209 S.W.2d 900 | Mo. | 1948
Lead Opinion
Late in the afternoon of January 10, 1946, about 5:30, the appellants' Ford delivery truck was driven off the pavement on Highway 54, near Nevada, to avoid colliding with another truck. The shoulder was wet and muddy and when the driver attempted to get the truck back onto the pavement it slid down the north shoulder and the rear wheels became mired in the ditch. When it finally became impossible to move the truck it had so slid that the rear wheels were yet in the ditch and the front wheels were pointed "a little to the left diagonally (southwest) across the highway." The truck remained in that position with its lights on until after *580 12:30. About eleven o'clock Mr. Creek of Walker, his wife and his son, came along and the truck driver enlisted their assistance. They turned around and drove about five miles into Nevada and procured a wrecker to get the stalled truck out of the ditch. When they stopped the second time, on their way home, the driver asked them to remain until the wrecker arrived as he wanted them to take him to Nevada for the night in the event the wrecker did not come. The Creek automobile was headed east and because of the muddy shoulder was stopped with its right wheels upon the pavement. The plaintiff, Dottie Ann Browne, and five other high school boys and girls from El Dorado Springs had been to a basketball game at Rockville in Eugene Dale's automobile. They had stopped in Nevada for hamburgers. As they drove east on Highway 54, on their way home, at a speed of thirty-five or forty miles an hour they came over a hill or grade and saw the lights of the stalled truck pointed across the highway. It was "kind of foggy, just a dreary day" and the pointed lights illuminated the mist and "shortened" Eugene's vision and as their car came out of the lights it crashed into the rear of Mr. Creek's car, tearing a hole in the gasoline tank. Dottie Ann was hurled from the car onto the burning pavement.
To recover for her resulting injuries this action was instituted against Mr. Creek and the appellants who owned the delivery truck. The jury exonerated Mr. Creek and found against the appellants in the sum of $10,000 upon the charge that "defendants Anderson and Cunningham negligently parked an automobile close to the highway with blinding headlights, and defendant Creek negligently parked on the highway and without lights, and the negligence of the defendants concurred in causing the collision and in that defendants negligently failed to keep a lookout, and negligently helped to cause the Creek automobile to be standing on the slab."
[1] Upon this appeal the preliminary point is made that the court erred in denying the appellants' application for leave to file a third party petition bringing in Eugene Dale. Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 847.20. In this connection the appellants urge that the sole proximate cause of the collision was Eugene's taking an unreasonable chance in driving through the fog and lights at forty miles an hour and therefore the court abused its discretion in denying the application. However, the appellants' application and proposed petition, with reference to [903] Eugene as a third party, did not assert any claim whatever against him. It was only claimed and asserted that Eugene's negligence was the sole proximate cause of the collision and injuries complained of.
The plaintiff declined to amend her petition so as to include Dale as a party defendant, whereupon the trial court denied the defendant's application for leave to include him as a party. While there has been some diversity of opinion as to the right of a defendant *581
to tender an additional third party defendant alleged to be solely liable for the injuries complained of and who is not liable to the defendant, it has become the better accepted and the better reasoned view, in the circumstances of this record, that there is no abuse of discretion when the trial court refuses the application. General Taxicab Ass'n. v. O'Shea,
[2] On the merits, the appellants contend that the trial court should have sustained their motion for a directed verdict for the reason that there was a fatal variance in the plaintiff's pleading and her proof. There was no impact with the appellants' truck and it is urged that there was an intervening sole cause of the collision with Creek's automobile, Eugene's driving through the fog in disregard of the angling lights. In this connection it is urged that the court erred in giving the plaintiff's first instruction because it omitted the defense of sole cause, did not follow the pleadings and proof, did not contain facts limiting the jury's consideration to the evidence, incorrectly charged on concurrent negligence and, finally, did not hypothesize facts demonstrating a legal obligation from the appellants to the plaintiff and a breach of that duty or obligation.
The appellants develop their argument by first analyzing the petition and contending that it charges, concerning the lights, specific negligence of failure to warn and failure to keep a lookout. Otherwise, it is said, there is no charge of negligence with respect to blinding lights. There was no proof or submission of failure to warn or failure to keep a lookout and therefore, it is urged, that there was a variance in the pleading and proof and consequently error in submitting the cause because the truck lights constituted but a condition about which, under the allegations, the appellants were obliged to do some specific thing — warn or lookout — before they could be charged with negligence in respect to the lights. There being no proof or submission of the specific things, failure to warn and keep a lookout, it is urged that there was a total failure of proof. It is argued that the truck driver, in his relationship with Mr. Creek, was not acting in the scope and course of his employment and that the charge "negligently helped to cause the Creek automobile to be standing on the slab" is not a charge of negligence at all but if it is the charge is one of general negligence only and not submissible in view of the specific allegations and the relationship.
