Begley v. Connor

361 S.W.2d 836, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 545
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 14, 1962
Docket48691
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 361 S.W.2d 836 (Begley v. Connor) 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
Begley v. Connor, 361 S.W.2d 836, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 545 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

BOHLING, Commissioner.

Helen F. Begley instituted this action for $50,000 damages against James H. Connor, Jr., and John E. Housh for severe personal injuries sustained in a multiple automobile collision. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered upon a unanimous jury verdict for defendants and contends the court erred in rulings with respect to certain evidence and the giving of an instruction on behalf of defendant Connor. Each defendant contends plaintiff failed to make a submissible case against him, and that the trial court committed no reversible error.

The collisions occurred about 2:30 p. m. Sunday, August 16, 1959, on Highway 61-67 at its intersection with Oak Street in Festus, Missouri. Highway 61-67 extends generally north and south and has two southbound and two northbound lanes, with, at the scene involved, a center concrete divider strip, four feet wide and a few inches high, with openings for the passage of traffic. The asphaltic concrete with limestone aggregate' pavement on either side of the divider strip was 24½ feet wide and the shoulders were nine feet wide. There is a crown of a “little rise” in the highway and then a slight down grade for southbound traffic approaching the place of the collisions. The Oak Street opening is 124 feet long and affords access to, among other things, an eating place known as the. Dairy Queen just west of the highway. A consulting engineer, plaintiff’s witness, estimated the distance, north from the south: end of said opening to the crest of the rise,, as we read his testimony, to be about 372 feet, but on cross-examination he admitted his measurements had not included all the distance involved. Plaintiff’s brief puts this distance at 510 or 520 feet. Defendant Connor’s estimate was between 750 and 1,000 feet.

A summary, notwithstanding some repetition later, may be helpful. Four automobiles were involved. Plaintiff was a passenger on the front seat of her brother Arthur Hettenbach’s Chevrolet carryall, southbound in the inside lane, next to the divider strip. Her son Thomas and his friends Patricia and Larry Ryan occupied the other seat. Defendant Housh, his wife and two daughters, of Indianapolis, Indiana, were southbound in the outside lane in his new Pontiac station wagon, at distances variously estimated at two car lengths and 150 feet behind the carryall. Defendant Connor, northbound in his Edsel sedan, intended to stop at the Dairy Queen. He was either stopped at an angle with most of his *838 Edsel in the 4 foot width of this Oak Street opening or was angling toward the opening and slowing down to permit the approaching southbound traffic to pass. Connor’s Edsel suddenly shot out in front of the carryall when the carryall was one or two car lengths north of it. The carryall and Edsel collided and both went westwardly into the outside southbound lane. Housh braked and swerved his Pontiac but a second collision occurred; i. e., the Pontiac .and the carryall collided. Mrs. Made Davidson at said time was northbound in the ■outside lane in a Chevrolet. She turned into the inside lane to pass a car immediately ahead of her and her car struck the Edsel and knocked it into the southbound lanes. Mrs. Davidson was not a party to this suit.

Plaintiff’s case against defendant Connor rests upon the testimony of her brother; and her case against defendant Housh rests upon the testimony of her son.

After stopping for ice about a half mile or more north of the electric traffic signal at the Festus-Crystal City junction, Mr. Hettenbach drove his carryall in the southbound inside lane, next to the divider strip, up to the point of the collisions, stopping, however, for a then red electric signal at said junction. It had been raining hard, and was still raining. The pavement was wet. Hettenbach’s maximum speed was 30 to 35 m. p. h. He was just over the “little rise” in the highway when he first saw Connor’s northbound Edsel, and “guessed” the Edsel was “something like” two blocks or “was about a block” and “I was about a block” from where the accident occurred. He testified in chief that he didn’t pay any attention to the Edsel until the carryall came “to the break in the divider” and the Edsel “started to angle toward my side of the road and seemed to slow down and looked like he was going to let me pass until we got almost on top of each other and then he came right out in front of me.” On cross-examination he stated the Edsel, with its whéels in the opening in the divider strip, was at about a thirty degree angle, like it was “slowing down — stopping to let me get by.” He concluded the Edsel was going to stop and let the carryall maintain its speed of 30 m. p. h. and pass. He stated at different times that the carryall was less than a car’s length or was about two car lengths from the Edsel when the Edsel entered the carryall’s lane, and that it happened too fast to do anything; he “believed” he applied his brakes.

Asked, on cross-examination: “Q You mean to say this car just drove gradually out in front of you? A No. I wouldn’t say it drove gradually out in front of me. Q How did it come out? A Well, like the man’s foot slipped off the brake and hit the accelerator. Q You mean, shot right out in front of you? A That’s right. Q Just like a cannon ball? A Something like that. Q You saw him slowing down ? A That’s right. Q And he had come almost to a stop ? A Well, he hadn’t stopped, almost to a stop. Yes, he slowed down enough I figured he was going to let me pass. Q And all of a sudden when you got two or three car lengths away from him, the car shot right out into that lane, didn’t it? A Yes. Q Just as if something hit it and knocked it out there, wasn’t it? A Either that or he pushed down on the accelerator. Q It could have been one or the other, couldn’t it? A It could have.”

The cars collided at the right headlights of the Edsel and the left headlights of the carryall.

Hettenbach knew nothing about Housh’s Pontiac’s collision with the carryall.

Some additional testimony of Hettenbach appears later.

Defendant Connor testified: He moved his Edsel sedan from the outside to the inside northbound lane and signaled his intention to turn left to stop at the Dairy Queen. The highway becomes slick when wet. He slackened speed, saw southbound cars approaching, and stopped in the south 20 feet of the opening. He guessed, estimated, he was stopped about 30 seconds. *839 Looking in his rear view mirror he saw a car within IS or 20 feet of him, then felt a terrific impact, which knocked the Edsel into the southbound lanes, and got a glimpse of a woman, later ascertained to be Mrs. Made Davidson, driving a Chevrolet and passing him.

Mrs. Made Davidson testified she was traveling 40 m. p. h., with her two minor children in the rear seat, and turned into the inside northbound lane to pass a car immediately ahead of her in the outside lane. She was not over two car lengths from the Edsel when she first saw it, stopped or going very slowly, with about 2 feet of the rear end in her lane. “I was upon him before I knew it and I hit him before I looked.” Her Chevrolet struck the Edsel and knocked it into the southbound traffic lanes.

The Davidson car was damaged at its left front bumper, hood, fender and wheel and the Edsel at its right rear end by this collision.

Here, as stated, plaintiff relies upon witness Hettenbach to establish the liability of defendant Connor.

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Bluebook (online)
361 S.W.2d 836, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/begley-v-connor-mo-1962.