198 S.W.2d 684 | Mo. | 1946
Lead Opinion
This is an action by James Roy Petty and his wife for loss of services, the cost of artificial limbs, special training, care and attention and doctor and hospital bills resulting from the appellant's negligence in running over their minor daughter, Ruth Viola. At the time of her injury, February 1, 1943, Ruth Viola was three years of age. She sustained other injuries (Petty v. Kansas City Pub. Ser. Co.,
[1] As a preliminary it may be noted that the appellant assigns as error the refusal of its motions for a directed verdict at the close of the plaintiffs' evidence and at the close of all the evidence and the action of the trial court in admitting in evidence a $295.00 bill from the Kansas City General Hospital. The appellant does not indicate why the motions should have been sustained. In addition, these three assignments are neither briefed nor argued and, for the purposes of this appeal, are abandoned. Supreme Court Rule 1.08; Womack v. Missouri Pac. R. Co.,
[2] The plaintiffs' case was submitted upon the hypothesization of a violation of three ordinances of Kansas City. The appellant contends that the court erred in admitting one of the ordinances in evidence and in excluding as evidence two ordinances offered by it. It also urges that the instruction submitting the plaintiffs' case was prejudicially erroneous because one of the ordinances relied upon had been repealed, was in direct conflict with the ordinances offered by the appellant and was erroneously included in the traffic ordinances *830 of Kansas City. It is further objected that the instruction erroneously makes the appellant an insurer of the safety of pedestrians.
As to the latter point, the argument is that because the instruction told the jury that the ordinances relied upon were in force and in reciting the substance of their provisions, among other things, said that under the ordinances the streetcar should not be operated, at such speed that the operator could not decrease it or stop the streetcar when necessary to avoid colliding with a person and then told the jury that if they found that the streetcar was operated at such speed that it could not be decreased or the streetcar stopped in time to avoid hitting the plaintiffs' daughter that thereby the appellant is made an insurer. It is not contended that the instruction in express language makes the appellant an insurer but it is argued that the language "could be interpreted by a jury of laymen to mean that regardless of the speed of the streetcar, if there were a collision with the plaintiffs' daughter the defendant was liable." The appellant says, under this instruction, that even though the streetcar could have been stopped in the shortest time and space possible yet if it struck the child the appellant would be liable. In the first place, in making its point, the appellant has separated two clauses from the context of a long instruction. Grubbs v. Kansas City Pub. Ser. Co.,
[3] Whether one of the ordinances was repealed is decisive of whether the instruction was erroneous as well as whether the court was in error in admitting it in evidence and in excluding the appellant's proffered ordinances. The respondents pleaded, offered in evidence and instructed upon Chapter 63, Section 3 of the 1941 Revised Ordinances of Kansas City, known in this record as Ordinance 7100 and particularly as Section 638 of the Traffic Code of 1928. This section was enacted as an ordinance in 1928 and provides that a streetcar shall not be run "at a greater rate of speed than fifteen miles per hour in the congested district" (defined as that portion of the city lying north of the south line of 19th Street and west of the east line of Troost) "nor more than twenty-five miles per hour in the noncongested district of the city." In 1940 a further traffic *831 ordinance, No. 6312, was enacted and that ordinance was also included in the 1941 Revised Ordinances as a part of Ordinance 7100 and provides that a streetcar may not be operated "at a greater speed than is reasonable" and "in any residence or business district" (territory contiguous to a highway when fifty per cent or more of the frontage for a distance of 300 feet is occupied by buildings in use for business) "may be operated at a speed of twenty-five miles per hour." It is the position of the appellant that the ordinance enacted in 1940 (the appellant offered the original ordinances) repealed the ordinance enacted in 1928 and, therefore, Ordinance 638 was included in the revised ordinances through error.
The appellant says: "There could not be two speed limits for street cars in business districts, one of fifteen miles per hour and one at twenty-five miles per hour." It is argued that they are in direct conflict and, therefore, the later ordinance repealed the older one. Of course, if this is true, it was error to admit the ordinance in evidence and instruct the jury upon it. However, as the appellant concedes, the older ordinance was not repealed by number or in express terms by the later ordinance. If it had been it would not have been revived by inserting it in the new code without reenacting it and it is in this that the case differs from Fish v. Walsh,
[4] The appellant also urges that the court prejudicially erred in four respects in instructing the jury upon the measure of damages. It is urged that the instruction fails to limit the plaintiffs' recoverable losses to the period of Ruth Viola's minority; that the *832 use of the word "may" in describing the plaintiffs' recoverable pecuniary compensation does not delimit with certainty the damages awardable; that future medical and hospital expenses "necessarily" incurred were authorized by the instruction [687] when there was no proof to support such an allowance and, fourth, that the instruction erroneously permitted an allowance to the plaintiffs of the amount of earnings the child would necessarily lose until she reached her majority when the child's potential loss was not necessarily the same as the plaintiffs and, in this respect, it is also urged that the instruction is broader than the pleadings and proof and gives the jury a roving commission.
In presenting the first point, however, the appellant quotes only the first clause of the instruction, separating the clause from its context. In three different places the instruction limits the plaintiffs' recovery to the period "until she reaches the age of twenty-one years" and if the appellant thought the instruction too broad or subject to misinterpretation should have offered an instruction limiting its effect. Kirk v. Kansas City Ter. Ry. Co. (Mo. App.), 27 S.W.2d 739. Considering the instruction as a whole the appellant's criticism is unwarranted. Grubbs v. Kansas City Pub. Ser. Co., supra.
