Annin v. Jackson

100 S.W.2d 872, 340 Mo. 331, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 5, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 100 S.W.2d 872 (Annin v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Annin v. Jackson, 100 S.W.2d 872, 340 Mo. 331, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 342 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

*335 HAYS, J.

Alice Annin recovered a verdict for $8000 as damages for personal injuries sustained by her while riding' as a guest of Dorothy Jackson in an automobile being driven by the latter. Defendant has appealed from the judgment rendered pursuant to the verdict.

The appeal presents questions of error mainly in the denial of appellant’s request for a directed verdict at the close of all the evidence, and error in the giving of a certain instruction for respondent on the merits of the case. As there is no substantial dispute over the determining facts in evidence we detail them mainly as the appellant’s counsel has stated them.

The injury was received early in the afternoon of October 25, 1932, at a point on Florissant Road in St. Louis County. The respondent resided in University City. She and the appellant, former college mates, had latterly been members of the same bridge club, and from time to time had gone to the club’s meetings together; sometimes in respondent’s car, sometimes in appellant’s. Both were experienced drivers. On the occasion in question, pursuant to invitation extended the respondent by appellant to accompany her to a bi-weekly meeting of their club at Ferguson, the appellant drove her car to the residence of respondent, in University City, whence they proceeded over paved roads and streets, in said car, to Florissant Road, a highway between 25 and 30 feet in width and smooth-surfaced with macadam. It had rained in the forenoon and it continued to rain throughout their journey.

The appellant testified that throughout their course of travel which led to where the accident in suit occurred she was driving at a speed of twenty-five or thirty miles an hour; that nothing unusual happened on the way, save that while on St. Charles Road a car suddenly turned in front of her and she “had to apply the brakes” to keep from striking it. When she did so the car skidded somewhat to one side; she righted it without difficulty and went on. She said “it was nothing to frighten anyone.” The respondent testified that the other car must have caught its wheel in the track and “we skidded to avoid hitting it.”' After entering upon Florissant Road and before reaching the point where the accident occurred, they found that the road descends a long hill and makes several curves, but at the scene of the accident and for some distance in both directions from the same they found the road to be straight and level. Ferguson is but a fraction of a mile from that point. At the time of the accident and during their course there were no other vehicles on that road. The automobile was being driven along the middle of the road. The respondent testified that they had been traveling from thirty to thirty-five miles an hour and at the time of the accident were proceeding at a'speed of at least thirty miles; that “the road appeared *336 safe; there was nothing'1 about their approach to the point of the accident that appeared at all unnsual or abnormal;” that the road at that point was wet jnst as elsewhere in the course of their travel. They were talking together as they proceeded. At no time did respondent object or protest regarding the speed or regarding appellant’s manner of driving. The automobile was comparatively new and in first class mechanical condition and, after the accident, was driven from the scene under its own power.

Appellant’s version of the accident was as follows: She had no difficulty with the car in making the curves mentioned above or on the succeeding level stretch until suddenly the car seemed to slip over to the left side of the road. She tried to right it. In doing so the car went first to the right side, next back to the left side, and then back to the right side of the road, grazing three mail boxes at the roadside, and collided head-on with a telephone pole, and the rear end swung around so that the car was almost facing in the opposite direction. No glass of the car was broken. While the car was skidding the appellant, occupied in manipulating the vehicle, did not notice what the respondent was doing but discovered, when the ear came to rest, that respondent seemed rather dazed and her nose was bleeding. Appellant took her in the damaged ear to the place of the club meeting at Ferguson where respondent administered to herself first aid. Her injuries later developed into a serious and permanent condition, but in view of the narrow limits of the appellate issues, this reference to them will suffice. The appellant further testified that she did not know what caused the car to skid at that particular time; she struggled with the steering wheel in her effort to right the ear but had no recollection as to the use of the brakes, though she was sure she did not apply the emergency brake. It was her belief the car in its skidding traversed at least twice the width of the road.

Respondent’s version was very brief: When the ear started to skid she ducked her head down below the line of the windshield. She did not observe what the appellant did with the controls of the car. To her it all seemed to happen in an instant. She definitely remembered that "the car skidded to the left and back and out again and hit the pole. ’ ’ She was momentarily dazed. Shortly before the trial, which occurred more than a year thereafter, she and her counsel visited the scene' of the accident. They measured from the point where she thought the ear started to skid and determined the distance thence to the pole to be 125 feet. -The record does not indicate how she was enabled to determine the starting point.

The petition contained five separate charges of negligence. The first specification charged driving at a high and dangerous rate of speed in the circumstances; failure to travel at a rate of speéd so as not *337 to endanger the property of another, or the life and limb of another; and operation of the automobile at a rate of speed in excess of twenty-five miles an hour, in violation of Revised Statutes 1929, section 7775. The second, third and fourth charges need not be stated. The respondent abandoned all other charges and stood upon the fifth-which was in substance, and nearly so in wording, as the language contained in the respondent’s principal given instruction.

Issue was joined by appellant’s answer in the form of a general denial and pleas of contributory negligence and assumption of risk. We think the determination of the question of error in the giving of the assailed instruction may also largely determine the other questions raised on this record. That instruction is in substance as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that if you find from the evidence that on or about the 25th day of October, 1932, the plaintiff was an occupant of an automobile then and there being operated by defendant Dorothy Jackson upon Florissant road at or near the approach to the city of Ferguson, Missouri, and that Florissant road is a public highway in St.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.2d 872, 340 Mo. 331, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/annin-v-jackson-mo-1937.