This is an action for damages by Virgil and Annalee Hildreth, the adoptive father and the natural mother of Steven Alan Hildreth, for the alleged wrongful death of Steven, then six years of age, by reason of injuries sustained when he was struck about 1:00 P.M. on Sunday, November 14, 1954, by a 1949 Nash automobile then being driven by defendant, Robert E. Key, on Iron Gates Road in a suburban community near Joplin, Missouri. From the judgment of $8,000 entered upon the verdict, defendant has perfected this appeal. We pass defendant’s initial appellate complaint, i. e., that the trial court erred in overruling his motion for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence, because, by thereafter offering evidence, any such error was waived. Snead v. Sentlinger, Mo.,
Defendant turned north onto Iron Gates Road from 25th Street, the second east-and-west street south of the point of accident. Iron Gates had a two-lane blacktop roadway, the width of which was not shown more precisely than that two automobiles could pass without difficulty. The shoulder on each side of the blacktop was quite narrow (again we find no measurement or estimate of width), and at and near the point of accident the ground sloped from the east edge of the blacktop into the north- and-south drainage ditch, about eighteen inches in depth, which ran parallel with and on the east side of the roadway. There was no curb, gutter or sidewalk on either side. The day was sunny and warm, and the roadway was dry. Defendant, an automobile mechanic thirty-three years of age, and his wife, the only passenger in his automobile, were going to a wedding. They were in no hurry — “we had plenty of time.” As he drove north on his right-hand or east side of Iron Gates, defendant was traveling at a rate of speed described by plaintiffs’ witnesses as “moderate” and estimated by defendant at fifteen to twenty miles per hour. At a point in front of the Cox home, which faces Iron Gates and is. situate on the northeast corner of the intersection of Iron Gates and 24th Street, both defendant and his wife heard “a noise” or “a thud.” Defendant immediately stopped his automobile, and his wife opened the right door and “looked out to see what it was.” Steven was lying “at the (east) side of the road,” - about fifty-four feet north of the north line of 24th Street, with his. feet on the sloping east shoulder of Iron Gates and “his head * * * down at the bottom of the (drainage) ditch.” He was. “close to,” just “a little ways north” of, a. short walkway bridging the shallow drainage ditch on the east side of Iron Gates,, that is, leading from a low north-and-soutb retaining wall along- the front of the Cox yard to the east edge of the blacktop roadway. Steven died the same day without-regaining consciousness. Subsequent inspection of defendant’s automobile revealed' a dent in the right front fender just above- and inside the right headlight. It was admitted upon trial that Steven died “as a result of having come into contact” with defendant’s automobile. Neither defendant nor his wife had seen Steven prior to the-accident.
*605 On the day of this tragic occurrence, Steven and his mother had Sunday dinner at the home of his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Katherine Harmon, who lived on the southwest corner of the intersection of Iron Gates Road and 24th Street. After dinner, Steven went outside to play with “the Cox children”; and, in the course of childish frolic, Steven and Lynn Cox, the youngest Cox child, got into the back yard of the Cox home on the northeast corner of the intersection, where Mrs. Edith Cox, Lynn’s mother, talked with Steven and observed him winding the string around a yo-yo. By reason of the fact that Lynn’s parents were preparing to take Lynn with them to visit his grandparents, Steven left the back yard of the Cox home, and Mrs. Cox went inside to “gather up a few things.” The only information we have concerning Steven’s subsequent conduct and course is gleaned from the testimony of Lynn Cox, who was four years and seven months old when the accident occurred on November 14, 1954, and nine years and ten months old when the case was tried on January 13, 1960. Passing for the moment defendant’s complaints pertaining to Lynn’s competency (of which we treat anon), we here note the material facts which the jury might have found from his testimony as received.
When Steven left the Coxes’ back yard, he “started home” (i. e., to return to his grandmother’s home “cater-cornered” across Iron Gates Road), and Lynn went with Steven around the south side of the Cox home and “to the middle” of the walkway bridging the shallow north-and-south drainage ditch along the east side of Iron Gates Road. At that point, Lynn heard his mother calling for him and “ran back around” the south side of the Cox home. When Lynn left Steven, he (Steven) was “playing with his yo-yo” and “walking on top of the bridge (walkway).” Lynn did not see defendant’s automobile or witness the accident, but as he rounded “the (southwest front) corner of the house I heard some noise.” Lynn’s mother “heard this commotion, * * * panicked and run for the back door,” thinking that it was her boy who had been injured. By the time Lynn had reached the back porch, his mother met him with the relieved ejaculation that “she thought I (Lynn) got hit by a car.” When she went around to the front yard, she found the stricken Steven. There was no eyewitness to the fatal accident.
