153 S.W.2d 54 | Mo. | 1941
Lead Opinion
This is an action for $25,000 damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff was a guest in an automobile which collided with defendant's barricade, in the street, alleged to have been insufficiently lighted. Defendant's answer was a general denial. The jury found for defendant. Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment entered.
Plaintiff assigns error in instructions. Plaintiff was riding in a car owned and driven by N.M. Jakovac north on Broadway in St. Louis. Jakovac drove, "at the rate of twenty or twenty-five miles per hour," for several blocks behind a large transport truck which made a left turn (west) upon reaching Cass Avenue. Jakovac continued northwardly, on the right side of the east street car track, into the intersection and struck defendant's barricade ("between the easternmost street car track and the east curb") in front of a manhole which it was repairing; and plaintiff was injured. Jakovac said that when the truck turned he was about twenty feet behind it (he swung to the right when the truck slowed down to turn); that he "must have run thirty or thirty-five feet before (he) saw this barricade;" that "about ten feet away from that barricade (he) noticed a flicker of light which happened to be a lantern;" and that he "made a quick swerve to the left, stepping on the brakes at the same time" but went about fifteen feet after striking the barricade. (He said he could stop his car in about 20 feet at 20 miles per hour.) He said that there were "no flares or torches of any kind on the street and no reflectors on the barricade;" that the "flicker of light (he saw) was in a lantern placed on the southwest side of the barricade behind *192 the bar" (of the barricade) which "partly hid the light from view;" that "there were no other lanterns burning upon the barricade;" and that, after the collision, he found two cold lanterns with no oil in them, and one warm with "just a trifle of oil in it." Plaintiff had evidence that it "would take at least thirty minutes for the lantern to cool off, in the summertime, after it went out."
Defendant's evidence was that the barricade was set up on the south line of Cass Avenue, about 4:30 P.M. (collision occurred about 9:30 P.M.), with three lanterns filled with oil, sufficient to burn in excess of twenty-four hours, wired to prevent them swinging, "one to the south, one to the east, and one to the west." The barricade was open to the north "where there would be no traffic going into it." It was also shown that the same kind of [56] barricade and lights were used all over St. Louis by defendant and others. Defendant had a witness who said he came by the barricade and saw the lights (at least two) burning "about fifteen minutes before the accident happened;" that he "saw the accident" from a place where he was visiting with relatives about 150 feet north; that "the lights burned until it (the barricade) hit the street and that broke them and put them out;" and that he "lit one of the lanterns" (which was not broken) and put up the barricade after the collision. Defendant also had the testimony of police officers that the lanterns were burning about a half hour before the collision and that they found oil in the street around the broken glass of the lanterns.
Plaintiff assigns the giving of defendant's instruction No. 7 as error. This was a sole cause instruction, as follows:
"The court instructs the jury that if you believe and find from the evidence in this cause that the accident mentioned in the evidence, and in which plaintiff alleges he was injured, was caused on account of the sole negligence of defendant Nicholas M. Jakovac, and that there was no negligence on the part of The Western Union Telegraph Company causing or contributing to cause said accident, then your verdict must be in favor of defendant `The Western Union Telegraph Company.'"
This court has been called upon to consider sole cause instructions frequently since the Court en Banc in Borgstede v. Waldbauer,
[1] Since under our jury system, the jury does not have the function of deciding questions of law, the primary purpose of instructions must be to inform the jury, as triers of the facts, what fact issues are to be favorably decided to reach each possible verdict. Mere statements of abstract legal propositions therefore do not make proper jury instructions. Instead each instruction authorizing the *193
finding of a verdict (for plaintiff or for defendant on an affirmative defense) must require the finding of all essential fact issues necessary to establish the legal proposition upon which the right to it is based. [Constructing Reviewing Instructions — Trusty, sec. 2; Dorman v. East St. Louis R. Co.,
[2] The Court en Banc, in Borgstede v. Waldbauer,
[3] While the Borgstede case was pending and before it was finally decided in Banc, Division One decided, in Watts v. Moussette,
Although general pleadings are allowed in many instances (general statements, not asked to be made specific, and general denials) nevertheless a lawsuit should at some time be reduced to and decided upon definite and certain issues. In a jury trial the time for specifying fact issues is, at least, when the case is submitted to the jury. Only by so doing can it be possible for the jury to perform its proper function of deciding the facts of the case. If juries are to be required to decide cases on the fact issues actually developed in the trial, there can be no escape from the logic of this opinion (Watts v. Moussette, supra) requiring that such facts, as they must determine favorably in order to decide for defendant, on either a plaintiff's or a third party's *195 sole cause negligence, must be stated in the instruction authorizing such a verdict.