[5] So it is with the objection to the use of the word "may" in describing the pecuniary compensation allowable for loss of services, the word carries the possible connotation of bare possibility and its use has been criticized (Evans v. Farmers Elevator Co., 347 Mo. l.c. 341, 147 S.W.2d l.c. 601) but up to the present we have failed to find a case holding its use reversible error, especially so when the whole instruction is considered and the use of the word in its context does not appear to have positively misled the jury. Krinard v. Westerman,
[6] The instruction authorized as an element of damages "the reasonable value of any medical or hospital treatment . . . necessarily . . . incurred" until Ruth Viola reached her majority. The appellant emphasizes the word "necessarily" and insists that there was no evidence that future medical and hospital expense would necessarily be incurred and that, therefore, the jury was invited to base a verdict on speculation and conjecture. However, the doctor stated that the bones in the stump "might have to be readjusted often." Furthermore, in addition to the amputated leg, there was a long scar down Ruth Viola's right thigh extending over the knee. The doctor said that the scar contracted when the leg was straight, he could not say definitely whether there would be future contracting of the scar as the child grew but he said that the only way to remove the scar, and inferentially any future disability from it, was by plastic surgery. It may be that this evidence does not show that further medical and hospital expense would "necessarily" be incurred in the sense of not being capable of being dispensed with or *833 indispensable (Boyd v. Andrae (Mo. App.), 44 S.W.2d 891, 894) but it is evidence from which the jury could find that such future expense was necessary in the sense of being needful and so we cannot say that there was such a lack of evidence that it was erroneous to include it as an element which "will necessarily be incurred." While the items are not definitely certain, they are not left wholly to conjecture and specualtion.
[7] The appellant's fourth point, as we understand it, is that in the beginning the instruction permitted the plaintiffs' damages for "loss of service of their daughter" and subsequently said "you in addition may also allow the plaintiffs the amount of earnings of the daughter which you believe and find from the evidence she will necessarily lose until she reaches the age of twenty-one years." It is said that this language authorizes a double assessment for loss of earnings, that the child's potential loss is not necessarily the same as the parents and finally that there is no evidence that the child would lose earnings. As to the latter point, the doctor said that the child could not engage in industry or labor during minority, which the appellant argues leaves open to her numerous sedentary occupations which if she follows will not result in a loss of earnings. It is argued that the word "service" in the beginning of the instruction is not defined or limited and that if the word means "both loss of direct personal service to the parents and also loss of earnings to the child" then a double assessment for one loss is permitted. We do not believe the quoted clauses are reasonably subject to the interpretation the appellant [688]
places upon them. These clauses of the instruction, as we construe them, permit an award for loss of the child's services and any loss of earnings due to the child's injury during minority. Annotation 37 A.L.R. 11, 15. "The loss of earning capacity in a minor during minority is a loss to his parents who are entitled to both his services and his earnings." Evans v. Farmers Elevator Co.,
[8] Four of the appellant's assignments having to do with matters occurring during the trial of the cause, which the appellant claims were so prejudicially inflammatory that it was deprived of a fair trial, may all be considered together. There is a general assignment that upon the whole record the jury became unduly sympathetic with the plaintiffs and prejudiced against the appellant. In this connection, in his opening statement, plaintiffs' counsel described the manner in which Ruth Viola was injured and detailed the nature of her injuries. In his closing argument counsel pointed out the extra care and assistance required of the parents by reason of the child's artificial leg and said: "There is a child that when she starts across the street they must assist her. There is a child they will have to remember when she goes to bed at night. They must take the leg off and lay it one place and place the child in bed at another place." When the child was run over she was accompanied by her aunt, Deloris Frakes, who at the time of the trial was twelve years of age. Deloris was offered as a witness and at the beginning of her testimony cried when asked about the accident. At the time the court said: "Of course, she has been crying rather vigorously here when asked about the accident, but I do not see how it can be controlled very well at her age." At the commencement of the trial the appellant objected to Ruth Viola's presence in the courtroom and again, on the second day of the trial renewed its objection stating that her presence, sleeping in her mother's arms and lap and moving about in the presence of the jury unduly aroused the jury's sympathy. When the question first arose the court made some inquiry into the situation and stated that it was impractical under the circumstances to exclude the child.
Counsel's statement and argument to the jury and Deloris' crying were not so inflammatory as the similar occurrences in the child's case. Petty v. Kansas City Pub. Ser. Co.,
[9] Ten members of the jury returned a verdict for $20,000.00. Upon motion for new trial the court required a remittitur of $8,000.00 and judgment was entered for $12,000.00. The plaintiffs' hospital expense was $295.00 and they owed Dr. Petry $75.00. The first artificial leg and foot cost about $140.00. Throughout the years as the child grows it will be necessary to purchase new artificial legs every two or three years until age twelve and possibly not so often after that. The new legs will cost from $150.00 to $200.00. It is necessary to buy stockings for the stump rather frequently, the appellant estimates the maximum cost of the stump stockings at $380.00, and shoes on the artificial foot do not last as long as they do on her other foot. The appellant points to these items and contends that the verdict is yet excessive and not reasonably uniform with verdicts approved in similar cases, even conceding some change in economic conditions. Petty v. Kansas City Pub. Ser. Co.,
The judgment is affirmed. Westhues and Bohling, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur. *837