Defendant earnestly insists that, even with Lynn’s testimony, plaintiffs did not make a prima facie case on their theory of submission, to-wit, for alleged primary negligence in failing to maintain a vigilant lookout. Defendant’s argument on this point runs along the line that, since the front of the Cox home was thirty feet east of the walkway and the distance Lynn ran after leaving Steven on the walkway and before hearing the “noise” as he (Lynn) rounded the corner of his home “could have been as much as forty feet,” and since we should recognize judicially (so defendant says) that Lynn “ran at the rate of 8.8 feet per second,” the accident occurred “at least four or five seconds” after Lynn left Steven; that, depending upon whose estimate of speed is used, defendant’s automobile must have been “from ninety to one hundred seventy-five feet” distant when Lynn left Steven on the walkway; that, during this interval of four or five seconds, Steven “could have done any number of things”; that “nothing in the evidence indicated when and in what manner (Steven) started or arrived on the roadway”; and that, therefore, plaintiffs’ case rested upon the unwarranted “assumption that Steven was on the pavement or moving toward the pavement in such a manner that he was. seen or could have been seen by the defendant in time to (have avoided) the accident.”
Our view of the evidence and of the inferences reasonably deducible therefrom is not so narrow and restricted. Plaintiffs adduced evidence that, when defendant’s north-bound automobile was “just south” of the intersection of Iron Gates
*606
Road and 24th Street, defendant “was looking back over' his left shoulder” as his automobile was passing a south-bound automobile. Compare Spencer v. Kansas City-Public Service Co., Mo.App., 2S0 S.W.2d 187, 191 (3). Defendant and his wife had no recollection of having passed a south-bound automobile, and both insisted that, as they approached the point of accident, they “were watching ahead" with undistracted attention. However, regardless of whether, in fact, defendant then maintained a vigilant lookout ahead, certainly the continuous and inescapable duty to do so rested upon him. Thaller v. Skinner & Kennedy Co., Mo.,
The testimony of Lynn Cox placed Steven “in the middle” of the walkway where (to accept the statement in defendant’s brief) Steven was five to eight feet from the point of accident and was within four or five seconds of the tragedy. The distance then intervening between the walkway and defendant’s automobile was (again using the statement of defendant’s counsel) “from ninety to one hundred seventy-five feet.” Wherever defendant then may have been within that range, he had a clear and unobstructed view of the walkway and (as the jury reasonably might have found from Lynn’s testimony) of Steven “playing with his yo-yo” and “walking on top of the bridge (walkway).” "Where one is charged with the duty to look and to look is to see, he must be held to have seen what looking would have revealed.” Smith v. Kansas City Public Service Co.,
But, further pressing his contention that no submissible case was made against him, defendant argues that there was no showing that his failure to maintain a vigilant lookout, if so, was the proximate cause of the accident. True, the mere fact that injury follows negligence does not necessarily create liability [Branstetter v. Gerdeman,
We think that the jury reasonably might have inferred and found that, if defendant had maintained a vigilant lookout, he would, while yet ninety to one hundred seventy-five feet distant from the walkway, have seen Steven “playing with his yo-yo” and “walking on top of the bridge (walkway)” within a few (no more than eight) feet of the point where the boy subsequently was struck, and that, since Steven had “started home” to his grandmother’s residence on the west side of Iron Gates, he was walking in a westerly direction toward the roadway. Seeing six-year old Steven in such position and circumstances (because in law held to have seen what looking would have revealed), defendant “should have taken precautions commensurate to the danger potential in such a situation,” recognizing that “a child of such tender years, being engaged in play or other preoccupations on or near a roadway is almost entirely devoid of an appreciation of danger” [Ozbun v. Vance, Mo.,
Without conjuring up purported judicial knowledge of stopping distances much shorter than those contained in the Missouri Drivers Guide widely distributed by our State Highway Patrol [see Chawkley v. Wabash Ry. Co.,
“(T)he usual test as to causal connection is whether the facts show that absent the negligent act, the injuries would not have been sustained” [Wood v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,
