271 Mo. 495 | Mo. | 1917
Appellant brought this action for damages for injuries received when he was struck by respondent’s automobile. This appeal followed an order overruling a motion to set- aside an involuntary nonsuit.
Since his appeal in this case, appellant began a second action against respondent, in which the petition counted on the same facts. Eespondent has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the institution of the second action is an abandonment of the appeal in this.
After the petition.in this case was filed, appellant gave notice to take depositions in Chicago, and subpoenaed respondent to give his deposition in that city. Eespondent did not appear, and appellant subsequently moved to strike out his answer. This motion was overruled, and this ruling is assigned for error.
Before the trial appellant caused to be issued a subpoena duces tecum commanding one Owen Jackson to produce at the trial a writing signed by respondent and alleged to contain material admissions. Jackson made return to this subpoena that he was an attorney at law and was counsel of record for respondent in this case and that all communications by respondent to him were privileged; that he did not have, at the time the subpoena was served on him nor thereafter, any writing or statement or copy thereof such as was described in the subpoena. The court took up the matter, recalled the •subpoena and set aside the order for its issuance. This is assigned for error.
After the evidence was in and respondent’s demurrer thereto had been tendered and respondent had announced .he would stand on his demurrer counsel asked that appellant be recalled, a dispute having arisen as to
The evidence concerning the manner of appellant’s injury is set out in the opinion.
I. Respondent contends the filing of the second action constituted an abandonment of the appeal and that, despite the fact no service was had in such second action and it was dismissed for want of prosecution long prior to the docketing and submission of this cause, this appeal must be dismissed. Cases are cited. In Dannan v. Coleman, 8 Mo. App. 594, 595- (Memo.), it is held that a defendant who takes leave to plead after his demurrer is overruled is presumed to abandon his demurrer and cannot stand on it after an interlocutory judgment against him for failure to plead. In Gilstrap v. Felts, 50 Mo. l. c. 431, appellant had, after judgment arrested and new trial granted, participated in the new trial. It was held he could not complain of error in granting the new trial. In Burke v. Cunuingham, 42 Neb. 645, an appeal was first taken and a writ of error subsequently sued out. This last was held as an abandonment of the appeal under the law of that State. These decisions do not decide the question before us. From the statute (Secs. 1800 and 1804, R. S. 1909) it appears the pendency of this action might have been tendered as ground- of abatement of the second action. The institution of the second action no more constituted an abandonment of this appeal than it,- ipso facto, would have constituted an abandonment of this action had this been pending in the circuit court when the second action was begun.
II. The question whether the evidence introduced entitled appellant to have his case submitted to the jury, necessitates an examination of the testimony.
Jordan testified that he and appellant reached the curb on the southwest corner of Seventh and Locust and stopped because of the presence of a street car in the street; that there “were lots of people there;” that he and appellant waited until the street car moved on and then took one step into the street and were immediately struck; that before stepping into the street he looked west and did not see the automobile; that when he first saw it it was five or six feet west of appellant; that “it might not have been a second” after they stepped into the street before they were struck; it was a very short time; “we had no more than hit the curb before we met with the accident;” that the right-hand front fender struck appellant; that aside from the street car he saw, before stepping into the street, no moving vehicle in Locust Street west of the point where he and appellant were standing.
Re-cross examination:
“Q. The fact of the matter is that the first time you looked west, after you went to step down on to the street, or after you had stepped down on the street, you saw this automobile some four or five feet west of you ■ — wasn’t it right on you, the first time you looked west after you stepped into the street? A. - Yes, sir.
“Q. You saw the automobile some four or five feet away from Frankel (appellant) ? A. Yes, sir.
‘ ‘ Q. And then it was almost on you and immediately struck you? A. Yes, sir; that is it exactly.”
Recalled, Jordan testified that when he saw the automobile he tried to jerk appellant out of the way; that appellant was paying no attention at all and hé (Jordan) was not paying a great deal; that he and appellant would not have been struck if they had stood where they were,
James Fitzpatrick testified he was on the northwest corner of the crossing and saw the occurrence; that appellant and Jordan were standing in the street, talking earnestly; they were about four feet from the curb; that he saw the automobile approaching, but fifteen or twenty feet away from them, and called to them, but they “didn’t seem to hear;” that defendant sounded his horn, but they seemed not to hear it; that as defendant saw he “was going to run into them he turned-the machine a little north, and the two men had seen the machine at that time and they ran in the same direction to get out of the way,” and the automobile struck them; that he was not a good judge of speed, but supposed the automobile was going five or six miles per hour; that it was twenty to twenty-five feet from the men when he first saw it; that the space between the south car-track- and the curb at that point is ten or eleven feet; that he saw no street car there.
“Q. You say you heard a horn blow? When did this horn blow? A. Shortly before it hit the man.
“Q. About how far was the machine from the man? A. Well I guess the distance, when I first had seen the machine, was about twenty-five or thirty feet away, something like that.
“Q. Was it the automobile horn that blew? A. Yes, sir.”
He testified that if the men had stood still, where they were when he first saw the automobile, it would, had it continued in its course, have passed without striking them; that the automobile approached to within ten feet of the men and they ran north in the same direction the automobile turned and they had gone about eight or ten feet when it struck them.
There was evidence the automobile could have been stopped in three and one-half to six feet and that the rate at which’ it was traveling, five or six miles an hour,
In determining- whether the cause should have been submitted fo the jury, all evidence and inferences unfavorable to appellant must he disregarded, and all evidence and all reasonable inferences favorable to him must he taken into consideration. This rule is not affected by the fact that the witnesses were all called by appellant. While he could not impeach one of Ms own witnesses, he was at liberty to prove the facts to be otherwise than as such witness testified. [Schumacher v. Breweries Co., 247 Mo. l. c. 154, 155, and cases cited.]
