Bennett v. Kitchin

400 S.W.2d 97, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 828
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 14, 1966
Docket50900
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 400 S.W.2d 97 (Bennett v. Kitchin) 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
Bennett v. Kitchin, 400 S.W.2d 97, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 828 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

FINCH, Judge.

This personal injury case arose from a two-automobile collision, followed shortly thereafter by the collision of a third automobile with the damaged automobiles and the person of plaintiff, who then was out of his car, standing on the pavement. The two cars involved in the first collision were driven by plaintiff and defendant Kitchin. The third automobile was driven by defendant Reum. The jury returned a verdict for $90,000 in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Kitchin, but found in favor of defendant Reum. Plaintiff appealed from the judgment in favor of Reum, and defendant Kitchin appealed from the $90,000 judgment. The appeals have been consolidated.

The collisions occurred at approximately 10:30 p. m., on April 5, 1963, on Highway M-150 near its intersection with a single track railroad grade crossing and near where Prospect Avenue would intersect M-150 if it were cut through. M-150 at that point runs east and west along the north side of Richards-Gebaur Air Force Base. The pavement was of gravel imbedded asphalt construction with a lane for eastbound traffic and one for westbound traffic, separated by a painted divider strip. Each shoulder was wide enough to permit passage thereon of an automobile driving off of the pavement. The roadway at the scene of the collisions is approximately level and continues to be level to the east to the railroad tracks, a distance of 160 feet, and on to the east of the railroad tracks approximately eight feet, at which point it begins to slope downhill to the east.

Plaintiff was traveling east on M-150 in a 1955 Buick at from 30 to 40 miles per hour. His mother and his wife occupied the front seat with him, and his sister and her husband were in the rear seat. According to evidence on behalf of plaintiff, a westbound Plymouth driven by defendant Kitchin swerved left into the eastbound lane when 50 to 60 feet away from the plaintiff’s car. Plaintiff then swerved to the left and applied his brakes and was almost stopped when the right front of Kitchin’s car struck the right rear of the plaintiff’s Buick. Defendant Kitchin testified that it was plaintiff who first turned left when five or six car lengths away and that he (Kitchin) then turned to his left to try to avoid plaintiff. Both vehicles stopped at the approximate point of impact. The Buick was straddling-the center line with the right rear fender still south of the center line and the remainder of the car to the north, headed in a northeasterly direction. The Plymouth was *100 headed southwest. It was about one-half south of the center line and one-half north thereof. The cars were almost parallel, with the Plymouth to the east of the Buick. According to plaintiff and others in his car, the front headlights on the Buick were left shining after the accident and the dome light of the Buick was turned on and left on. The lights on the Plymouth were not burning after the collision.

Plaintiff and other occupants of his car who testified stated that immediately after the first collision, plaintiff’s sister began to scream and carry on. Plaintiff turned on the dome light of his car and checked her. He also could see Kitchin slumped over the steering wheel of his Plymouth, so he got out of the Buick and went around to the driver’s seat of the Plymouth and helped Kitchin out of the car. Plaintiff could see that Kitchin apparently was not hurt, but did ascertain that he was drunk. (Evidence was received that Kitchin had been drinking earlier in the evening and that he voluntarily took a breatholizer test at 12:53 a. m., over two hours after the collision, and it disclosed blood alcohol of .19 per cent.) Plaintiff then left Kitchin standing there and started back around the back of the Plymouth to go to the Buick and check further on the occupants of his own car. As he was going around the Plymouth, plaintiff heard its motor start up and the Plymouth started to back up. Plaintiff jumped out of the way and called to Kitchin, who was back in the driver’s seat, to ask what he was doing. Kitchin replied that he was going to “get the hell out of there before the police got there.” Plaintiff then reached in the driver’s window and turned off the ignition of the Plymouth. He remembered nothing after that. Plaintiff was corroborated in this version by other occupants of his car, but defendant Kitchin testified that plaintiff pulled him out of the Plymouth, took off his glasses, and punched him in the nose. He said he could not remember much about what happened after that. He thought he had walked over to the side of the road, but said he could have gotten back in his car. He said he did not try to drive away. Immediately, then, the second crash came. Kitchin testified that he did not know where plaintiff Bennett was at the time of the second collision.

While plaintiff was at the driver’s door of the Plymouth turning off the ignition, a westbound Chevrolet driven by defendant Reum hit plaintiff and the parked Plymouth (causing it, in turn, to hit the Buick). Plaintiff at the time was in about the middle of the eastbound lane. He was pinned between the front of the Chevrolet and the left side of the Plymouth. He suffered very severe injuries, the extent of which is not in issue on this appeal.

Plaintiff and the occupants of his car fixed the elapsed time between the first and second collisions at from one and one-half to two and one-half minutes.

Defendant Reum was a soldier on duty at the Richards-Gebaur Air Force Base. He had driven from.the Air Force Base onto M-1S0 and was driving west. Reum came up the grade toward the intersecting railroad tracks traveling, he thought, at somewhere between 40 and 50 miles per hour. He testified that as he approached the railroad he met four cars, the lights of which blinded him to a certain extent. He denied seeing lights on either the wrecked Buick or Plymouth, and testified that just when he was astraddle the intersecting railroad tracks his lights first picked up a reflection from the rear end of a dark automobile in the westbound lane. He saw no car coming from the west and he stated that when he saw the car in the westbound lane he immediately applied his brakes to slow his car and swerved it to the left to try to go around. He did not see the other car nor did he see plaintiff until he had turned left, at which time he did not know how far away he was. He applied his brakes in an emergency fashion and tried to swerve further to the left but could not do so. He did not sound his horn. He testified that when he first saw plaintiff he appeared to be reaching inside the left front door of the Plymouth but then straightened up, looked *101 around and put his hands on top of the Plymouth.

There was some testimony, based on skid marks, indicating a greater speed by Reum than that which he estimated. There also was other testimony which we need not detail for purposes of this appeal except as specific reference thereto may be made subsequently in this opinion as needed.

Plaintiff’s petition alleged negligence against the defendant Kitchin in the operation of his vehicle leading to the first collision, and also alleged negligence on the part of Kitchin in driving his car while intoxicated and in attempting to drive his automobile from the scene of the collision without identifying himself to plaintiff or the passengers in the Buick, although there had been injury and damage in connection with that collision.

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Bluebook (online)
400 S.W.2d 97, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-kitchin-mo-1966.