This is аn action to' recover damages in the sum of $25,000 for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff (respondent) in an automobile collision. The case was submitted under the humanitarian doctrine. Following a verdict for $1750, plaintiff filed a limited motion for neiv trial of the issue of damages only on the ground the verdict was grossly inadequate, which motion the court sustained; Defendants appeal, assigning as errоr: (1) that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case, and (2) the sustaining of plaintiff’s limited motion for new trial on the issue of damages.
The evidence is stated from the standpoint most favorable to plaintiff.
The collision occurred near the noon hour on Sunday, the 10th day of April, 1949, at the intersection of Ellis and Independence Streets in the City of Cape Girardeau, Missouri. Ellis Street is 39 feet, 8 inches, in width and extends north and south. Independence Street is 37 feet, 4 inches, in width and extends east and west. A stop sign, two feet wide and elevated six inches above the level of the pavement, is embedded in the center of Ellis Street, 7 feet and 9 inches south of its intersection with Independence. Independence is a major or “through” street.
Plaintiff was riding in the rear seat of an automobile owned by her sоn-in-law, Lawrence B. Fendler, and driven by her daughter, Elizabeth Fendler. In the front seat with Elizabeth Fendler were her husband, Lawrence, and their small son. Two other of their children were in the rear seat with plaintiff. The Fendlers and plaintiff were residents of St. Louis County. They had come to Cape Girardeau on Saturday looking for business possibilities. On *451 the morning of the collision, they had attended church and, at the time of the collision, were driving north on Ellis Street. Defendant Richard Boswell, age eighteen years, accompanied by his mother, his sister and a neighbor girl, had gone to another church in an automobile owned by his father,.defendant Thomas E. Boswell. Following the service, they started to their home in the Boswell car, Richard Boswell driving. At the time of the collision they were traveling west on Independenсe Street.
As the Fendler car, proceeding north on Ellis at 15 to 20 miles per hour, approached the intersection of Independence, Mrs. Fendler and Mr. Fendler noticed the unusual placement of the stop sign, commented upon it, and Mrs. Fendler brought the car to a stop at the sign. She looked to the east and could see a full block down the street. She saw the Boswell cаr about “half or three-quarters of the way down the street.” There was nothing unusual about its speed and Mrs. Fendler assumed she had “plenty of time” to cross Independence. There was no other traffic approaching the intersection. She shifted gears and started across the street in low gear. As she proceeded across the street she was engaged in shifting from low to high gear. When she had gotten three-fourths of the way across the intersection, she realized that the Boswell car was going to strike their car. She exclaimed to the children to “watch out; he is going to hit us”, and the collision occurred at that moment. When she realized the collision was imminent, she swerved to the left, but there was not time or space to permit a “violent” swerve. She also attempted to apply her brakes. The Boswell car struck the right side of the Fendler car near the door. The Fendler earthen rolled on to the northwest corner of the intersection, across a sidewalk, and struck a concrete retaining wall. Other than the testimony of defendant Richard Boswell, to which we will refer, there was no testimony as to the rate of speed at which the Fendler ear was traveling from the time it entered the intersection to the point of collision. Richard Boswell, called as a witness by plaintiff, testified that as he drove west on Independence he was driving at 20 miles per hour when he first saw the Fendler car; that he was then 60 feet east of the intersection; that the Fendler car was on Ellis Street about ten feet south of the intersection with Independence when he first saw it; that he assumed it would stop at the sign and continued his speed of 20 miles per hour from the time he first saw it until within 12 feet of the collision; that the Fendler car was traveling about the same speed as defendants’ car when he first saw it and he did not know whether it slowed down at the stop sign; he just knew it did not stop at the sign, but came on through the intersection and never stopped from the time he .first sаw it until after the collision; that he was 40 feet from it when he realized it was going on through the intersection and was unable to stop, slow or *452 swerve his car and avoid the collision; that when he was 40 feet from the Fendler ear he undertook to apply his brakes, proceeded about' 28 feet before the brakes were set and his car then skidded 12 feet to the point of collision.
Under the humanitarian doctrine,, defendants owed plaintiff no' duty until the automobile in which she was riding came into a position of imminent peril. “The meaning of the term ‘imminent peril’ as the basic fact of the humanitarian doctrine has been well settled. 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 . . . .” Blaser v. Cоleman,
Defendants contend that when Mrs. Fendler saw the Boswell car before entering the intersection the Fendler car did not come into a position of peril until it had reached a point beyond which she could not stop it before the collision; and that since there was no evidence of the speed at which she was driving as she crossed the intersection or the distance in which she could extricate her car from its peril, plaintiff’s case must fail. In support of this contention, defendants cite: Lotta v. Kansas City Public Service Co.,
Those cases are readily distinguishable on the facts. In each of them the evidence failed to show that defendant could have averted the collision after plaintiff came into a discoverable position of imminent peril. The evidence in this case is quite different. '
Mi’s. Fendler testified that although she saw defendants’ car one-half to three-fourths of a block еast of the intersection, yet she assumed she had “pleiffiy of time” to cross and did not realize the proximity of defendants’ car until the collision was imminent. Defendant Richard Boswell admitted he saw the Fendler car before it entered the intersection and saw it continuously thereafter.
There was no evidence of the length of the block or whether it was longer or shorter than the ordinary city block. AYe do know, however, that in ordinary parlance the term “block”, when used to express a measurement of distance, means about 300 feet. “It is a matter of common knowledge that in the settlement of the Plains states . . . urban areas were platted generally in squares or blocks of 300 feet on each side, and that, when used as a measurement of distance and nothing appears to the contrary, the commonly ac
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cepted meaning of ‘a block’ is 300 feet.” Gorman v. Dalgas, (Neb.)
