In this jury-tried action for personal injuries, plaintiff had judgment for $7,200; but, upon defendant’s timely after-trial motion under Section 510.290 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., the trial court set aside the judgment for plaintiff and entered judgment for defendant in accordance with his motion for a directed verdict at the close of the entire case. Upon this appeal by plaintiff, the determinative issue is whether plaintiff made a submissible case under the only theory presented in his instructions, i. e., defendant’s alleged negligence under the humanitarian doctrine for failure to stop or slacken the speed of a GMC pickup then being driven by him. In resolving this issue, we consider the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff and accord to him the benefit of all favorable inferences reasonably deducible therefrom. De Lay v. Ward,
When the accident occurred about 1:15 P.M. on October 22, 1955, plaintiff, “a house mover” for eighteen years, was engaged in moving a four-room frame house owned by a Mrs. Turnbough (hereinafter referred to simply as the house) from its location behind (and north of) a tavern on the north side of Main Street, an east-and-west business street in Marston, New Madrid County, Missouri. The house was being moved in a westerly direction toward an intersecting north-and-south street, known as McCarty Street, which had a graveled roadway estimated at thirty to fifty feet in width, no curbing or sidewalk on either side, no drainage ditch along the *431 west side, and only a shallow north-and-south drainage ditch, “not over a foot deep,” along the east side. In his moving operation, plaintiff parked his 1942 International “bob truck,” headed in a westerly direction and with the wheels “scotched,” at a point west of McCarty and behind {and north of) Fawcett’s Grocery, which stood on the northwest corner of the intersection of Main and McCarty and fronted on Main. Some two to four feet behind (and east of) the “bob truck” and tied to it with a chain, plaintiff parked a borrowed 1948 International “wrecker truck” equipped with a crane and winch and described as “a rusty looking red” in color. The wrecker also was headed toward the west (crosswise of McCarty) with its rear wheels, likewise “scotched * * * in order to keep it from sliding back,” in the middle of McCarty.
The house, “jacked up” and placed on three sets of “tandem dollies,” thirty inches in height, was being moved by means of a heavy cable (hereinafter referred to as the pulley cable) extending from the wrecker winch in an easterly direction across McCarty to a pulley hooked to a tongue on “the hitch cable,” which, in turn, was attached to the sills of the house — “one chain from one sill and a chain from the other sill.” Since the wrecker winch was running at the time of accident, the house was moving but it still was “about forty feet” east of the east edge of McCarty. With the moving operation thus in progress, the west half of McCarty was blocked by the wrecker, and the ■east half of McCarty was blocked by the pulley cable, which was rusty brown in color, about three feet above ground level, .and concededly without any warning papers, clothes or rags on it.
Defendant, a colored man fifty years of age, then working for one Leo Fisher at “a cotton office” in the north end of Marston, was sent after some bolts. Using his employer’s GMC pickup on this errand, defendant purchased the bolts at a store on the south side of Main Street opposite the tavern. Starting his return trip to the cotton office, defendant proceeded west on Main to the intersection of Main and McCarty, made a right-hand turn to the north onto McCarty, and traveled “about one-third of a block” before running into the pulley cable. Defendant admitted that, pri- or to the accident, he did not see the cable, the wrecker, the house or plaintiff, did not hear any warning (although plaintiff’s evidence was that “there was two boys out there yelling and waving traffic” and that “lots of people hollered”), and did not apply the brakes on the GMC pickup. With respect to the speed of defendant’s pickup, the only evidence adduced by plaintiff was the estimate of his witness, James Muse, Jr., operator of the wrecker winch, that the pickup was traveling thirty-five to forty miles per hour when it struck the pulley cable. There was no showing as to the distance within which the pickup, traveling at that speed, could have been stopped. Defendant estimated his speed at eighteen to twenty miles per hour and thought that he could have stopped within thirty to forty feet.
At the time of accident, plaintiff was standing, “about six feet” as he said on direct examination, or “two, three or four feet” as he agreed on cross-examination, in front (and west) of the house. Thus, plaintiff was “approximately thirty-five feet east of the east edge” of McCarty. “Facing the dolly” and with his back to McCarty, he never saw defendant’s pickup. Immediately prior to his injury, he had “dropped down to put a board underneath the front dolly wheel”; but, when he heard what “sounded like four or five hollering” — “just hollering to stop the man from going through the cable” — he “raised up.” When the pickup hit it, the pulley cable broke and “that block” (apparently referring to the pulley) struck plaintiff on the right side of his chest and abdomen.
