This is an automobile-pedestrian accident case in which the jury returned a verdict for the defendant automobile operator. Plaintiff pedestrian appeals contending error in the giving of a contributory negligence instruction and in the content of defense counsel’s closing argument. Affirmed.
A brief resumé of the facts will suffice. The parties will be referred to as below, plaintiff and defendant. The accident occurred at the offset intersection of 27th Street and Lister in Kansas City, the southerly continuation of Lister, a north-south street, being somewhat westerly of its north projection. Thus, one driving south on Lister, as was defendant, must turn right on 27th and then left to proceed south again on Lister.
On the afternoon of the accident, plaintiff had left her place of employment at the southwest corner of the intersection and was walking across Lister to her automobile parked on the east side of Lister south of 27th Street. Defendant had paused westbound on 27th Street waiting on eastbound traffic to clear so that she could turn south. As defendant then made her left turn to continue south on Lister, she struck plaintiff who was at that time near the center of Lister and some four feet south of 27th.
The weather was clear and the sun was bright. Except for the eastbound traffic on 27th, neither party was handicapped from seeing the other by any visual obstructions. Momentarily, however, the sun did strike defendant’s windshield as she was making the turn. Plaintiff’s submission was on alternate grounds of defendant’s negligence, failure to keep a careful lookout or failure to yield to a pedestrian in the crosswalk.
As to plaintiff’s first point, she contends that the evidence did not support the giving of an instruction on her contributory negligence because the evidence did not show the location of defendant’s car when plaintiff stepped from the curb and it did not indicate what time elapsed from then until the impact. She thus says that it would be sheer speculation and conjecture as to whether she could have seen defendant’s car before leaving her place of safety on the curb or, having done so, whether her abilities and the time before impact would have permitted her to act and escape the path of the oncoming vehicle. Plaintiff cites and relies on
Butler v. Hicks,
In determining whether there is evidence to support the giving of a contrib
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utory negligence instruction, the evidence is considered in the light most favorable to the defendant and the plaintiff’s evidence will be disregarded unless it tends to support the giving of the instruction.
Wissman v. Wissman,
The facts in the subject case are, as shown by the evidence, that defendant’s automobile was stopped four or five seconds while awaiting clearance for the left turn onto Lister and at this time the car was north of the center line of 27th, a street forty feet wide. After moving again, defendant’s car traversed the south half of 27th and an additional four feet onto Lister to the point of impact, a total distance of less than thirty feet. Plaintiff, on the west curb of Lister, which was twenty-four feet wide, was some four feet south of the south curb of 27th. The distance which lay between plaintiff as she stepped from the curb and the point on 27th Street where westbound cars on 27th turned to proceed south on Lister was therefore less than fifty feet.
Plaintiff testified that she looked before leaving the curb to cross Lister, did not see defendant’s car then and did not see the car thereafter until she was struck. It is quite apparent, however, that the car was there, either on 27th Street or moving into the turn which brought the vehicle to intersect plaintiff’s pathway walking from the west curb. Why plaintiff, who was under a duty to look out for her own safety, did not see the car at all before being struck, whether she looked before leaving the curb or after she was in the street, and whether her conduct caused or contributed to cause her injury were all questions for the jury. The court was obligated under the evidence to submit this issue to the jury under the appropriate instruction on contributory negligence. It would have been error not to do so.
Plaintiff next complains of defendant’s closing argument to the jury in which counsel stated, in effect, that any negligence of plaintiff, however slight, was sufficient to bar her recovery. The argument was a misstatement of the law and has previously been condemned when made in exactly the form employed by defense counsel here.
Walsh v. Southtown Motors Company, supra,
In an attempt to avoid the consequence of a failure to object to defendant's closing argument at the time, plaintiff now seeks consideration of the point as plain error citing Rule 84.13(c). Rarely applied, the plain error rule is reserved for those situations in which hatred, passion or prejudice has been engendered causing manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice.
Steens v. Wetterau Foods, Inc.,
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In her reply brief, plaintiff cites
Robbins v. Brown-Strauss Corp.,
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur.