It is to he kept in mind that appellant had a right to use the street and that the vehicle which injured him was one which is not confined to a track or rails and one which is recognized as a dangerous agency. By statute (Laws 1911, pp. 326, 327, 330) it is required that drivers of automobiles moving along public streets must use “the highest degree of care that a very 'careful person would use, under like or similar circumstances, to prevent injury” to persons in streets; and that in approaching a pedestrian “who is upon the traveled part of any highway, and not upon a sidewalk . . . such motor vehicle shall slow down and give a timely signal;” and in approaching a street ear which has been stopped to discharge or take on passengers the same precautions are enjoined. [Meenach v. Crawford, 187 S. W. 879.]
There is evidence appellant was standing in the street, at a crossing, waiting for a street car, which had stopped, to move out of the way; that respondent approaching in his automobile, at the rate of five or six miles per hour, saw appellant twenty-five or thirty feet away; that respondent gave no signal and did not slow down, but proceeded directly toward appellant until he saw a collision with Mm was imminent; that, without checking his automobile or giving any signal he proceeded until he struck appellant. Another view supported by the evidence is that though he saw appellant twenty-five or thirty feet away, he approached within ten feet of
(a) The petition charges respondent negligently drove and operated his automobile and thereby struck and injured appellant. Under the rule long settled in this State this allegation is sufficient pleading “'to let in the humanitarian doctrine.” [Fleming v. Railroad, 263 Mo. l. c. 188, 189; Kellny v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 75; Hilz v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 56; Hanlon v. Railroad, 104 Mo. l. c. 391.] The evidence clearly warranted the submission of the cause on that theory.
(b) Without regard to the humanitarian doctrine, the evidence was for the jury. There was evidence warranting a finding that respondent violated the statute, and whether appellant was guilty of contributory negligence was for the jury to decide. [Meenach v. Crawford, supra; Carradine v. Ford, 187 S. W. l. c. 289, 290; Grouch v. Heffner, 184 Mo. App. l. c. 372, 373, and cases cited.] Even if the jury should find appellant and Ms companion became excited and, attempting to escape, fled in the wrong direction, it is yet a question of fact whether, in the' circumstances, that action was negligent. Fright at the suddenly discovered approach of an automobile imminently near is something so natural, so .usual, that one driving a vehicle should anticipate it and govern himself accordingly where the circumstances indicate one in the streets may. be taken unawares. [Meenach v. Crawford, supra; Hodges v. Chambers, 171 Mo. App. l. c. 567.] One in peril through, the negligence
Respondent cites cases. In Winter v. Van Blarcom, 258 Mo. l. c. 424, Williams, C., held that the evidence failed to show any negligence on the part of defendant, and that plaintiff’s injury resulted from his suddenly running from a safe place (so far as the automobile was concerned) across the street and in front of a carefully driven automobile, the driver having no opportunity to avoid striking him. In Parkes v. Lindenmann, 161 Wis. 108 et seq., a woman was standing near a street car track awaiting a street car which was approaching and about one-half block away; the driver of an automobile attempted to pass in front of her and between her and the car toward which she was looking; his course was such that the evidence all shows she was in no danger had she stood still; the machine would have “cleared her from three to seven feet;” that she ran north and the driver turned south to avoid striking her, and would have done so but she turned back and ran directly in front of the automobile; that the driver tried to stop and again turned north to avoid a collision, but was unable to do so. The fender struck her and the car stopped within two feet. The court recognized the rule that in an emergency the failure to take the best means of escape is not negligence. The court held defendant was not negligent; that the automobile was in plaintiff’s line of vision, attempting to pass in front of her and moving so as clearly to avoid striking her and at a careful speed, six miles per hour; that the driver had the right to presume that one waiting for an approaching car did not intend to step forward upon the car track; that the course he took, in the circumstances, “in all probability seemed to be outside of where she [plaintiff] would be likely to be or go” and yet where she would see him; that he could be charged with anticipation of probable results only. It is clear the facts of that case are markedly dif
In Knapp v. Barrett, 216 N. Y. 226, it was held that' it is the duty of a pedestrian, in crossing a street, to “use his eyes and thus protect himself from danger.” In that case an old man was struck by an express wagon. The trial court instructed that “the law did not require plaintiff to look” but that ordinary care might have required him to look. This was held erroneous. The court said that one who crosses a street without any exercise of the faculty of sight, is negligent as a matter of law, and that, to escape the consequences of such negligence, he must prove the accident would still have happened. The court concedes that no particular manner of looking is required and that the turning of the head is not necessary, as a matter of law, and that a vision of sufficient open space to give a reasonable assurance of safety is enough to take the question to the jury. What was held was that the instruction told the jury, in effect, that plaintiff, though he, without looking at all, “walked blindly in the path of the wagon, they might acquit him of all negligence.” That is not this case. Certainly, if the jury find in this case, as some of the evidence tends to prove, that appellant, without looking, stepped off the curb immediately in front of an automobile, moving slowly and carefully and giving warning signals, there can be no verdict against respondént. No statute like ours affected the decision of the New York court, and the evidence in that case is quite unlike the phases of the evidence in this which entitle" appellant to a submission of the issues. Other cases are cited, but an examination of them discloses they do not conflict with the views already expressed.
With respect to tbe ruling on tbe offer to recall appellant, that question will hardly arise on another trial. Neither, in view of tbe conclusion reached, is it necessary to discuss tbe ruling' withdrawing tbe subpoena duces tecum.
Tbe order overruling, tbe motion to set aside tbe nonsuit is reversed' and the cause remanded with directions to sustain that motion and proceed with tbe cause in a manner not inconsistent with this opinion.