Arnold v. Haskins

147 S.W.2d 469, 347 Mo. 320, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 607
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 1, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 469 (Arnold v. Haskins) 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
Arnold v. Haskins, 147 S.W.2d 469, 347 Mo. 320, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 607 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

Appellant, plaintiff below, sued to recover for the death of her husband, Leo Arnold, who was killed in an automobile accident. There were four defendants named, G.D. Haskins, Sr., G.D. Haskins, Jr., Thad Campbell and Pat Sherwood. Plaintiff recovered a verdict for $10,000 against all of the defendants. Haskins, Sr., and Haskins, Jr., filed motion for new trial, which was by the court sustained and from the order sustaining said motion the plaintiff appealed. It does not appear that Campbell or Sherwood filed motions for new trial. At least, so far as appears from the record before us, they seem to have abided the verdict and do not appear as respondents here, the respondents being the two Haskinses.

G.D. Haskins, Sr., and G.D. Haskins, Jr., father and son, lived at Malden, Missouri, and were engaged, as partners, in the cotton ginning business. They had cotton gins at Malden and Vanduser, Missouri, and in the course of their business sold cotton seed, one of their customers being the Missouri Cotton Oil Mill at Cairo, Illinois. Defendant Sherwood owned some trucks which he used in general hauling for hire for various people. On occasion he hauled cotton seed from respondents' gins to the Cotton Oil Mill at Cairo, whether as employee *Page 323 and agent of respondents or as independent contractor or in some other capacity being a disputed question. Defendant Campbell was a brother-in-law of Sherwood and the two would at times aid each other, as matter of accommondation, when either had trucking difficulties. Campbell was not employed by the Haskinses nor personally acquainted with either of them.

The accident herein involved occurred on December 29, 1937, five or six miles north of Sikeston, Missouri, on U.S. Highway No. 61, at about three o'clock A.M. It was then quite dark and visibility was poor. On the evening of December 28th, Sherwood, in a truck owned by Campbell, called at respondents' Vanduser gin to get a load of cotton seed to deliver to the Cairo mill. He loaded the truck and started to Cairo. At the point where the accident occurred the truck, in some way, was overturned in a road ditch along the side of the highway (No. 61). No portion of the truck or its cargo was left upon the slab or traveled portion of the highway. Sherwood left the overturned truck and its load, went to Sikeston and called a neighbor of Campbell's, requesting him to ask Campbell to bring another truck, owned by Sherwood, to the scene of the accident. That truck had printed upon it a sign "Haskins Gin Co.," although it in fact belonged to Sherwood. Campbell received and responded to Sherwood's call. When he arrived at the place where the truck had been overturned he did not find Sherwood there. The latter, it seems, had gone back to Sikeston to look for Campbell or to get assistance. Campbell, not finding Sherwood there, decided to go back to Sikeston to find Sherwood. While attempting to turn around on the highway the automobile, in which plaintiff's husband was riding as a guest, approached and collided with the truck and trailer which Campbell was driving. Deceased received injuries from which he died. From Campbell's testimony, introduced by plaintiff although Campbell was a defendant — it appears that while he was in the act of turning and while the trailer portion of his outfit was on the right side of the black center line of the pavement and the tractor portion was up to or slightly over the black center line of the pavement, it "`bucked up and down' and stopped;" that he made unavailing efforts to start it, and, seeing the lights of an approaching automobile (in which deceased was riding) made efforts to warn and to stop that car, finally jumping out of its way to save himself when no attention was paid to his signals; and that said approaching car "skidded" against and struck the stalled truck.

Campbell took the wounded man to a doctor's office and later found Sherwood and told him of the accident. Sometime later in the day Sherwood, with help hired by him — not including Campbell — righted the overturned truck, reloaded the spilled cotton seed, and proceeded to deliver it to the mill at Cairo, in the truck in which it had originally started — not the truck involved in the fatal accident. *Page 324

The overturned truck did not belong to either Haskins, Sr., or Haskins, Jr. — or to the partnership. It belonged to Campbell. Although the truck that stalled across the highway and with which the car in which deceased was riding collided had printed on it "Haskins Gin Co.," neither of the Haskinses had caused such lettering to be done or knew it was there or how it came to be there. They did not do business under the name "Haskins Gin Co.," but under the name "Lake County Gin Company." Seemingly Sherwood, who owned that truck, had had that printing done of his own volition.

The facts we have summarized are taken from the evidence introduced by plaintiff. She had taken and she introduced depositions of defendants Haskins, Sr., Haskins, Jr., and Sherwood, and she called defendant Campbell as her witness. The defendants introduced no evidence but stood upon demurrers to plaintiff's evidence, which the court overruled.

[1] Respondents' motion for new trial raised several questions. One was alleged misconduct of one of plaintiff's attorneys. The court heard evidence on that question and specifically found against respondents and in plaintiff's favor on that point, so she cannot be said to be aggrieved by that part of the court's ruling. The court sustained the motion for new trial on the stated ground that "the court . . . finds that the evidence is insufficient to fix liability as respects defendants G.D. Haskins and G.D. Haskins, Jr., and the motion for a new trial of said defendants G.D. Haskins and G.D. Haskins, Jr., is ordered by the court sustained."

[2] In Gates v. Dr. Nichols' Sanatorium (En Banc), 331 Mo. 754,55 S.W.2d 424, a case certified to this court by the Kansas City Court of Appeals, a new trial had been granted by the trial court on the stated ground "that under all the evidence the plaintiff is not entitled to recover." The judges of the Court of Appeals had differed as to whether the trial court's order meant there was no evidence to support the verdict and that a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant should have been given or whether it meant that, in the opinion of the trial court, the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, in which latter event the order granting the new trial would be sustained. We held that the language used by the trial court meant that in said court's opinion there was no evidence to justify submission of the case to the jury and that said court had granted the new trial because it was of opinion it should have directed a verdict for the defendant — a conclusion with which this court did not agree. But in the Gates case we referred to two prior decisions of this court, which had been discussed by the Court of Appeals, viz., Somerville v. Stockton, 178 Mo. 121, 77 S.W. 298, and Van Liew v. Barrett Barrett Beverage Co.,144 Mo. 509, 46 S.W. 202. We quoted from the Court of Appeals' opinion (see 55 S.W.2d l.c. 425): *Page 325

"`In the case of Somerville v. Stockton, 178 Mo. 121, 77 S.W. 298, the words, "that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict," and in Van Liew v. Beverage Co., 144 Mo. 509, 46 S.W.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W.2d 469, 347 Mo. 320, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-haskins-mo-1941.