delivered the opinion of the court:
Can a nunc pro tunc order changing a final judgment be entered where there is no supporting data in the court record or file in the case?
No.
Nov. 13, 1978 — Following an automobile accident, defendant-driver was issued two traffiс citations.
Feb. 5, 1979 — Defendant pleads guilty to driving too fast for conditions in cause No. 78-TR-5912.
Apr. 21, 1981 — the Feb. 5, 1979, order in No. 78-TR-5912 corrected nunc pro tunc to show charge of driving too fast for conditions dismissed.
Apr. 22, 1981 — Plaintiff precluded from using defendant’s Feb. 5, 1979, conviction at a jury trial.
Apr. 23,1981 — Jury verdict for defendant.
We reverse and remand for a new trial.
Nunc Pro Tunc Order
Plaintiff, Karen O’Dell, as administrator of the estate of her deceased son, Brian Scott Williams, filed a wrongful death suit charging defendant Randy Dowd with negligence. Plaintiff’s son, Brian, was killed while riding as a passenger in a truck driven by Dowd. Prior to trial, the court granted a motion in limine precluding plaintiff from introducing a certified copy of a conviction showing that on February 5, 1979, defendant pleaded guilty in cause No. 78-TR-5912 to driving too fast for conditions in connection with the incident in question.
On the day before trial in this cause, defendant obtained a nunc pro tunc order in the original traffic case, No. 78-TR-5912, purporting to correct a clerical error. According to the order entered nunc pro tunc, defendant pleaded guilty to driving while license suspended, but the charge of driving too fast for conditions was dismissed.
Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in preсluding her use of a certified copy of the conviction showing that defendant pleaded guilty to driving too fast for conditions. She claims the trial court’s ruling was based upon a void order of the traffic court, which was entеred without jurisdiction and is subject to collateral attack. It is undisputed that the court file in No. 78-TR-5912 had earlier been destroyed and did not exist when the nunc pro tunc order was entered. The basis for the nunc pro tunc order was the affidavits of defendant, defendant’s father, and the two attorneys who represented defendant in the No. 78-TR-5912 cause.
We are referred by plaintiff to People ex rel. Sweitzer v. City of Chicago (1936),
A nunc pro tunc order (“now for then”) is an entry in the present for something done in the past, made to make the record speak for what was actually donе. (In re Estate of Bird (1951),
The order in question was entered over two years after the original order аnd is based only upon the recollection of defendant and other persons. Under such circumstances, the court in 78-TR-5912 had no power to enter the nunc pro tunc order, thereby rendering its entry void.
Defendant relies on Dauderman v. Dauderman (1970),
In this case, however, the original No. 78-TR-5912 order reveals no hint of irregularity. There is simply nothing to assure the correctness of the nunc pro tunc amendment and there is no basis for its entry. Even assuming the nunc pro tunc order is merely a clerical correction as defendant asserts, the court in No. 78-TR-5912 had no power to enter it.
An order entered by a court which lacks jurisdiction of the parties or the subject matter, or which lacks inherent power to enter the particular order, is void, and may be attacked at any time or in any court, either directly or collaterally, and by any person affected by that order. City of Chicago v. Fair Employment Practicеs Com. (1976),
The plaintiff in the appeal before us was precluded from utilizing the original order to establish a prima facie case of negligence against defendant, was directly affected by the void order in No. 78-TR-5912, and therefore has standing to attack it. The lower court’s ruling on defendant’s motion in limine was based upon a void order of the traffic court. Since plaintiff was prejudiced by the exclusion of this evidence, the verdict in dеfendant’s favor must be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Proof of conviction is admissible in a civil case as prima facie evidence but may also be explained and contradicted by defendant. (See Thornton v. Paul (1978),
Judgment N.O.V.
Evidence presented at trial shows that at approximately 7:30 a.m., on November 13, 1978, defendant Randy Dowd was driving south on Henderson Road in Macon County. The rear end of his truck skidded, crossed the road, traveled into and across a ditch, then into a wooden fence. After hitting the fence, the truck turned and came to rest on its side. A board, which entered the truck cab through the windshield, struck and killed Brian Williams, a passenger in defendant’s truck. Defendant was traveling 40 to 45 miles per hour, and the applicаble speed limit was 55 miles per hour. Henderson Road is comprised of oil and rock, and there may have been gravel at the point where defendant’s truck began to skid. The pavement was wet. The incident was observed by Robert and Susan Hood, who were in their car traveling approximately 40 feet behind the defendant.
When the truck was towed to his residence later that morning, defendant’s father discovered a break in the centеr of the truck’s left rear tire. This tire was examined by defendant’s expert, Allan Siegel, who testified the tire had about 50% wear. In his opinion, the tire was punctured by a very sharp object, but the cut was not made by a nail or a board. The tire did not blow out, and there was no indication the tire had traveled in a deflated condition.
Plaintiff claims error in the trial court’s refusal to grant her judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the issue of defendant’s liability. Relying upon the rule set forth in Calvetti v. Seipp (1967),
We agree the evidence that defendant lost control of his truck and left the roadway raises an inference that this accident resulted from defendant’s negligence and requires defendant to make a showing that something other than his negligence may have caused the accident. We disagree, however, that the explanation presented by defendant is insufficient as a matter of law. Although the fact that the defendant’s rear tire had been punctured at some time does not definitely establish the cause of this accident, it is certainly sufficient to create a jury question as to whether defendant was negligent. See Polkey v. Phillips (1980),
We cannot say that all the evidence viewed in its aspect most favorable to defendant so overwhelmingly favors plaintiff that the verdict in favor of defendant cannot stand. (Pedrick v. Peoria & Eastern R.R. Co. (1967),
Expert Testimony
Plaintiff also challenges the admission of Allan Siegel’s testimony, claiming he is not sufficiently qualified to testify as an expert in this cause. Siegel is the director of Industrial Testing Laboratories in St. Louis, Missouri, which is a commercial organization involved in material testing and evaluation. Siegel is a registered engineer, belongs to numerous professional organizations, and has evaluated between 200 and 300 tires to determine a cause of failure. Clearly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding Siegel sufficiently qualified to testify as an expert in this trial. Nowakowski v. Hoppe Tire Co. (1976),
It is further claimed by рlaintiff that Siegel’s testimony was speculative since there is no evidence of an object on the roadway that could have caused the puncture in the rear left tire and caused the defendant’s loss of control of the truck. As we have already found, however, this evidence is sufficient to allow the jury to draw the inference that something other than defendant’s negligence caused the accident in question and was properly admitted.
The judgment in favor of defendant is reversed and remanded for a new trial in accordance with the views expressed herein.
Reversed and remanded.
GREEN, P. J., and LONDRIGAN, J., concur.
