In this damage suit for personal injuries resulting from a vehicular collision, plaintiff had judgment for $5,000 upon a nine-man jury verdict against both defendants, Taft Dixon and Bill Hullet. Thereafter, Dixon’s motion for new trial was sustained for error in giving Hullet’s instruction 3-H, and Hullet’s motion for new trial was sustained for error in giving Dixon’s instruction 2-D. On this appeal by plaintiff, she frankly concedes that both of said instructions were erroneous but earnestly argues that neither instruction was prejudicial to the other defendant.
The collision under consideration occurred about 10 A.M. on January 27, 1956, at the “T-intersection” (hereinafter referred to as the intersection) near the south city limits of Kennett, Missouri, formed by a paved two-lane east-and-west road known as the “south by-pass” as it enters from the east Missouri State Highway 25, a paved two-lane north-and-south through highway. Plaintiff was riding in the front seat of a 1955 Ford automobile owned and driven by her brother-in-law, defendant Dixon. As Dixon, west-bound on the bypass, was attempting at the intersection to make a left turn to the south onto Highway 25, the left side of the Dixon automobile was struck by the front end of defendant Hullet’s 1953 Chevrolet automobile, north-bound on Highway 25. The evidence upon trial of this case, pertaining to the circumstances surrounding the collision, was quite similar to that adduced upon trial of the companion suit by plaintiff’s husband, also a passenger in the Dixon automobile, which was recently decided on appeal by our Supreme Court [Downing v. Dixon, Mo.,
Plaintiff pleaded both primary and humanitarian negligence on the part of each defendant, but she submitted as to each solely on humanitarian negligence. 1 Hul-let’s instruction 3-H (for the giving of which Dixon’s motion for new trial was sustained) first told the jurors that, if they found that Hullet was driving in a northerly direction on Plighway 25, a through highway (as to which there was no dispute), and that the Dixon automobile “entered or was entering the intersection * * or was approaching so closely to State Highway 25 as to constitute an immediate hazard,” it was Dixon’s duty to yield the right of way *930 to Hullet. Instruction 3-H “further instructed” the jurors that, if they found that “Dixon was negligent in entering the intersection” and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the collision and plaintiff’s injuries, their verdict should be in favor of Hullet and against plaintiff, unless (as the jurors then were told in the language of a converse humanitarian instruction) Hullet was guilty of humanitarian negligence in failing to warn, stop, slacken speed, or swerve. Plaintiff candidly concedes in her brief that the first portion of Hullet’s instruction 3-H “covers primary negligence on the duty of (Dixon) * * to yield the right of way” and that “there •does not seem to be any question that this instruction would be erroneous and prejudicial as to the plaintiff.” But, emphasizing that instruction 3-H directed a verdict only for Hullet and not against Dixon, plaintiff vigorously insists that this instruction was not prejudicial to Dixon.
Plaintiff had the right to elect, as she did, the pleaded ground of negligence upon which her case was submitted against each defendant [Berry v. Kansas City Public Service Co.,
Of course, in a humanitarian case “the defendant can either submit the exact converse of plaintiff’s humanitarian submission, or of any essential element thereof, or he can submit facts (shown by his evidence) which would disprove one or more of the basic facts of plaintiff’s humanitarian submission.” Janssens v. Thompson,
Dixon’s instruction 2-D (for the giving of which Hullet’s motion for new trial was sustained) first told the jurors that “all parties whose negligence concurs directly and proximately to cause an injury are jointly and severally liable” and instructed them that, if they found that all defendants were negligent and that such negligence directly and proximately contributed and concurred to cause plaintiff’s injuries, their verdict should be against all defendants. Instruction 2-D “further instructed that it is no defense to- one defendant that the negligence of some other defendant concurred with his negligence to cause said injury, if any, and
before you can render a verdict in favor of any one defendant you must find and believe from the evidence that said defendant was not negligent or that his negligence, if any, did not contribute to cause the plaintiff’s injury, if any."
Our Supreme Court holds that an instruction in the italicized language has the effect of shifting the burden of proof and, therefore, is prejudicially erroneous.
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The fact that, as in the instant case, other instructions on the burden of proof correctly declare the law simply results in “an irreconcilable conflict” [Schneider v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo.,
However, plaintiff (supported on this point by defendant Dixon) here contends, on the broad general principle
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that a party will not be heard to complain of error invited by him,
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that Hullet is in no position to predicate error on the giving of instruction 2-D, because (so plaintiff and Dixon assert) Hullet’s counsel, after voicing emphatic objections to instruction 2-D
as originally drafted and presented,
told the trial judge that he (Hullet’s counsel) would not object to this instruction if the last paragraph containing the above-quoted language in italics were added. This contention reflects an obvious difference of opinion and a possible misunderstanding between opposing counsel (always regrettable and here especially deplorable in view of the high ethical standing and recognized personal integrity of all interested counsel) as to the precise meaning, intendment and effect of what Hullet’s attorney may have said concerning instruction 2-D in the course of a thirty-minute discussion in the judge’s chambers before the court ruled on the instructions offered. By granting a new trial to Hullet for the giving of Dixon’s instruction 2-D, the trial court necessarily found that Hullet’s counsel had not waived his right to object to that instruction; and, after carefully reviewing the testimony of counsel given at the hearing on defendants’ motions for new trial and the detailed statement of the trial judge concerning this matter (as embodied in the record before us), we are inclined to defer to such finding by the trial judge who certainly was in better position than we are to rule this point with a view to the doing of substantial justice. Furthermore, the transcript on appeal, which we must take as it comes to us [Bennett v. Wood, Mo., 239 5.W.2d 325, 327(2); Farmer v. Taylor, Mo.App.,
The order of August 17, 1957, setting aside the judgment for plaintiff and sustaining defendants’ separate motions for new trial is affirmed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court for retrial.
Notes
. We find it unnecessary, as did the Supreme Court in the companion case, to determine whether a guest properly may proceed against her host driver on humanitarian negligence.
. Cunningham v. Thompson, Mo.,
. Ciardullo v. Terminal Railroad Ass’n of St. Louis, Mo.,
. State ex rel. Nevins v. Hughes,
. Rothweiler v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo. (banc),
. Consult Yankoff v. Allied Mutual Ins. Co., Mo.App.,