What we have written concerning submissibility of the case is largely dispositive of defendant’s attack upon plaintiffs’ principal verdict-directing instruction, numbered 6. As we have held, the jury reasonably might have found that, after defendant saw, or in the exercise of the highest degree of care could and should have seen, Steven “playing with his yo-yo” and walking in a westerly direction on the walkway within eight feet of the point of accident, defendant had the means and ability so to have acted that Steven would not have been struck. This being true, the findings required by instruction 6 were sufficient and it was not essential that this instruction hypothesize the exact manner in which, and the precise means by which, defendant could have acted to have avoided the tragedy. Moore v. Ready Mixed Concrete Co., Mo.,
With the submissibility of plaintiffs’ case admittedly depending upon the testimony of Lynn Cox, a child of four years and seven months at the time of accident and of nine years and ten months at the time of trial, we have been deeply concerned with defendant’s appellate complaints that the trial court erred “in permitting * * * Lynn Cox to testify * * * over the objections of the defendant when said witness was incompetent by statute [V.A.M.S. § 491.060] * * * and was not shown to be properly qualified as a witness” and “in that defendant was not permitted to complete his cross-examination of Lynn Cox with regard to his qualifications as a witness.” We observe preliminarily that, when a child under the age of ten years is offered as a witness, “the correct practice” is for competency as a witness to be determined upon preliminary examination before the child is sworn and permitted to testify [Davenport v. King Electric Co.,
The statute [V.A.M.S. § 491.060] does not provide that
all
children under ten years of age shall be incompetent to testify, but only those “who (appear) incapable of receiving just impressions of the facts respecting which they are examined, or of relating them truly,” and our Supreme Court has said that the effect of the statute is to lower the age of presumed capacity and competency from fourteen years, as at common law, to ten years, leaving the common-law rule in force as to proffered witnesses under ten years of age, with the burden of proving the capacity and competency of any such witness resting upon the party who offers the witness. State v. Anderson,
Although competency as a witness must be determined
at the time of trial,
only two of the four essential elements, to-wit, the first and the fourth, depend upon the child’s
mental capacity at that time.
The second element inquires into
mental capacity as of the time of the occurrence
under consideration [cf. Bradburn v. Peacock,
The human memory is, at best, frail, fallible, and frequently a fond deceiver. Many figmentary recollections and fictitious remembrances truly “are begot in the ventricle of memory, nourished in the womb of pia mater, and delivered upon the mellowing of occasion.” Shakespeare, Love’s Labour’s Lost, Act IV, Sc. 2. Observing that the impressions made on the human memory ofttimes “resemble * * * the traceless track of the arrow through the air” and that “(m)any memories are mere sieves,” Lumpkin, J., a judicial realist of another day, exclaimed that “I would sooner trust the smallest slip of paper for truth, than the strongest and most retentive memory ever bestowed on mortal man.” Miller v. Cotten,
In the instant case, Lynn Cox was only four years and seven months old at the time of accident and thereafter five years and three months passed before he was offered as a witness at the trial. Although the competency of a child witness has been considered in many Missouri cases,
4
no reported case in this jurisdiction has been
*611
cited or found in which (a) a child witness has been offered who, at the time of the occurrence under consideration, was less than five years of age or (b) a child, still under ten years of age, has been permitted to testify concerning an occurrence after a time interval even approaching five years and three months. Turning to other jurisdictions, counsel for instant defendant have cited one case [Rosche v. McCoy, supra], and we have found others, in which a child less than five years of age at the time of the occurrence has been offered as a witness. In some of those cases, the appellate court held that the trial court had not abused its discretion in permitting the child witness to testify.
5
In other cases, usually on the basis of what had been disclosed by examination in the trial court, the child was said to have been incompetent as a witness,
6
while in a few instances the appellate court ruled that reversible error had been committed by the trial judge in refusing, without an adequate examination, to permit the child witness to testify because of extreme youth.