This rather ingenious argument and the cases offered in support of it are not applicable however to the facts and circumstances of this record. Unquestionably, one may not charge specific negligence and submit his case on general negligence or upon proof of some act *582
wholly beyond the amendable charges of his petition. State ex rel. Anderson v. Hostetter,
Admittedly, by all the evidence, the lights on the stalled truck were on, not only at the time of the collision but from 5:30 until 12:30. They were pointed at an angle, in a southwesterly direction, down and across the highway. They so shined and were so pointed as to "shorten" Eugene's vision. Some of the plaintiff's witnesses said that the lights "were pretty bright," "slanting very brightly into our eyes" and, "they were blinding." The gist of the plaintiff's evidence was that the truck lights blinded Eugene until he drove past their rays and their own headlights reflected in the taillight of Mr. Creek's car and it was then too late to avoid crashing into the rear of that car. And so, "In view of the evidence as to the purpose of McDaniel's (Biscuit Company's) stopping and where he stopped, and the position at the time of the Shell truck, without lights, and with his (McDaniel's) lights on, which would tend to prevent a driver coming from the south from seeing the Shell truck, as the evidence tends to show, and in view of the other conditions obtaining, there would be a jury case regardless of any duty to so warn. It was McDaniel's duty to stop his truck at a place where his lights would not have prevented approaching drivers from seeing the unlighted Shell truck." Brinkley v. United Biscuit Co.,
[3] As the appellant says, there was no proof or submission of failure to warn or to lookout but, in any event, these charges and the charge of "negligently helped to cause the Creek automobile to be standing on the slab" and the specific charge of blinding lights were separately charged acts of negligence and there being pleading and proof of the one, blinding lights, the charge and submission as to the other acts becomes immaterial upon this appeal. Meeker v. Union Electric L. P. Co.,
[4] The plaintiff's instruction on the measure of damages permitted an allowance for past and future physical pain and mental anguish and in a separate paragraph said: "If you find from the evidence that as a direct result of the casualty and injury to her, her power to work and labor has been and isreasonably certain to be impaired in the future, then you can take into consideration and *584
make fair and reasonable allowance for all such impairment you so find." There was no evidence that the plaintiff, a minor, had been emancipated and the case was not tried upon the assumption that she had been. Shouse v. Dubinsky, (Mo. App.) 38 S.W.2d 530; Wagner v. Gilsonite Const. Co., (Mo.) 220 S.W. 890. It is insisted, therefore, that the instruction was prejudicially erroneous because it allows a recovery by a minor of earnings
to which she is not legally entitled. It is insisted that the instruction falls within "any impairment to his earning power and capacity" condemned in Evans v. Farmers Elevator Co.,
[5] In conclusion the appellants contend that the verdict of $10,000 is excessive and the result of passion and prejudice[906] and that the court erred in refusing to discharge the jury because of misconduct in examining the plaintiff in the presence of the jury. The appellants concede that the plaintiff "did sustain burns on the lower portion on the back side of her body" and "There is no question but that the burns were serious." So, there is no contest as to the nature and seriousness of the plaintiff's injuries. As a matter of fact the appellants do not contend or argue that the plaintiff's injuries are not sufficient to support the award of $10,000. Myers v. Chicago, B. Q.R. Co.,
[6] The plaintiff was injured on January 10, 1946. When the case was tried in October 1946 she was in a hospital in Kansas City receiving treatment, including plastic surgery. The trial lasted three days and the plaintiff was not present in the courtroom or even in Nevada when the trial began. She was brought to Nevada from Kansas City in an ambulance and was in the courtroom for a very short while, just long enough to testify and for the doctor to elaborate on his previous testimony as to her injuries. She was the plaintiff and appellants' counsel in making the objections now under consideration said: "We never didobject to the bringing in of plaintiff on the stretcher; what we are asking was that there be an agreement between counsel that at the time we made our objections as to the outcries of the plaintiff and at all times she was on a stretcher, so our record shows the facts as they were," consequently there can be no question as to her right as a party to be there. Bryant v. Kansas City,
The precise incident of which the appellant complains and asserts that the court abused its discretion (Smith v. Thompson,
[907] There being no prejudicial error the judgment is affirmed. Westhues and Bohling, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.