RUELL W. JACKSON v. SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY, Aрpellant.
SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
March 2, 1920
281 Mo. 358
Division One
2. ——: Care Defined. Ordinary care is such care as would ordinarily be exercised by an ordinarily careful person under the same or similar circumstances. But the statute requires the driver of an automobile on a public highway to exercise “the highest degree” of care that a “very careful person” would use under like or similar circumstances; and those words mean the highest care and caution of an experienced and competent chauffeur, since an automobile is an exceedingly dangerous machine unless kept under control. They do not mean the highest conceivable degree of prudenсe and skill possible to man, but the highest degree that has been demonstrated to be practicable.
3. ——: Contributory Negligence: Question for Jury. Under the Automobile Statute of 1911, if reasonable men may honestly differ as to whether the driver of the automobile, the circumstances considered, exercised the highest degree of care of a very careful person, the question of his contributory negligence is for the jury to settle; but if his failure to exercise such care is apparent to all reasonable men from the undisputed facts in evidence, then it becomes the duty of the court to declare, as a matter of law, that his contributory negligence bars a recovery; and in this case it is held that plaintiff‘s own undisputed testimony unquestionably shows that he was not exercising the highest degree of care of a very careful person, and therefore a demurrer should have been sustained.
4. ——: To Right of Center of Road. The statute (Par. 9, sec. 8,
5. ——: Skidding: Knowledge of Driver. Where the driver of the automobile left the smooth and beaten center of the public road, when there was no necessity for doing so, and encountered clods which caused his car to skid and strike a guy telephone pole, his contributory negligence cannot be excused by a failure of the evidence to show that he did not know that automobiles would skid in turning on to rough ground and clods. A very careful person, exercising the highest degree of care, venturing to drive an automobile at a turn in the public highway, at a speed of twelve or fifteen miles an hour and with the power off, thirty or forty feet over dry clods and rough ground, in daylight, his view unobstructed, would, before doing so, at least inform himself as to the common conditions and plaсes in the roads which cause such vehicles to skid.
Appeal from Buchanan Circuit Court.—Hon. Thomas B. Allen, Judge.
REVERSED.
W. B. Norris, D. E. Palmer and Battle McCardle for appellant; D. A. Frank and J. W. Gleed, of counsel.
(1) The location of the pole in question did not constitute negligence on the part of the defendant, and the accident complained of was caused by plaintiff‘s own fault and negligence, and was not due to any fault or neglect on the part of the defendant; and it was error for the court to refuse defendant‘s demurrer to plaintiff‘s evidence and defendant‘s request for peremptory instruction at the close of all the evidence.
L. C. Gabbert for respondent.
(1) The pole or guy stub in question was admitted to be nine feet in the public highway. The overwhelming evidence is to the effect that this pole narrowed the highway and was frequently run into and against by automobiles other than the plaintiff‘s. Placing the pole in the highway ninе feet from its north boundary incommoded the public. At least the jury so found upon the overwhelming testimony to that effect. This, therefore, made the defendant a trespasser, a violator of the law and in no position to complain that the act did not constitute negligence. “An obstruction that appears to interfere with the public‘s rights, or to endanger the safety of travelers, or annoy those coming in contact with it at a place on the right-of-way of a public
SMALL, C.—Appeal from the Circuit Court of Buchanan County. Plaintiff sued defendant for personal injuries sustained by him while driving a Ford automobile which, in making a turn in the road to the west, skidded against a telephone pole of defendant near the north edge of the road. It was in the country near Saxton, Buchanan County. The verdict and judgment were for plaintiff in the sum of ten thousand dollars. Defendant duly appealed to this court.
Plaintiff testified on direct-examination: That he lived near Easton, east of Saxton, Missouri. That on the morning of the 25th of February, 1917, he started in his Ford autоmobile to go to St. Joseph. He had had the car twenty-three days. It was his first car. He had driven every day except one. Had driven a Ford car, but not very much, before he bought this car. On this morning, he was driving, and his wife and three children were with him in the car. He had to make a turn to the west in the road, about two miles east of Saxton. As he approached this turn he was going north. The road going north, from fence to fence, was about forty-five or fifty feet wide, and about the same running west. There was a concrete culvert running diagonally from the southwest to the northeast corners of the turn in the road. There was a line of telephone poles running
On cross-examination, plaintiff testified: That he had driven his car on each of the twenty-three days he had owned it, except one. The weather had been good, except the day after he got the car. Before purchasing this car he had driven the cars of Guy Watts and Mr. O‘Brien four to six times. O‘Brien and Jim (Watts) taught him how to run his car. They just showed him how to use the brakes and feed the machine, and then he proceedеd to drive it himself. During the twenty-three days, when he was driving his car, he was learning, at the same time. The driving during those twenty-three days was part of the learning. During that time, he had sometimes come to St. Joseph in his car along the same road, crossed the same culvert in the day time, and made the same turn in the road, and had passed by the same pole each time, but never paid any attention to the pole. Did not know how tall the pole was. The grass and weeds there were dry and shriveled up. Never saw anyone drive between the pole and the north fence. Lived near Saxton all his life. Had been along that road a great many times in wagons and buggies. There was nо place for a team to get ‘round between the pole and the fence. The pole was eight or nine feet south of the fence. The road there sloped to each side. As he approached the culvert from the south, there were no teams nor foot passengers around. He had the road all to himself. Before that, on other days, he had crossed the culvert and rounded the curve and gotten by without any trouble. He made the corner all right without striking the pole or his car skidding. On this trip, he had turned out more to the right side than he had ever done before. Before he turned to the right, coming from the south, he was traveling in the middle of the main traveled road. Did not know how much he did swing over to the right. His best judgment was two or
There were no other witnesses to the accident. The other testimony in the case did not differ materially from that of the plaintiff as to the condition of the road and location of the pole. In the view we take of the case, it is not necessary to set out the further proceedings at the trial except to say that the court refused to give a demurrer to the evidence asked by the defendant at the close of the plaintiff‘s case and also at the close of all of the evidence.
