[ 366] ~W. Ferd Dahlen instituted this action against Richard L. Wright to recover $15,000.00 damages for injuries and losses resulting from an intersectional automobile collision. Upon the trial of the cause a jury found against Dahlen on his cause of action and returned a $1500.00 verdict in favor of Wright on his *526 counterclaim against Dahlen and W. Ferd Dahlen Company. Dahlen and his company appeal from Wright’s judgment on the counterclaim. In the view we are compelled to take of the appeal it is necessary to consider but one assignment of error. Dahlen’s cause was submitted upon the hypothesis of the humanitarian [367] doctrine and negligent failure to observe a stop sign on Edmondson Road and suddenly driving onto Natural Bridge Road in front of his automobile. Wright’s counterclaim was also submitted upon Dahlen’s negligence under the humanitarian doctrine and primary negligence of speed in the circumstances. There was evidence on both sides, conflicting evidence, supporting all the charges of negligence and the decisive question upon this appeal is whether the court erred in instructing the jury upon Wright’s counterclaim.
His claim of Dahlen’s negligent speed was submitted in this instruction, and there were no other instructions on the subject (Carson v. Evans,
‘' The court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence, on the occasion mentioned in the evidence, that the plaintiff W. Ferd Dahlen and defendant W. Ferd Dahlen, Inc., a corporation, through its agent and servant, drove and operated an automobile in a westerly direction on Natural Bridge Road, at or near the intersection of Edmondson Road, at a high and excessive rate of speed, having regard to the circumstances and conditions then and there present, if you so find, and if you further believe that defendant W. Ferd Dahlen, Inc., a corporation, through its agent and servant thereby failed to exercise the highest degree of care, and was thereby negligent, if you so find, and if you further find that such negligence, if you find said plaintiff and defendant W. Ferd Dahlen, Inc., were so negligent, directly and proximately caused the collision mentioned in the evidence and defendant Wright’s injuries, if any, and you further find and believe that defendant Wright was then and there exercising the highest degree of care for his own safety, then your verdict must be in favor of the defendant Wright and against the plaintiff W. Ferd Dahlen on his cause of action, and in favor of defendant Wright on his counterclaim and against the plaintiff W. Ferd Dahlen and the defendant W. Ferd Dahlen Inc., a corporation.”
It is not necessary to detail the evidence on the subject but Dahlen’s contention that there was no competent, relevant or material evidence to support the instruction is without foundation, as we have suggested. In this connection it may be noted that several of the cases upon which Wright relies in justification of the instruction are not in point for in those eases the question was whether the instructions on speed were within the purview of the pleadings or the evidence.
*527
Johnessee v. Central States Oil Co., (Mo. App.) 200 S. W. (2) 383; Koelling v. Union Fuel
&
Ice Co., (Mo. App.)
The precise question is whether the instruction sufficiently submits and hypothesizes the
facts
concerning speed or whether it submits a mere conclusion of law. The appellant insists that no fact issues were submitted to guide the jury and that no finding of fact was required, either as to the speed at which the automobile was being operated or as to the circumstances then and there existing. He says that the issue of negligent speed was submitted without any guide whatever as to what particular speed or under what particular circumstances the speed would sustain a finding of negligence and argues that the jury was given a roving commission to guess and speculate without a guide, especially so in view of the conflicting evidence. The collision occurred at night, about ten o’clock, and Wright’s witnesses fixed Dahlen’s speed at thirty-five miles an hour, one of his witnesses, his guest, fixed his speed at sixty-five to seventy miles an hour. Dahlen admitted driving thirty-five miles an hour for' a half mile and Wright argues, therefore, that his admission is presumptive evidence of excessive speed, negligence per se, (Mo. R. S. A., Sec. 8383; Benzel v. Anishanzlin, (Mo. App.)
The controlling and decisive case is Yates v. Manchester,
The foregoing opinion by Barrett, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
