While “it was getting dark” on October 14, 1954, Mrs. Lucie Leek, plaintiff herein, was riding as a guest in the rear seat of a 1950 Ford automobile then being driven by Wilford Redman, one of the defendants herein, in an easterly direction on U. S. Highway 60 en route from Dexter to More-house, Missouri. As the Redman automobile approached “the Wahite bridge” over a drainage ditch about two miles west of Morehouse, defendant Redman observed an automobile (subsequently identified as a 1951 Chevrolet owned by Burtis Dillard, the other defendant herein) standing on the bridge. For injuries alleged to have been sustained when Redman’s emergency application of his brakes “threw me (plaintiff) * * * down between the front seat and back,” plaintiff sued both Redman and Dillard. At the close of plaintiff’s case, the trial court sustained defendant Dillard’s motion for a directed verdict; and, at the close of the entire case, the jury returned a verdict for $3,000 against defendant Redman. We have the case upon the separate appeals (here consolidated) of plaintiff and defendant Redman.
Upon
plaintiff’s
appeal challenging the directed verdict for defendant Dillard at the close of plaintiff’s case, the evidence adduced in plaintiff’s case in chief will be viewed in the light most favorable to her and she will be given the benefit of all inferences reasonably deducible therefrom. Bohle v. Sternfels, Mo.,
We have no doubt but that the triers of the facts might have drawn different inferences from plaintiff’s testimony upon trial, particularly in view of the demonstrated inconsistencies between such testimony and her previous deposition. However, she was not bound conclusively by contradictory statements in her deposition ; 1 and, viewing her testimony most favorably to sustention of her claim against defendant Dillard, we think that the jury reasonably might have found that the Dillard automobile was discovered by defendant Redman when, as he passed the parked truck, the headlights on' his (Redman’s) automobile “flashed on” the Dillard automobile, stopped with no lights on it about halfway between the east and west ends of the Wahite bridge, headed “partly southwest,” and standing “partly on the left side and partly on the right” side of the bridge, with “most of it” on plaintiff’s left side. (There was no center line on the bridge at that time.) Redman immediately “slapped his brakes on”; and, although plaintiff and Redman agreed that, when they first saw the standing Dillard automobile, it “looked *64 like” there was insufficient space to pass, the Redman automobile, “sliding sideways or skidding” — “kind of slanting,” passed on the south side of the Dillard automobile without striking either that automobile or the bridge, and came to a stop near the east end of. the bridge. Plaintiff recognized defendant Dillard as one of the “people standing in front of the car” shortly thereafter.
The Dillard automobile had been theretofore involved in a collision “around 6 o’clock” (hereinafter referred to as the earlier collision), but the record is altogether silent as to the circumstances under which the earlier collision had occurred, as to the nature and extent of injury and damage resulting from the earlier collision, and as to what period of time had elapsed between the earlier collision and the subsequent occurrence involving the Redman automobile. However, since the time of the setting of the sun is a matter of judicial notice [Haley v. Edwards, Mo.,
The allegations of plaintiff’s amended petition, including a charge that defendant Dillard negligently permitted his automobile “to be stopped on said (Wahite) bridge and to block the traffic lanes of said highway, without having any lights burning on said vehicle,” were sufficient to invoke the statutory light regulations, although the statutes were not pleaded specifically. 3 The broad and inclusive requirement of Section 304.310 is that “(n)o person shall drive, move, park or be in custody of any vehicle * * * on any street or highway during the times when lighted lamps are required unless such vehicle * * * displays lighted lamps and illuminating devices as this chapter required”; and, the plain and unmistakable mandate of Section 304.450 is that “(w)henever a vehicle is parked or stopped upon a highway * * * during the times when lighted lamps are required, such vehicle shall be equipped with one or more lamps which shall exhibit a white light on the traffic side visible from a distance of five hundred feet to the front of such vehicle and a red light visible from a distance of five hundred feet to the rear * * (All emphasis herein is ours.)
Permitting the Dillard automobile to remain at rest without lights on the traveled roadway of Highway 60, at a time when lights were required by Section 304.-270(9), constituted negligence per se.
4
Of course, defendant Dillard might have shown legal justification or excuse for his violation of the statutory light regulations, by adducing (if he could) “proof that an occurrence wholly without his fault made compliance with the statute impossible at the moment complained of and which proper care on his part would not have avoided.” Wilson v. Shumate, Mo.,
However, defendant Dillard here insists that, even if he was negligent, plaintiff cannot recover against him for want of causal connection between such negligence and plaintiff’s injury. Donnelly v. Goforth, Mo.,
For a negligent act or omission to constitute a proximate cause of an injury,
some
injury must have been reasonably foreseeable. Dickerson v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo. (banc),
As defendant Dillard here emphasizes, there actually was sufficient room between his automobile and the south side of the Wahite bridge for the Redman automobile to pass safely. But, want of causal connection between Dillard’s negligence and plaintiff’s injury was not established conclusively by a showing that the Dillard automobile, “partly” on the south side, did not block the entire south half of the traveled roadway, 8 nor by the further fact that there was no collision between the Redman and Dillard automobiles. 9 And, if Dillard’s negligence was a substantial factor contributing to cause plaintiff’s injury, Dillard would not have been absolved from concurrent responsibility therefor, even though defendant Redman might have been negligent also, for Dillard “should reasonably have considered the probability of injury, not only from careful drivers of other vehicles, but from negligent ones [citing cases], unless the act of the other driver was so ‘extraordinary’ as not to be reasonably foreseeable.” Dickerson v. St. Louis Public Service Co., supra, 286 S.W.2d loc. cit. 825.