Although no case has been cited or found in which our humanitarian doctrine has been invoked under analogous circum *432 stances, we assume for the purposes of this opinion (without, however, so deciding or holding) that, as plaintiff here contends, such doctrine might he extended to encompass plaintiff’s discoverable peril on private property some thirty-five feet from the public street, if the evidence otherwise properly permitted a finding of all essential elements of a cause of action under that doctrine. The first and basic, if not the chief, fact of liability under the humanitarian doctrine is that plaintiff must have been in a position of imminent peril; 1 and, by repeated judicial declarations, it has been settled beyond room for argument that: “The peril truly must be imminent— that is, certain, immediate, and impending; it may not be remote, uncertain or contingent. A likelihood or bare possibility of injury is not sufficient to create imminent peril.” 2
The second essential element of a cause of action under the humanitarian doctrine is that defendant must have had (either actual or, in a
discoverable
peril case, constructive) notice of plaintiff’s position of imminent peril [Banks v. Morris & Co.,
Imputing to defendant in the instant case (for the purposes of this opinion) knowledge of the entire situation immediately prior to the accident,
insofar as developed in and reflected by the transcript before us,
our initial inquiry becomes whether the
reasonable appearances
of that situation,
as divulged by the record,
were such as to impose upon defendant a duty to act by charging him with constructive notice of the basic element of liability under the humanitarian doctrine, i. e., that plaintiff was in a position of imminent peril. Plaintiff’s distance from, and position relative to, the pulley cable, pulley, tongue and hitch cable obviously would be vital and determinative in any such inquiry; but, in
*433
formation on these subjects is conspicuous solely by its absence. The transcript on appeal, which we must take as it comes to us [Bennett v. Wood, Mo.,
The sound and oft-repeated statement (of which the authorities cited by plaintiff remind us) that the precise place where, and time when, one
comes into
a position of imminent peril is for the jury, appears and finds application in cases in which a
moving
plaintiff
comes into
the pathway of defendant’s moving vehicle;
5
but, even in cases of that character, whether plaintiff
comes into
a position of imminent peril is not always for the jury. Paydon V. Globus, Mo.,
Of course, we know from the fact of injury, itself, that plaintiff was in a position fraught with perilous possibilities. But, it is clear that proof of plaintiff’s injury did not establish his prior position of imminent peril
within the contemplation of the humanitarian
doctrine, for, “(i)f such were a sound theory, then it could be urged that all persons whose injuries were occasioned by the wrongful act or conduct of another were theretofore in ‘imminent peril’ within the meaning of the term under our humanitarian rule.” McClanahan v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,
Having so concluded, we need not rule other questions raised, excepting only plaintiffs contention that, in any event, the cause should be remanded for a new trial on
primary
negligence. In arguing this point, plaintiff ignores the fact that
he is the appealing party,
and that this is
not
a case (such as those cited by plaintiff’s counsel) in which our discretionary power to remand is invoked upon
defendant’s
appeal from a judgment for
plaintiff
[e. g., Blaser v. Coleman,
The transcript before us reflects coolly-calculated choices by capable counsel, who, on the morning of trial, voluntarily dismissed as to defendant Fisher, the white employer, and thereafter proceeded against defendant Taylor, the colored driver, and who emphatically and effectively impressed the jurors with the magnitude of Taylor’s alleged dereliction, not only by presenting evidence on
all
pleaded assignments of primary negligence but also by emphasizing such evidence in closing arguments. Careful consideration of the entire record convinces us that deliberate submission to the jury on the sole ground of alleged humanitarian negligence was clearly a matter of legal strategy by which informed counsel sought “to secure the strategic advantage of avoiding the hazard of meeting the defense of contributory negligence.” Smith v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,
Plaintiff having so chosen purposefully to abandon pleaded primary negligence [Welch v. McNeely, Mo.,
The judgment for defendant is affirmed.
Notes
. Banks v. Morris & Co.,
. Blaser v. Coleman, supra, 213 S.W.2d loc. cit. 421(2); Chenoweth v. MeBurney,
. See v. Wabash. R. Co.,
.Turbett v. Thompson,
. See Wabash R. Co. v. Dannen Mills, Inc., supra, 288 S.W.2d loc. cit. 929 (5); Catanzaro v. McKay, Mo.,
. Vietmeier v. Voss, Mo.,
. Paydon v. Globus, Mo.,
. Stephens v. Thompson, Mo.,
. Contrast also Houfburg v. Kansas City Stock Yards Co. of Maine, Mo.,
. Edelen v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo.App.,
. Consult Hunt v. Chicago, M., St. P. & P. R. Co.,