As defendant Richard Boswell approached the intersection it was his duty to exercise the highest degree of care. That duty required him to keep a careful watch ahead and laterally for other vehicles. “He was required to look in such an observant manner as to see what a person in the exercise of the highest degree of care for the safety of himself and others would be expected to see under similar circumstances.” Chenoweth v. McBurney,
In Prater v. Rausch,
We hold that plaintiff made a submissible case under the humanitarian doctrine.
The trial court submitted in the disjunctive the issue of whether the Boswell car could have been stopped, slowed or swerved to avoid the collision. Defendants further contend there was no evidence that the collision could have been avoided by swerving the
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Boswell car. The evidence above narrated clearly warranted a finding it could. But, in any event, it would be improper under the record in this ease to review a trial error in submission of оne element of negligence when a submissible case was made upon other elements that were pleaded. Defendant filed no after trial motions, and, therefore, we are precluded from reviewing any error occurring in the trial of the case other than that inherent in every ease that comes to an appellate court on appeal, to-wit: whether a submissible case was made. RSMo. § 512.160 (1); Rule 3.23 of this Court; Hughes v. St. Louis Nat. League Baseball Club,
Somewhat parenthetically, we take this opportunity to correct a recent opinion of Division No. 1 of this Court, dealing with the subject matter discussed in the foregoing paragraph. The case of Schneider v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,
Defendants finally contend that even if it be. held plaintiff made a submissible case, the trial court’s order sustaining plaintiff’s limited motion for new trial on the issue of damages only constituted an abuse of discretion and an invasion of defendant’s fundamental and inherent rights.
Plaintiff, aged 74 years at the time of the collision, was a teacher by profession, and had earned about $500 per year for five years prior to her injuries. She had a hernia and wore a support at that time, but it caused her no trouble. She was able to do housework and had accepted a position as housemother and supervisor at St. Ann’s School, for which she was to be paid $150 or $200 per month, dependent upon whether she lived at the school.
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Her physician testified that prior to the collision he had treated her for hypertension, divertieulosis of the colon, hypertrophic osteoarthritis of the spine and prolapse of the uterus, but that she was in reasonable health at the time of the аccident. Following the accident she was taken to a hospital, suffering from multiple body bruises and possible internal injuries. Her abdomen became enlarged and a strangulated hernia developed as a result of her injuries. An operation ensued and a wire screen nine inches square was placed in her abdomen. Following this operation, thrombophlebitis, a complication of her injuries and the hernia operation, arose, necessitating further surgery. This consisted of ligation or tying off the veins in both legs. Edema and swelling of the- legs ensued and this causes pain. An examination made before the trial revealed that the screen placed in her abdomen had become loose and the hernia had returned. It is unlikely that another operation could bе successfully performed. Her general health is now good, but she could not teach. Her injuries did permanent damage to health and aggravated her pre-existing infirmities. Her medical and hospital bills amounted to $1455.46. The verdict was for only $1750. The trial court did not abuse the wide discretion allowed it in holding the verdict was inadequate. Steuernagel v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,
Did the trial court by its order limiting the triаl to the issue of damages alone violate fundamental rights of defendants? By the Civil Code, which became effective January 1, 1945, the General Assembly provided in Section 115, .RSMo. § 510.330:
“A
new trial may be granted for any of the reasons for which new trials have heretofore been granted. A new trial may be granted to all or any of the parties and on all or part of the issues after trial by jury, court or referee . . . In so legislating, it gave sanction to what this court in 1926 had said trial courts might do, Busse v. White, Mo. Sup.,
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In the case of Gasoline Products Co. v. Champlin Refining Co., (1931)
Rule 59 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U. S. C. A. 269, now provides: “A new trial may be granted to all or any of the parties and on all or part of the issues (1) in an action in which there has been a trial by jury, for any of the reasons for which new trials have heretofore been granted in actions at law in the courts of the United States; . . . .”
Cases cited by defendants from other jurisdictions are not controlling or persuasive. We are obligated to follow the directions of the Civil Code. Furthermore, properly administered, the practice is to be commended. There can be no sound reason for requiring a litigant to submit to the hazards and expense of resubmitting the issue of liability where the issue of damages can be tried anew without prejudice. The trial court did not err in ordering- a new trial on the issue of damages only, unless, for some reason appearing upon the reeord- as a whole, a substantial right of defendants was denied.
Defendants assert that (a) the issue of damages is so interwoven with other fact issues they cannot be separated without prejudice to them, and (b) the inadequacy of the verdict shows on its face that it was a compromise or an effort to “give the old lady something from the insurance company.” (The jury had been interrogated on voir dire examination as to any interest in defendants’ insurer.) In so contending, defendants concede they must rebut the presumptiоn of the correctness of the trial court’s ruling; and that is the law. Conner v. Neiswender,
(a) Plaintiff gave no testimony as to the cause of the collision. She did not know it was impending’. The collision occurred and-plaintiff was injured. The question of who was at fault can have no bearing upon the nature, extent, duration or compensatory value of her injuries. Liability or non-liability cannot affect thеm in any manner.
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(b) There is no evidence of misconduct on the part of the jury. Defendants’ contention that the inadequacy of the verdict justifies the conclusion it was the result of a compromise is purely conjectural. This identical question was before the. St. Louis Court of Appeals in the case of Borgstede v. G. H. Wetterau & Sons Grocery Co.,
The trial court had a better opportunity than this court to determine whether the verdict was the 'result of compromise. It did not so find and we are not at liberty to hold, upon the basis of conjecture alone, that it abused its discretion. . • -
The order of the trial court is affirmed.
