BETTY SEMAR, an Infant, by Her Next Friend, BURL SEMAR, Her Father, v. CARL E. KELLY, Appellant.
No. 38586
Division Two
December 6, 1943
Motion for Rehearing Overruled, January 3, 1944
176 S. W. (2d) 289
157
PER CURIAM:-The foregoing opinion by WESTHUES, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. Tipton, J., and Leedy, P. J., concur; Ellison, J., not sitting.
Oliver J. Miller and Lashly, Lashly, Miller & Clifford for appellant.
Mr. Kelly, his wife and their baby were returning home from eighty miles west of Vandalia, Illinois. Mr. Kelly and his witnesses testified that when he approached January Avenue he almost came to a stop in turning left onto the street. His car was in low gear and by the time he had completed the turn his car was in the middle of the west side, the right side, of the pavement and was never, at any time, on the east or wrong side of the pavement. They say that when they were about forty or fifty feet up the hill away from Chandler Street a car suddenly came over the crest of the hill and its headlights were “straddle” the middle line of January Avenue. They say the car was travelling at a speed of forty to forty-five miles an hour-one witness said “like a streak.” Kelly swerved to the right but the speed of the other car was such that he could not avoid it even though his car was three to four feet west of the center line of the pavement at the instant they collided.
There were but two instructions specifically and factually hypothesizing the contrasting theories of liability and nonliability. The five other instructions abstractly defined terms, advised the jury how they could return a verdict and how to measure any damages they might find. For Betty Semar Kelly‘s liability was hypothesized upon a finding that the proximate cause of the collision and her injuries was his primary negligence of driving and operating his automobile on the east or wrong side of January Avenue, not as close to the right or west side of the street as practicable. The facts of the collision and the circumstances of the parties, as shown by her evidence, were narrated and her evidence as to the manner in which Kelly was said to have driven his car was hypothesized and if the jury believed her evidence and found those to be the facts the cause of the collision was Kelly‘s being on the wrong side of the street. Betty was a guest in the car driven by Williams and it was not claimed that she personally was negligent in any manner. Seago v. New York Central Ry., 349 Mo. 1249, 164 S. W. (2d) 336 (1942). And, by specific direction of both the plaintiff and the defendant the jury were told that they could not
” . . . at a rate of speed which was careful and prudent and at such a speed as not to endanger the life or limb of any person there. And in this connection the court instructs you that if you believe and find from the evidence that on the occasion mentioned in the evidence the driver of the automobile mentioned in the evidence drove said automobile towards and over the crest of the hill mentioned in the evidence at a rate of speed which did endanger the life and limb of persons there and was not careful and prudent, if you so find, and if you further believe and find from the evidence that the act of the driver of said automobile in so driving said automobile at a rate of speed which was not careful and prudent, if you so find, was the sole proximate cause of the collision and injuries to the plaintiff, if you so find, then and in that case plaintiff is not entitled to recover against the defendant herein and you will find your verdict for the defendant, but you are instructed that the negligence of the driver of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding, if any, is not to be imputed to the plaintiff in determining whether the said driver‘s negligence, if any, was the sole proximate cause of the collision mentioned in the evidence.”
As we have said, the trial court was of the view that this instruction was prejudicially erroneous under the circumstances. The instruction, obviously, is a so-called “sole cause” instruction. The respondent, in justification and defense of the trial court‘s views, says there was no evidence warranting the giving of such an instruction. The respondent also says the instruction was misleading and prejudicial in that it did not include the phrase “and not due to any negligence on the part of the defendant as set forth in other instructions given you herein.” The respondent takes the position that such a clause is essential to all sole cause instructions.
The appellant, on the other hand, contends that the evidence presents a typical “sole cause” situation and that the instruction correctly and properly submitted the question to the jury in language substantially and previously approved. He says the word “sole” is a commonly used, generally understood word and the jury could not but know that it meant, in its context, that the collision must have been due to Williams’ negligence only, alone and solely before they could
As we have noted, the defendant did not claim by his pleadings, his evidence or his instructions that Betty was guilty of contributory negligence and neither did he seek to impute Williams’ negligence to her in order to escape liability or defeat her claim but it does not follow that he could have no other means of exonerating and exculpating himself of blame and liability. There is no magic in the word “sole” nor in the phrase “sole cause” and perhaps they have been used overmuch (see Hopkins v. Highland Dairy Farms Co., 348 Mo. 1158, 1163, 159 S. W. (2d) 254, 257 (1942)) but for lack of more expressive and apt language they have been employed to describe another means by which a defendant may absolve himself of liability. If a defendant can present a state of facts (aside from showing contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff or imputing some third party‘s negligence to him through an agency relationship) which if found by the jury would absolve him of fault and consequent liability and demonstrate as a matter of fact, if true and found, that some other person or agency than the defendant was “alone; that is the only one” at fault, “the sole author” of the collision and injuries complained of he is, of course, entitled to do so. (The quoted words are from Webster‘s New International Dictionary.) And if he does present such a state of facts he is entitled to the same right accorded a plaintiff on his facts and his theory of liability, that is to have them hypothesized in an instruction and thus given an opportunity to have the jury find them if the jury is persuaded of their existence and so absolve the defendant of liability. That, as we understand it, is the sense in which the words “sole cause” were used in the leading case of Borgstede v. Waldbauer, 337 Mo. 1205, 88 S. W. (2d) 373 (1935). If his, the defendant‘s evidence, completely exonerates him of fault and is susceptible of an hypothesization demonstrating that the plaintiff‘s injuries were not due to the defendant‘s acts or conduct but were wholly and alone due to the negligent acts or conduct of some third person or of the plaintiff himself he is entitled to an instruction submitting those facts to the jury as his theory of the case and the reason he should be exonerated. Borgstede v. Waldbauer, supra; Watts v. Moussette, 337 Mo. 533, 85 S. W. (2d) 487 (1935).
There may be some confusion and question as to how this problem should and can be properly submitted in various types of cases but confining the discussion to the situation presented by this instance which does not involve the humanitarian doctrine or contributory negligence and which by specific instruction excludes imputed negligence the questions are, first, whether it was permissible under the defendant‘s evidence and second, if so whether it was submitted in an acceptable manner.
But, considering the words of the instruction in their commonly understood meaning, reading all the instructions together and construing this instruction in view of the tests applied to instructions generally, was the defendant‘s theory of his case, acquitting him of liability, hypothesized and submitted in an acceptable manner? The facts count. The plaintiff-respondent points out that the clause “and not due to any negligence on the part of the defendant, as set forth in other instructions” is omitted from the instruction and says that logic and sound reasoning, as well as the previously decided cases, compel its inclusion in an instruction as one of the essential elements
We have set out the instruction and it hypothesizes the facts adduced by Kelly‘s evidence from which it is made to appear, if believed and found by the jury, that Betty‘s host, Williams, drove and operated the automobile in which she rode as a guest at an excessive rate of speed and was therefore negligent but where are the facts from which it could be found as a fact that Williams alone was negligent or that Kelly was not negligent and that his negligence had nothing to do with the collision and Betty‘s resulting injuries? His
The judgment is affirmed and the cause remanded. Westhues, C., concurs; Bohling, C., concurs in result.
PER CURIAM:-The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
