Bean v. SUPERIOR BOWEN ASPHALT CO., LLC

340 S.W.3d 275, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 490, 2011 WL 1363800
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 2011
DocketWD 71638
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 340 S.W.3d 275 (Bean v. SUPERIOR BOWEN ASPHALT CO., LLC) 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
Bean v. SUPERIOR BOWEN ASPHALT CO., LLC, 340 S.W.3d 275, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 490, 2011 WL 1363800 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

KAREN KING MITCHELL, Presiding Judge.

Superior Bowen Asphalt Company (“Superior”) appeals the Circuit Court of Platte County’s (“trial court”) amended judgment granting a new trial to the Estate of Sara Kampert, the Estate of Lacie Marie Kam-pert, Robert Kampert, Barbara Kampert and Christopher Newbury (collectively “the Kamperts”) in their wrongful death action against Superior for the death of James Kampert. The trial court granted the Kamperts’ motion for a new trial based upon jury confusion caused when two instructions (one submitted by the Kamperts and one submitted by Superior) were read together. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Factual and Procedural Background

On September 28, 2005, an underground mining operation was underway at Hunt Martin. The activity in the mine created a large amount of dust that made working conditions difficult for the mine employees. To alleviate the dust problem, certain Hunt Martin employees would periodically water the roads inside the mine and above ground at the mine site. Hunt Martin kept two water trucks specifically for this purpose. On September 28, 2005, however, those two water trucks were inoperable. Since the Hunt Martin trucks were not working, an employee of Superior, an asphalt production company located adjacent to Hunt Martin, brought Superior’s own water truck over to Hunt Martin to water the aboveground roads for them. Superior also watered the surface of the Superior property to alleviate the dust created by the neighboring mine. This truck was driven by a Superior employee and was not taken underground.

James Kampert (“Kampert”) was an employee on the evening shift at the Hunt Martin mine. By the time Kampert reported for work on September 28, Superior had closed business for the day. Kampert was concerned about the dusty conditions inside the mine and knew that Hunt Martin’s water trucks were not working. Kampert took it upon himself to go next door to Superior’s property and borrow its water truck. Apparently no Hunt Martin supervisor had asked Kampert to do this or knew of Kampert’s intention. Kampert had never before been on Superior’s property. Superior had never lent any of its equipment to Hunt Martin and had not given Hunt Martin permission to borrow its water truck. In fact, Superior had a policy that all trucks were to be locked at night with the keys kept inside a Superior building. On September 28, however, Kampert found the Superior water truck unlocked with the keys inside the truck.

Kampert drove the Superior water truck, which was full of water, off the Superior property and onto the Hunt Martin property. Kampert then attempted to drive the Superior water truck down into the mine to water the underground roads. The pitch of the road leading down into the mine was very steep — approximately a seventeen- to eighteen-percent grade. Kampert soon lost control of the heavy, fully-loaded water truck. The brakes on the truck, which had worked fine for Superior’s use above ground, could not slow the truck on the steep grade. Kampert jumped from the truck, but was run over and did not survive.

The Kamperts, who are the parents and children of James Kampert, brought an action for wrongful death against Superior, alleging that Superior failed to properly *278 maintain the brakes on the Superior water truck and that Superior was negligent in leaving the keys in the truck on September 28, 2005. In its defense, Superior claimed that the truck’s brakes were maintained in a manner that was sufficient for its use and that Kampert was negligent in taking the truck down into the mine.

After the close of the evidence at the trial, the Kamperts submitted to the jury a comparative fault verdict director that read as follows:

In your verdict you must assess a percentage of fault to defendant whether or not James Kampert was partly at fault if you believe:
First, plaintiffs were the children and parents of James Kampert, and
Second, defendant’s employees failed to remove the keys from the truck being operated by James Kampert, and
Third, defendant’s employees were thereby negligent, and
Fourth, as a direct result of such negligence, James Kampert died.

(Emphasis added.) The trial court accepted the Kamperts’ verdict director and gave it to the jury as Instruction No. 7.

Superior submitted two alternate instructions submitting Kampert’s comparative fault. The Kamperts objected to the first, and it was rejected by the trial court. The Kamperts did not object to the second comparative fault instruction submitted by Superior, and the trial court gave the instruction to the jury as Instruction No. 8. It read:

In your verdict you must assess a percentage of fault to James Kampert if you believe:
First, James Kampert took defendant’s water truck into the underground mine, and
Second, James Kampert was thereby negligent, and
Third, such negligence of James Kam-pert directly caused or directly contributed to cause the death of James Kampert.

(Emphasis added.)

During the jury’s deliberation, it submitted to the court the following question concerning Instructions seven and eight, “Instruction # 7 seems to conflict with Instruction #8 as #7 asks whether JK’s death was a direct result of SB’s negligence versus whether SB [sic] directly contributed to JK’s death. Which verb[i]age should we consider, the direct contribution or direct result?”

The trial court responded, “I am sorry I am not permitted to answer your question. You are to be governed by the instructions and the evidence as you remember it.”

The jury returned a verdict assessing damages of $1,000,000, with fault allocated ten percent to Superior and ninety percent to Kampert. The Kamperts filed a timely motion for new trial “on the basis that plain error occurred in submitting conflicting and confusing jury instructions,” and that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence.

The trial court granted the Kamperts’ motion for a new trial, stating that “the Court finds that Instruction # 7 and Instruction # 8 are inconsistent and, because of the Court’s error, Plaintiffis’] Motion for New Trial should be sustained.” Superi- or’s appeal follows.

Standard of Review

We review a trial court’s grant of a new trial under Rule 78.01 for an abuse of discretion. Damon Pursell Constr. Co. v. Mo. Hwy. & Trans. Comm’n, 192 S.W.3d 461, 469 (Mo.App. W.D.2006). We defer more to a trial court sustaining a motion for a new trial than we do to a trial court that has denied such a motion. Id. This is *279 “because the right of a trial court to grant a new trial involves judicial discretion, which many times is founded upon matters known to the court ... but unknown to us.... This precept has been afforded complete accommodations in appeal cases involving jury instructions.” McTeer v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.3d 275, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 490, 2011 WL 1363800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bean-v-superior-bowen-asphalt-co-llc-moctapp-2011.