Certiorari to the respondent judges of the Kansas City Court of Appeals bringing up for review their opinion and the whole record in Bresler v. K. C. Pub. Serv. Co. under Sec. 10, Art. V, Const. 1945, and our Rule 2.06. The opinion is reported in
The plaintiff’s evidence showed she first saw the approaching streetcar when it was about 823 feet away. This was just after her husband, with whom she was sitting, had stopped the automobile at a warn *872 ing sign and then started slowly across the streetcar tracks. Their seven year old twin daughters were in the back seat. The engine “went dead” and the automobile stopped with the back wheels between the rails of the track when the streetcar was 450 feet away. The husband made ineffectual efforts to start again. Plaintiff again saw the streetcar when it was 225 feet away. The motorman was clanging the bell and waiving his arms at them. The streetcar was traveling about 25 miles per hour. She turned toward her children, who had started crying, and did not see the streetcar again. It hit the rear wheel of the automobile and shoved it around 25 feet, the streetcar traveling 45 feet after the collision. At the stated speed it could have been stopped in 45 or 50 feet. The relator’s evidence was that the automobile did not stop at the warning sign; that it stalled on the track when the streetcar was 80-100 feet away; and that the motorman did everything possible to avert the collision.
Plaintiff’s case was submitted to the jury solely on the humanitarian doctrine. At relator’s request the court gave an instruction No. 3, defining “imminent peril.” The jury found for the defendant-relator, but the trial court sustained plaintiff’s motion for new trial on the ground that the instruction was erroneous. On relator’s appeal the respondent judges’ opinion affirmed that order. The only issue raised in this review proceeding is whether respondents erred in so ruling and thereby contravened our decisions. The instruction was as follows (italics ours) :
“The court instructs the jury that the term, ‘imminent peril’ does not mean remote, uncertain, contingent danger nor, so far as the plaintiff is concerned, avoidable danger, but means danger that is immediately impending and that admits of no time for deliberation- on the part of the person in peril between its appearance and the impending calamity.”
To sustain the instruction, the relator strongly relied in the Court of Appeals, as it does here, on Byrnes v. Poplar Bluff Printing Co.,
Kelator also stresses Johnson v. Hurck Delivery Service, Inc.,
They all go back to the definition in Judge White’s separate concurring opinion in the foundation banc decision of Banks v. Morris & Co.,
Respondents’ opinion first challenges instruction No., 3 as to phraseology and form, saying it is too technical and involved to be understood by a jury of laymen. Then it is suggested that the “imminent peril” mentioned in Judge White’s definition really refers to a plaintiff’s apparent peril as seen or seeable by the defendant, and not to his actual peril (if any); and that the instant instruction No. 3 does not make that distinction plain. Speaking of the Byrnes case, supra, respondents observe that although the instant instruction No. 3 satisfies the particular criticism made of the instruction in the Byrnes case, yet that decision did not hold the instruction there was otherwise unexceptionable. Then respondents go further and rule instruction No. 3 was clearly erroneous in substance as well as form— in telling’ the jury that the plaintiff’s peril was not imminent if she could have avoided the danger; and they assert the question of contributory negligence was thereby wrongfully injected into the humanitarian case.
*874
On the main points' respondents cite two decisions,
3
both of which in turn are expressly based on the
principal
opinion (by Judge Rag-land) in the Banks-Morris case, supra, 302 Mo. l. c. 266-7,
“ ‘The position of peril’ is one of the basic facts of liability; it might be denominated the chief one. . . . It is of no consequence what brings about, or continues, the situation of peril. It may be through the obliviousness of the one imperiled, or through his inability to extricate himself from his environment, or through his efforts to rescue another, or through his sheer hardihood or recklessness. But regardless of what occasions his peril, the law out of its extreme regard for human life makes it the duty of another who sees him in peril to exercise ordinary care to prevent injury or death.”
Then the opinion states a “formula” enumerating the constitutive facts of a cause of action under the humanitarian rule, as follows: “ (1) Plaintiff was in a position of peril; (2) defendant had notice thereof (if it was the duty of defendant to have been on the lookout, constructive notice suffices) ; (3) defendant after receiving such notice had the present ability, with the means at hand, to have averted the impending injury without injury to himself or others; (4) he failed to exercise ordinary care to avert such impending injury; and (5) by reason thereof plaintiff was injured.”
Clearly these two quoted paragraphs do not limit imminent peril to ««avoidable danger, as do the challenged instruction No. 3 and Judge White’s definition when the latter say imminent peril does not mean peril which is avoidable so far as the plaintiff is concerned. On the contrary, unavoidable peril (inability to extricate one’s self) is only one of the four kinds of peril mentioned. Judge Ragland’s opinion simply overruled prior cases3 4 which had restricted the reeog *875 nized causes of peril to obliviousness and inability to escape; and laid down the broad rule that it is of no consequence what brings about or continues the peril, even though it be sheer hardihood or recklessness. This covers the whole range of self-exposure to peril from mere negligent inattention to utter, audacious and continuing disregard of known and avoidable danger. 5
Indeed, this court has never yet directly ruled that the injured party (or his statutory claimant) cannot collect damages under the humanitarian doctrine even for self-sought injury or suicide. Judge White’s concurring opinion in the Banks-Morris ease did negative that theory but no other judge concurred therein. And while five later decisions 6 by Div. I have recognized Judge White’s view, they have done so only to the limited extent of saying the doctrine of Judge Ragland’s principal opinion is the law (italics ours) “except perhaps” when the plaintiff voluntarily seeks injury. Also, the St. Louis Court of Appeals in one case 7 concluded our decisions “lean to the idea” that suicide is a defense in a humanitarian case. This is as far as our appellate decisions have gone up to this time.
There is no issue of malingering or suicide in this case. That point and the cases just cited are mentioned only to show the latitude of our humanitarian doctrine is so great, that when.the question of a plaintiff’s right to recover for self-sought injury has come up as a matter for general construction, our decisions have restricted themselves to the statement that “perhaps” he could not. But in any event, the ruling in the principal opinion in the Banks-Morris case that the cause of the plaintiff’s peril is immaterial, even though it be his sheer hardihood or recklessness — that ruling alone is enough to demonstrate that the challenged instruction No. 3 is wrong in saying imminent peril does not mean avoidable danger; for reckless peril obviously could be avoided.
And if, as respondents’ opinion suggests, Judge White’s definition of imminent .peril, as embodied in the challenged instruction No. 3 refers only to the plaintiff’s apparent peril — that is, his apparent lack of ability or intention to avoid the threatened danger, as seen or seeable by the defendant — then the instruction is obscure and fails to make its meaning clear. Furthermore, the instruction as written is little less than an invitation to a defendant’s counsel to argue that *876 the plaintiff could have “avoided” the danger if he had not been guilty of contributory negligence, which argument would be improper.
For the reasons just stated, our writ of certiorari is quashed and the judgment of the circuit court affirmed.
Notes
Wallace v. St. J. Ry. L. H. & P. Co.,
Frailey v. Kurn,
Hunter v. Fleming (K. C. Ct. App.),
7
S. W. (2d) 749, 751; Tuck v. St. L.-S. F. Ry. Co.,
Montague v. Interurban Ry. Co.,
See “sheer” and “hardihood”, Webster’s New International Dictionary; and “recklessness”, 36 Words- & Phrases (Perm. Ed.) p. 489.
Zumwalt v. C. & A. Rd. Co. (Mo. Div. 1),
Cain v. St. L. Pub. Serv. Co.,