The next case, in which this question was considered, was Doherty v. St. Louis Butter Company, supra, in Division Two (by the author of the Borgstede case) which did hypothesize acts of plaintiff showing a sole cause situation and requiring the jury to find that these acts were the sole cause of his injuries and "not due to any negligence" of defendant's driver "in any particulars set out in other instructions," which hypothesized plaintiff's charges of negligence. This instruction was approved, on authority of the Borgstede case, because "if the facts were, as presented by the defendant (in the instruction), plaintiff was not entitled to recover under the humanitarian doctrine." This court also held therein that a defendant in a humanitarian case should not "be restricted to disprove one or more of the facts upon which that rule rests" but should be permitted to "affirmatively show a state of facts which, if true, would place the entire blame for the injury upon the plaintiff, and by an appropriate instruction submit that question (of finding such facts) to the jury."
The matter was further considered in Dilallo v. Lynch,
Obviously what the Court en Banc did by the Borgstede case, overruling the Causey case, was to authorize a defendant's instruction to submit facts, which are shown by defendant's evidence and which (if true) show that plaintiff would have no case because such defendant under such facts could not be guilty of the negligence charged against him and such facts would show negligence solely on the part of the plaintiff. Obviously also, it did not by overruling the Causey case approve of submitting such a defense (any more than submitting a plaintiff's case) upon an abstract general legal proposition which would give the jury a roving commission as to facts and permit them to pass upon a question of law according to any theory they could construct or evolve in their own minds. [Reiling v. Russell (second appeal),
[4] Defendant contends, however, that any error in this instruction was cured by plaintiff's instruction No. 2, which was as follows:
"You are instructed that the negligence, if any, on the part of Mr. Jakovac, the driver of the automobile mentioned in the evidence, cannot be imputed to or charged against the plaintiff and cannot affect his right, if any, to recover against the defendant unless such negligence, if any, of Mr. Jakovac was the sole cause of the collision and injuries to plaintiff.
"Therefore, even though you find and believe from the evidence that Mr. Jakovac was guilty of negligence, nevertheless if you find and believe from the evidence that defendant was also guilty of negligence in the manner submitted to you in other instructions given you, and that such negligence, if any, directly contributed to cause *197 the collision and injuries, if any, to plaintiff, then you cannot find against [59] the plaintiff on the ground that the driver of the automobile, Mr. Jakovac, was also guilty of negligence."
Concerning the criticism, based on Dilallo v. Lynch,
[5, 6] Plaintiff also assigns as error the giving of defendant's instruction No. 4 and the refusal of plaintiff's instruction C. The objection to instruction No. 4 is that it stated defendant's duty was to have lighted lanterns on the barricade "so that they were visible to approaching motorists." Plaintiff says the instruction should have specifically stated the duty to have them visible to northbound motorists. *198 It seems reasonable to believe that qualified jurors would understand this instruction to include the duty to have lanterns visible to northbound motorists which apparently, from the location of the barricade, was the direction from which most (if not all) motorists did approach it. Plaintiff's instruction C made failure to have a warning sign or flares ahead of the barricade negligence, even if it had lighted lanterns on it. Plaintiff did not have sufficient evidence to show the necessity of such additional warning devices. Defendant was only required to exercise ordinary care and its evidence showed (with nothing to the contrary) that its barricade and lighting was the usual and customary method adopted throughout the City under similar circumstances. We, therefore, overrule these assignments. Plaintiff also assigns error in the cross-examination of its witness Jakovac (the driver), but this matter will probably not occur again on retrial.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Bradley and Dalton, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by HYDE, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.