In the absence of any notice or warning, an east-bound motorist, such as defendant Redman, approaching the Wahite bridge over a long, level, straight stretch of smooth pavement would have had no reason to have anticipated that the traveled roadway on the bridge was obstructed by the Dillard automobile, standing (so plaintiff said) unlighted and “partly” on the south side of the bridge. Haley v. Edwards, supra, 276 S.W.2d loc. cit. 159; Davis v. F. M. Stamper Co.,
On
defendant Redman’s
appeal, the initial contention is that his motion for a directed verdict should have been sustained, because plaintiff’s testimony “constitutes a judicial admission” precluding recovery against Redman. Compare Haddow v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo.App.,
Plaintiff’s submission against Redman was for alleged negligent failure to keep a proper lookout. While operating a motor vehicle on a public highway in this state,
defendant Redman
was under a
continuous
duty to exercise the
highest
degree of care in maintaining a vigilant lookout ahead;
13
and, to satisfy and discharge that duty, he was obligated to look in such observant manner as to enable him to see what one in the exercise of the
highest
degree of care for himself and others could and should have seen under similar circumstances.
14
As a guest in the Redman automobile,
plaintiff’s
duty was to exercise
ordinary
care; and, in the absence of visible
*68
lack of caution on the part of Redman or known imminence of danger, plaintiff had a right to rely upon Redman [Fann v. Farmer, Mo.App.,
Defendant Redman testified that, traveling at fifty to fifty-five miles per hour, “I had already passed the (parked) truck when I noticed the (Dillard) car” — “I would say right after I passed it.” He “wasn’t exactly at the (Wahite) bridge” but he “just couldn’t say how far” west of the bridge he was when he first saw the Dillard automobile. Plaintiff’s evidence
in rebuttal
developed that the Wahite bridge was “85 steps” or “approximately 250 feet” in length, and that it was about “42 steps” from the Dillard automobile to the west end of the bridge. Since defendant Redman said that his headlights were burning and “were good,” we assume that they complied with the requirements of Sections 304.320 and 304.350 [now amended Laws of 1955, p. 626]. Peterson v. Tiona, Mo.,
Plowever, for refusal to instruct the jury on the law of emergency, the judgment against defendant Redman cannot stand. The so-called emergency doctrine is not a defense, under which a motorist is exonerated simply by reason of the existence of an emergency. Rohde v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo.,
It is true that, before permitting consideration of an emergency, an instruction must require a finding, in substance and effect, that defendant’s negligence did not cause or contribute to cáuse the emergency;
17
but, the “freedom [of the defendant] from any negligence in bringing about the emergency may be hypothesized generally.” Rohde v. St. Louis Public Service Co., supra, 249 S.W.2d loc. cit. 421; Jones v. Hughey, Mo.,
Having so concluded, it becomes unnecessary to consider other errors assigned by defendant Redman, including substantial objections to the form of plaintiff’s instruction 1-P, which will, no doubt, be obviated upon retrial. The judgment of the trial court is set aside and the cause is remanded for retrial against both defendants.
Notes
. Hamilton v. Patton Creamery Co.,
. Except as otherwise stated, all statutory references herein are to RSMo 1949, V.A. M.S.
. Counts v. Thomas, Mo.App.,
. Cotton v. Ship-By-Truck Co.,
. Herrington v. Hoey,
. Smith v. Producers Cold Storage Co., supra, 128 S.W.2d loc. cit. 308(13); Blashfield’s Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice (Perm.Ed.), Vol. 2A, § 1191, loc. cit. 7. Compare Harris v. Hughes, Mo.App.,
.State ex rel. City of St. Charles v. Haid,
. Note the factual situations in Drakesmith v. Ryan, Mo.App.,
. Brooks v. Menaugh, Mo.,
. Nelson v. Tayon, Mo.,
. Maltz v. Jackoway-Katz Cap Co.,
. Smith v. Siercks, supra, 277 S.W.2d loe. cit. 525(1-3); Burris v. Kansas City Public Service Co., Mo.App.,
. Faught v. Washam, Mo.,
. Faught v. Washam, supra, 291 S.W.2d loe. cit. 82(5); Chenoweth v. McBurney,
. Consult Mayne v. May Stern Furniture Co., Mo.App.,
. Filkins v. Snavely,
. Kohde v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo.,