I. The first question to be decided in this case is whether the plaintiff in driving his car wаs bound to use “the highest degree of care that a very careful person would use under like or similar circumstances,” as required by Section 12, par. 9,
“As stated, the court modified the instructions for plaintiff by adding thereto a clause which placed upon her driver the duty of exercising the highest degree of care in the running of the machine. This the appellant assigns as error. Respondent urges that such degree of care is required by State statute, and that the court committed no error in so wording the instructions. Paragraph 9 of Section 12,
Laws 1911, page 330 , reads:“‘Any persons owning, operating or controlling an automobile running on, upon, along or across public roads, streets, avenues, alleys, highways or places much used for travel, shаll use the highest degree of care that a very careful person would use, under like or similar circumstances, to prevent injury or death to persons on, or traveling over, upon or across such public roads, streets, avenues, alleys, highways or places much used for travel. Any owner, operator or person in control of an automobile, failing to use such degree of care, shall be liable to damages, to a person or property injured by failure of the owner, operator or persons in control of an automobile, to use such degree of care, and in case of the death of the injured party, then damagеs for such injury or death may be recovered, as now provided or may hereafter be provided by law, unless the injury or death is caused by the negligence of the injured or deceased person, contributing thereto.’
“What these two cases really hold is that, as to the driver of an automobile who is injured, or whose machine is injured, or damaged, only the rule of ordinary care is applicable. They say that the statute requiring the highest degree of care is one applicable to persons traveling on or over the streets or highways; that as to such persons traveling on or over such highways he owes the highest degree of care, but as to himself, his property, or those with him, only ordinary care is required. We cannot take this view of this statute. We think that it contemplates a rule of conduct for automobile drivers upon ‘public roads, streets, avenues, alleys, highwаys, or places much used for travel.’ That rule of conduct is to use ‘the highest degree of care.’ . . . The person driving a motor vehicle has a rule of conduct prescribed for him by this statute. That rule of conduct is the use of the ‘highest degree of care.’ A failure to reach the standard prescribed by the law is negligence, and, if the negligence contributed to his injury, he cannot recover. As said before, this statute prescribes a rule of conduct. If a violation of the statute occasions injury to others, the person violating it is liable in damages. If, on the other hand, the violation of the statute occasions injury to the person violating it, such person cannot recover for injury to himself,
It is thus seen that the statute establishes a general rule for all persons operating automobiles upon the public roads and highways not only to protect the lives and property of others on or traveling over such roads and highways, but also to protect such drivers themselves and the persons traveling with them.
Respondent‘s learned counsel suggests that the statute does not apply in this case, because the telephone pole was an illegal structure in the road or highway, in that it incommoded travel and was nine feet south of the north line of the road, and the statute (
We must, therefore, rule that the Automobile Statutes of 1911 applied to the plaintiff in this case, and that if he failed to exercise the high degree of care required by that statute in driving his machine he was guilty of contributory negligence.
II. The next question is whether the plaintiff was, as a matter of law, guilty of such contributory negli
The statute (Paragraph 3 of Section 8 of the Automobile Act,
In the Monroe Case, supra, it is ruled that the statute “does not mean the highest degree of prudence or skill which could be conceived as possible to man. They are only held to the highest degree which has been demonstrated to be practicable.” It obviously was practicable for the plaintiff to keep in the middle of the road, where it was smooth and generally traveled by the public, and not voluntarily leave it for experimental purposes only and drive over rough ground or clods and thereby cause his car to skid and become unmanageable and collide with the pole. Even old Dobbin, when he was the mighty master of the highway, would have followed the beaten path and kept out of trouble, for, as stated by plaintiff‘s learned counsel, plaintiff “had traveled over that road for years; but previous to getting his Ford car, we can assume his horses followed the beaten path, so that the guy or stub pole had never been brought to his attention.”
The plaintiff‘s violation of the statute is clear and constituted contributory negligence. That such negligence contributed to his injury is beyond question. We hold, therefore, the lower court erred in refusing defendant‘s demurrer to the evidence. The judgment of the lower court is reversed. Brown and Ragland, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by SMALL, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur; Blair, P. J., in result.
