, intending to attend a picture show in the neighborhood and invited a friend to go with her.
The uncontradicted facts, as shown by this record, clearly do not make out a case against the defendant, Arthur Thacher, and the learned trial court should have given the said peremptory instruction.
It is to be noted that we have been cited no authorities in the United States upholding the rule as laid down by Lord Campbell in his charge to the jury in the Hicks case, supra, and our examination of the authorities discloses that the courts in this country are in seeming harmony on the point that a defendant cannot secure a reduction of the damages for which he is liable for negligently causing the death of another, by showing that the plaintiff or the party in interest, was entitled to collect or has collected, for his individual use, proceeds of an insurance policy upon the life of the deceased; and consequently evidence is inadmissible to show the receipt of such money or the existence of such insurance policies. [Carroll v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co.,
This rule is based on reason and is sound in principle for the amount of damages in actions under the statutory damage act is fixed by statute and by it certain beneficiaries are named, and to allow the construction of the statutes contended for by the appellants, "would defeat or modify actions under the statute where the party killed had, by his own prudence and at his own expense sought to provide for the maintenance of his family in the event of his death and would enable the wrongdoer to protect himself to the extent of his insurance against the consequence of his own wrongful and unlawful acts." [Carroll v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., supra.] And consequently, as is stated in Sutherland on Damages (4 Ed), page 487, et seq., "generally there can be no abatement of damages on the principle of partial compensation received for the injury where it comes from a collateral source, wholly independent of the defendant, and is as to him res interalios acta. . . . The payment *315
of such moneys not being procured by the defendant and they not having been either paid or received to satisfy in whole or in part his liability, he can derive no advantage therefrom in litigation for damages for which he is liable. . . . To permit a reduction of damages on such a ground would be to allow a wrongdoer to pay nothing and take all the benefits of a policy of insurance without paying the premium." [See Dillon v. Hunt,
We are satisfied from an examination of these instructions that they were properly refused. Instruction C should not have been given in that it entirely omitted to take cognizance of the fact that the testimony for plaintiff tended to show that defendant, Theodora Thacher, was driving at a high rate of speed; gave no warning of the approach of the automobile, and saw, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have seen, the deceased in a place of danger in time, and by the exercise of ordinary care, could have stopped her machine without striking him.
Instruction lettered E was properly refused in that it assumes, as an established fact, that Mrs. Reamer ran "suddenly backwards in front of the machine," whereas it was controverted by the testimony of Mrs. Reamer, and consequently the giving of said instruction would have been error. *316
As we have ruled above, the testimony offered along these lines was properly refused and it follows that the instruction was also rightly refused.
Instruction lettered H, offered by the defendants, which told the jury that under the pleading in this case plaintiff at most could recover only nominal damages, was properly refused. As we have ruled above, the petition specifically alleges pecuniary loss on the part of the mother and the plaintiff's testimony to the effect that she was, at the time of her son's death and had been for many years prior thereto, dependent upon him for her support, was uncontradicted. So that neither under the pleading nor the evidence in the case could the plaintiff be restricted to the recovery of nominal damages only.
As to instruction numbered one, given at the request of the plaintiff, it erroneously declared the law with reference to the liability of the defendant, Arthur Thacher, under the evidence adduced in the case, but as we have indicated above, the court, at the close of the case, should have sustained the peremptory instruction in the nature of a demurrer requested by defendant, Arthur Thacher. But the criticism that the instruction, so far *317 as the defendant, Thodora Thacher is concerned, in that it attempts to cover the whole case and authorized a verdict for plaintiff without requiring a finding on the part of the jury that the plaintiff was damaged as the result of the death of Charles W. Bright, we rule is not well taken.
An examination of the record in this case shows there was no controversy so far as the testimony was concerned but that the mother of Charles W. Bright had been supported by him at the time of his death and for some years prior thereto, to the extent of furnishing her a home, for the rental and upkeep of which he expended from $100 to $125 per month; and that in addition thereto the said son had, from time to time, given her sums of money, at her request, aggregating $50 per year. Furthermore, not alone was this testimony uncontradicted, but defendants adduced a witness by whom it was shown that the expectation of life of a woman aged seventy-four years would average somewhat over 6.68 years, and that to purchase an annuity of $530 per year, payable in equal monthly installments, it would cost, for a woman of said age, the single premium of $4000. We are, therefore, in light of the testimony in this case, of the view and so hold, that the question of whether plaintiff was damaged as the result of the death of said Charles W. Bright, was not a controverted question, and that an instruction which covered the entire case and directed a verdict which did not require the jury, before they could return a verdict for plaintiff, to find that the plaintiff was damaged as the result of the death of the deceased, was not erroneous.
The instruction given at the request of plaintiff on the measure of damages is criticized in that it assumes that there was a necessary pecuniary injury resulting to the mother from the death of the son, and authorizes the jury to assess damages without finding from the evidence that there was such pecuniary injury.
What we have stated in the preceding paragraph in this opinion suffices to cover the criticism leveled at this *318 instruction. Furthermore, an examination of the defendant's, Theodora Thacher, instruction on the measure of damages shows that it in turn assumes that there was a necessary pecuniary injury resulting to the mother from the death of the son. We rule the instruction is sufficient to be held good in its general scope.
The argument that the life tables show that the expectation of a woman who has reached the age of seventy-four years was a little over 6.68 years, was binding upon the jury. To this we cannot agree. Life tables are persuasive evidence but not conclusive. [See Sternsfels v. Met. St. Ry. Co., 73 A.D. (N.Y.) 494; Secord v. Lumber Co.,
The record shows that the mother was a witness in the case and the jury has an opportunity, therefore, to observe her actions on the witness stand, her physical alertness, her general appearance as to health, and from such observations could very properly come to the conclusion that she would live many years beyond that which the average woman of her age, as shown by the mortuary tables, would live.
Our examination of the several assignments of error shows that there are none, in our judgment, that are well taken in so far as the defendant, Theodora Thacher, is concerned; and as to her we hold that the judgment is for the right party. But as to the defendant, Arthur Thacher, we hold that the court erred in not giving the peremptory instruction requested at the close of the case. It follows, and it is so ordered, that the judgment *319 as to the defendant, Arthur Thacher, is reversed, and is affirmed as to the other defendant, Theodora Thacher. Reynolds, P.J., and Allen, J., concur.