157 Mo. App. 38 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
— This is a suit for damages accrued because of the negligence of defendant in causing plaintiff to destroy his automobile through colliding with an abutment of a bridge, in endeavoring to avert a collision with the automobile of defendant. The finding and judgment were for defendant and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
It appears both plaintiff and defendant are members and patrons of the Glen Echo Country Club, near the city of St. Louis, and the injury to plaintiff’s automobile occurred on the grounds of that institution.
• The specification of negligence relied upon in the petition relates to a violation of a rule or custom of the Glen Echo Club' which requires automobiles and other conveyances to move forward on the right-hand side .of the road. The private roadway involved runs to the clubhouse at‘the westward through the club "grounds from what is known as the Lucas.and Hunt public road on the east. Immediately after entering the grounds of the Glen Echo Club from the Lucas and Hunt road on the east side thereof, the private way divides into two
The evidence for plaintiff tends to prove that defendant’s automobile came down the hill from the clubhouse at the westward and crossed the bridge near the center thereof and in part on the north side of the road, in order to obviate the rough stones on the right-hand side of the roadway immediately east of the bridge, when, in accordance with the custom, it should .have occupied the south, or that which to it was the right-hand, side of the road entirely. But it appears as well from plaintiff’s evidence, and it is conclusively established in the case, that it was customary for automobiles to cross the bridge, which was about twenty-five feet wide, near its center. However, it is to be conceded the evidence' tends to prove negligence on the part of defendant and ■the same is certainly true with respect to plaintiff.
There are several arguments leveled against the action of the court in giving and refusing instructions and as to the reception and rejection of evidence at the trial, but it will be unnecessary to examine them, for it appears beyond question that the verdict is for the right party. Conceding negligence to have been shown on the part of defendant, it is obvious that of plaintiff contributed to and concurred in operating the proximate and efficient cause of the collision from which the damages are said to flow. The collision with the abutment of the bridge occurred about 2:30 in the afternoon at a time of the year when the club and its grounds were much frequented by members and others in automobiles. Plaintiff’s proof discloses beyond controversy that ' his
“Q. When you came down that road, if you had thought about it, you would have known that you were just as apt as not to meet a car right in the middle of that road going east? A. Yes, sir, if I had thought about it.”
Immediately after defendant’s automobile had crossed the bridge and when from fifteen to twenty feet east thereof, plaintiff’s automobile came around the curve to the westward from behind the foliage “about twenty-five or thirty feet away.” To avert a catastrophe, defendant’s chauffeur turned his automobile into the rough or rocky portion of the road on the south or, as to him, right-hand side, with no more serious result than the puncture of a tire, while plaintiff’s chauffeur turned his to the northward and collided with the north stone abutment of the bridge from forty to fifty feet ahead of him. Though the evidence tends to prove defendant was negligent in running his car at a high rate of speed on the side of the road other than that which the custom suggested, it is entirely clear plaintiff’s chauffeur was culpably negligent as well.
There is naught in the case suggesting the negligence of defendant was proximate and that of plaintiff remote, so as to invoke the principle involved in the last clear chance doctrine, and, indeed, such is not relied upon for a recovery, but, on the contrary, the theory asserted is, that defendant’s negligence alone was the proximate cause of the injury, while plaintiff exercised ordinary care at all times for the safety of himself and the automobile he was driving. No one can doubt the general rule which condemns a plaintiff’s cause when it appears the injury received might have been averted and the consequences of defendant’s negligence avoided by the exercise of ordinary care, under the circumstances, on the part of the injured person, who has omitted to do so. In such circumstances, the case is one of mutual
In this view, the judgment should be affirmed, as it is for the right party, though there may have been error committed on the trial, as to which matter we express no opinion. The judgment .should be affirmed. It is so ordered.