7
But, in only one case [Robinson v. State,
Notwithstanding all of the foregoing, we are unwilling to declare,
as a matter of law,
that
no child
four years and seven months of age has the mental capacity truly to observe and register facts such as those to which Lynn Cox testified and a memory sufficient to retain an independent recollection of those facts for five years and three months thereafter [cf. Bradburn v. Peacock, supra, 386 P.2d loc. cit. 974; Wheeler v. United States,
We have written at length on this point that our holding may not be misinterpreted or misapplied. We would be less than frank if we failed to record our grave doubt of Lynn’s qualification as a witness, more particularly as to whether his examination adequately showed that he could and did satisfy the
second
and
third
elements in the quoted test of competency. But, taking the record as it comes to us, as we must [Bennett v. Wood, Mo.,
If there has been no objection in the trial court to the competency [Adair v. Mette,
Defendant’s next complaint is that, since plaintiffs’ petition did not plead burial, hospital and ambulance expenses as special damages, the trial court erred in admitting evidence of such expenses and in giving plaintiffs’ instruction 5 which permitted recovery therefor. By the so-called compensatory sections of the wrongful death act [V.A.M.S. §§ 537.080 and 537.090, as amended and re-enacted Laws of 1955, p. 778], under which this action was brought, plaintiffs were entitled to recover (if the verdict was for them) such damages, not exceeding the statutory maximum, as the jury might have deemed fair and just, “with reference to the necessary injury resulting from such death,” having regard for mitigating and aggravating circumstances. As our Supreme Court tartly observed in Owen v. Brockschmidt,
Defendant also asserts that the trial court erred in permitting plaintiff, Virgil Hildreth, “to testify as to his wages and financial status.” Virgil stated, without objection, that he was an employee of Gas Service Company. Later, he was asked “what are your wages, sir?” and, after objection made and overruled, answered “$350 a month.” That was the
only
question bearing upon “wages and financial status,” to which an objection was interposed In his appellate brief, defendant also refers to a subsequent “question” propounded to Virgil, “you are not a rich man, are you?” but, there having been no objection thereto, the propriety of that “question” is not preserved or presented for our review. Sand-ler v. Schmidt, Mo.,
Finally, we consider the point that the trial court erred in refusing defendant’s motion to discharge the jury and declare a mistrial when, in closing argument, plaintiffs’ counsel admonished the jury, “Don’t let Mr. Shortridge and Mr. Tudor (defendant’s attorneys) call their client and say, ‘We have done it again.’ ” With defendant seated in the courtroom and no suggestion that he had been engaged in any previous litigation, the plain and obvious purpose of this stirring appeal was “to keep green before the minds of the jury” [Ry-tersky v. O’Brine,
In their appellate brief, plaintiffs’ counsel offer another “interpretation” of the *616 criticized argument, to-wit, that “jurors know * * * that a case is not finalized when a jury brings in its verdict,” that “in fact this case is not finalized yet,” and that “it may be that they (defendant’s counsel) will have to call their client and tell him the result thereof after this court speaks.” To us, the argument and its “interpretation” bear the same stamp of craft and cunning, and neither has any merit other than that of novelty and ingenuity. Counsel should not assume that even country appellate judges are so incredibly naive or innately stupid as to embrace such an “interpretation.”
We are mindful of the fact that, upon defendant’s objection to the argument, the court ruled that “the statement will be stricken out — the jury will disregard it” before denying the request for a mistrial, and we are cognizant of the holdings that the trial judge is invested with a considerable measure of discretion as to what action should be taken with respect to improper argument and that, where he has not regarded the transgression of counsel as of sufficient importance to grant a new trial, the appellate court is inclined to defer to his opinion. Davis v. Terminal Railroad Ass’n of St. Louis, Mo.,
All of the foregoing would lead naturally and logically to the conclusion that, where, as here, counsel have chosen deliberately to pollute and poison the stream of justice, imposition of the drastic, but only effectual, remedy of setting aside the verdict should be imposed. Compare Chowning v. Parker,
Our detailed study of this case has impelled the conclusion that the judgment for plaintiffs must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Notes
. State v. Groves, Mo.,
. State v. Groves, supra, 295 S.W.2d loc. cit. 172(2); State v. Tillett, supra, 233 S.W.2d loc. cit. 692; State v. Jones,
. Burnam v. Chicago Great Western R. Co., supra, 100 S.W.2d loc. cit. 862; State v. Jones, supra, 230 S.W.2d loc. cit. 680-681(3) ; State v. Tillett, supra, 233 SW.2d loc. cit. 692(10); State v. Statler, Mo.,
. In the eases collated in footnotes 4 to 7, incl., the ages following each citation are, except as otherwise specifically noted, the ages of the child witness at the time of the occurrence and at the time of trial, respectively. State v. Groves, supra, 295 S.W.2d loc. cit. 171 [6 yrs. 5 mos. and 7 yrs. 7 mos.]; State v. Smith, Mo.,
. Robinson v. State,
. Rosche v. McCoy,
. Bradburn v. Peacock,
. Stating that “(w)here the witness shows an appreciation of the nature and obligation of an oath, her competency to testify appears,” the Robinson opinion apparently ignored the other three essential elements in our Missouri test of competency. In the Robinson case, the child had been an eyewitness to a murder, while in the instant case Lynn Cox was neither involved in, nor an eyewitness to, the accident under consideration. Finally, in’ the Robinson case, “(t)here was evidence sufficient to sustain the verdict even if error was committed in admitting the child’s testimony,” while in this action the submissibility of plaintiffs’ case depends upon Lynn’s testimony.
. Rains v. St. Louis, I. M. & So. Ry. Co.,
. Degan v. Jewell,
. Annotation
. Stratton v. Sioux Palls Traction System,
. Brewer v. Rowe, supra, 252 S.W.2d loc. cit. 377, 379; Grogan v. Broadway Foundry Co.,
. Buehler v. Festus Mercantile Co.,
