Bobos v. Krey Packing Co.

19 S.W.2d 630, 323 Mo. 224, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 641
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 29, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 630 (Bobos v. Krey Packing Co.) 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
Bobos v. Krey Packing Co., 19 S.W.2d 630, 323 Mo. 224, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 641 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

RAGLAND, J.

This is the second .appeal in this case. The first is reported in 317 Mo. 108, 296 S. W. 157-161. There was a mistrial prior to the one in which that appeal was taken: the present appeal therefore grows out of the third trial of the cause.

The action is one for personal injuries. On the 29th day of October, 1920, plaintiff, then a boy sixteen years of age, was in.the employ of defendant at its packing plant in the city of St. Louis: having completed his duties for the day, on tbe date just mentioned, he left the plant and started walking home. AVhen he had gotten a *228 short distance from the plant, he looked back and saw one of defendant’s trucks, heavily loaded with meat, approaching; the meat was being taken from the plant to defendant’s warehouse or place of storage in another part of the city. As the truck came near, plaintiff left the sidewalk on which he had been walking, stepped out into the street and raised his hand as an indication to the driver that he wished to ride. The truck thereupon slowed down and came to a stop; it was being driven by one Reinert, another of defendant’s employees. When the truck had come to a stop, plaintiff grasped the handhold on the side of the cab, put one foot on the step and was pulling himself up so as to take a seat at the side of the driver. While he was in the act of doing so the truck suddenly started forward, causing the plaintiff to fall to the street. A front ivheel ran over him, crushing his right hip and otherwise injuring him. He lay in a hospital for eighteen months; he underwent three or four operations: he suffered excruciating pain: he will be an invalid and a cripple during the remainder of his life. The jury awarded him damages in the sum of $17,500.

On this appeal no error is assigned with respect to the admission or exclusion of evidence, the giving or refusing of instructions, or the size of the verdict: all of appellant’s grievances are'based on the alleged misconduct of plaintiff’s counsel.

On the trial the defendant endeavored to show that plaintiff attempted to climb onto the truck while it was moving: that it never stopped for him to get on. Whether it had stopped, or was still proceeding along the street, was practically the only contested issue of fact. The only eye-witnesses to the occurrence as a whole were plaintiff and Reinert, the driver.

The defendant carried indemnity insurance in the American Automobile Insurance Company. On the day following plaintiff’s injury, one Phelps, a representative of the Insurance Company, went to the hospital for the purpose of getting a statement from plaintiff with reference to the casualty and the manner in which it had happened. According to plaintiff’s testimony; Phelps told him in substance that Reinert would be prosecuted unless plaintiff’s statement exonerated him; he then questioned plaintiff at length, writing down what purported to be the answers given; at the conclusion of the interrogation plaintiff, without reading or having read to him the paper so written, signed the same at Phelps’s request. It seems that the paper contained the statement that the truck had not stopped when plaintiff attempted to get on it. At the time of the trial Phelps was in Philadelphia, but still in the employ of the Insurance Company.

There was evidence tending to show that one Wallace was president of the defendant corporation; that Beckmeyer and Price were *229 employees; tliat the defendant, being somewhat perturbed as to what Reinert would testify to if called as a witness on the trial, sent Price to him to request that he, Reinert, would come to Wallace for an interview; that upon Reinert’s refusing to comply with the request, Wallace sent Beekmeyer to him to ascertain if he was. going to be a witness, and if so for him, Beekmeyer, to accompany Reinert to court. Reinert was present in the court room during thé trial. He had been subpoenaed by both parties, but neither called him to the witness stand. At the time of the trial he was not in the employ of defendant, and had not been for five years.

At the opening of the trial, plaintiff’s counsel requested defendant’s counsel to accompany him to the bench for a conference with the court, out of the hearing of the jury, touching the propriety of propounding certain questions to the jurors on their voir dire. Thereupon defendant’s' counsel, in the presence of the jury .panel, and while seated at the counsel table said:

‘ ‘ If you want to prove that an insurance company is interested in this case, I will admit that. The American Automobile Insurance Company is defending this case,’ and I am appearing here as attorney on behalf of the American Automobile Insurance Company and on behalf of the Krej'- Packing Company for the excess, and you need not take the time to put this in the record, as I am admitting all you want to prove.”

Subsequently, and while defendant’s counsel was examining the jurors on their voir dire, the following occurred:

“Mr. Ely: I am here representing the Krey Packing Company in the defense of this lawsuit. I am also here representing the American Automobile Insurance Company, who issued an indemnity policy to the Krey Packing Company, agreeing to indemnify the Krey Packing Company for any judgment you might return against them up to the amount of $5,000. I want to lay my cards on the table and advise you gentlemen of that fact. Now, I want to ask you gentlemen whether the fact that the American Automobile Insurance Company has issued such a policy of indemnity agreeing to indemnify the Krey Packing Company for any judgment you might return against them up to the amount of $5,000 would cause any of you gentlemen to return a verdict against my client, or whether you gentlemen will be governed solely by, the evidence and the instructions of the court?
“Me. HabeNICHT: I don’t know the exact amount of the policy carried by the defendant. . . .
“Mr. Ely: The file I have here shows five thousand dollars is the policy limits. Mr. Habenicht says he was advised it was ten thousand dollars, but whether it was five or ten thousand dollars, it should be thoroughly understood, and I want you jurors to tell me, any of *230 you that don’t thoroughly understand it, that the fact that there is insurance lias nothing whatever to do with your decision in this case, but that is merely to indemnify the Krey Packing Company for any judgment that you might return against them up to the amount of the policy. The fact that they have that much insurance does not mean, whether five or ten thousand dollars, does not mean that you have any right to.go out and return a verdict for five or ten thousand dollars because they have that much insurance, and you won’t do that, will you?”

During the voir dire examination the following also occurred:

“MR. ITabeNICHT: . . . Now, gentlemen, in this case you will learn that, like in most all automobile cases, the American Automobile Insurance Company is interested.
“Me. Ely: Now, I object to that remark. . . . My objection is to the statement that ‘in this case, as in most automobile cases, you will learn that the American Automobile Insurance Company is interested. ’

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 630, 323 Mo. 224, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobos-v-krey-packing-co-mo-1929.