Adams v. DeBusk

666 S.W.2d 878, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 3536
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 31, 1984
DocketNo. WD 34321
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 666 S.W.2d 878 (Adams v. DeBusk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. DeBusk, 666 S.W.2d 878, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 3536 (Mo. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiff Michael R. Adams, a minor, by next friend, and plaintiff Mary Bratten, his natural mother, brought an action in two counts seeking money damages due to the alleged negligence of defendants Billy M. DeBusk and Gloria DeBusk (husband and wife).

Count I sought money damages on behalf of the minor and Count II, a derivative action, sought damages on behalf of the natural mother of the minor for loss of services and medical expense. Defendants’ answer was in effect a denial of the allegations of negligence accompanied by a general plea of contributory negligence on the part of minor plaintiff Michael Adams. No motion to make defendants’ answer more definite and certain was ever filed by plaintiffs.

The ease was tried to a jury which returned a verdict in favor of defendants on both counts. Plaintiffs, after an unavailing motion for new trial, appealed.

Plaintiffs rely on three points of error on appeal, the first two alleging instructional error and the third alleging error in the admission of irrelevant evidence elicited from three of plaintiffs’ witnesses on cross-examination. As defendants chose on appeal to confront head-on the issues raised by plaintiffs on their merits, this court neither discusses nor expresses an opinion as to whether plaintiffs made a submissible case.

The anomalous nature of the instructional errors raised by plaintiffs eliminates the necessity of setting forth any of the subject instructions verbatim. Moreover, a brief statement of facts will suffice to give sufficient dimension to the points, as joined on appeal, for their disposition.

[880]*880On August 1, 1978, plaintiff Michael Adams was fourteen years of age and lived with his mother, plaintiff Mary Bratten, in Warrensburg, Missouri. The minor plaintiff and one of his peers were walking east on a public alley in the vicinity of a shed located on the northeast corner of property owned by defendants. The shed had a corrugated metal roof, the trailing edge of which was about five feet above ground level. The north side of the shed was on or near defendants’ north property line and the trailing edge of the corrugated metal roof extended approximately five inches over the alley. Plaintiffs contend that the trailing edge of the corrugated metal roof was torn or jagged in the vicinity of the northeast corner of the shed and could not be seen because it was obscured by foliage and brush. Photographs introduced into evidence disclosed a slight vertical bulge in the trailing edge of the corrugated metal roof near the northeast corner of the shed.

The minor plaintiff was on the south side of the alley as he and his companion walked in an easterly direction. When they reached the vicinity of the northeast corner of the shed in question, the minor plaintiff threw a grape at some other children ahead of him in the alley. Immediately before doing so, the minor plaintiff saw the shed and its corrugated metal roof. When the minor plaintiff threw the grape the tip of the little finger of his right hand struck the trailing edge of the corrugated metal roof near the northeast corner of the shed and was severely lacerated. Considerable medical expense, including hospitalization and corrective surgery, was incurred as a result of the injury sustained by the minor plaintiff, all of which was paid for by his mother, plaintiff Mary Bratten.

Plaintiffs’ first point focuses on Instruction No. 3. The trial court, on its own initiative, gave Instruction No. 3, same being MAI 3.01 captioned “[1981 Revision] Burden of Proof — General.” Notwithstanding the fact that two contributory negligence verdict directors [Instruction No. 9 re Count I and Instruction No. 13 re Count II] were given at the request of defendants, Instruction No. 3 failed to contain “or defense” set forth in brackets in the 1981 revision of MAI 3.01. Plaintiffs contend that inclusion of “or defense”, under the circumstances, was mandatory by virtue of the “Notes on Use” appended to the 1981 revision of MAI 3.01, to-wit, “[u]se bracketed phrase when an affirmative defense is submitted”, and that failure to comply therewith constituted reversible error. Plaintiffs’ contention is completely defused by Leonard v. Hodge, 654 S.W.2d 165, 166 (Mo.App.1983). There, as here, a burden of proof instruction, otherwise comporting with MAI 3.01 [1981 Revision], failed to include the bracketed phrase “or defense” although a contributory negligence verdict director was submitted at the request of defendants therein. The court in Leonard, although conceding that omission of the bracketed phrase “or defense” was error, held, after a pragmatic analysis, that its omission was harmless and nonprejudicial. Accordingly, plaintiffs’ attack on Instruction No. 3 affords no basis for appellate relief. Leonard v. Hodge, supra.

Plaintiffs, by way of their second point, contend that defendants’ contributory negligence verdict directors [Instructions 9 and 13] were fraught with error. Four specific charges of error are grouped under four subpoints: (1) they failed to submit an affirmative defense because they did not take into account plaintiff Michael Adams’ minority; (2) they failed to "negate any of the essential elements” of plaintiffs’ verdict directors; (3) by reference on the copies of the parties and the court they purported to be a modification of MAI 32.01(1), captioned “[1978 New] Affirmative Defenses — Contributory Negligence — Single Negligent Act Submitted”, rather than MAI 32.01(2), captioned “[1978 New] Affirmative Defenses — Contributory Negligence— Multiple Negligent Acts Submitted”, when in fact two grounds of negligence were submitted in the disjunctive; and (4) they submitted “unpleaded issues” in that the grounds of negligence disjunctively submitted were not alleged or set forth in defendants’ answer.

[881]*881The first semblance of error plaintiffs seek to attribute to Instructions 9 and 13, that they failed to take into account plaintiff Michael Adams’ minority, is virtually subject to summary rejection by reason of Instruction No. 4 given by the court. Said instruction faithfully conformed to MAI 11.04, captioned “[1978 Revision] Definition — Negligence of Minor”, and defined the term “negligent” or “negligence” as used in defendants’ verdict directors with respect to minor plaintiff Michael Adams. If there is more to plaintiffs’ argument on this point than perceived, it is, in all candor, so immersed in subtlety that any further discussion would require this court to embark upon a course of sheer speculation and conjecture. Notwithstanding this court’s disinclination to do so, it is appropriate to remind plaintiffs that defendants’ verdict directors (MAI 32.01(2) modified) were patterned after a contributory negligence verdict director (contributory negligence of a minor) approved in Dorrin v. Union Elec. Co., 581 S.W.2d 852 (Mo.App. 1979). In Dorrin, the court, in detail, rejected an array of alleged errors leveled at the contributory negligence verdict director there in question.

The next semblance of error plaintiffs seek to attribute to Instructions 9 and 13, that they failed “to negate any of the essential elements” of plaintiffs’ verdict directors, is minimally argued by plaintiffs absent citation of authority.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ashby v. Johnson
792 S.W.2d 7 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1990)
Havrilla v. Millers Mutual Insurance Ass'n of Illinois
724 S.W.2d 592 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
666 S.W.2d 878, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 3536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-debusk-moctapp-1984.