Boydston v. Burton

379 S.W.2d 536
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 15, 1964
Docket48917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 379 S.W.2d 536 (Boydston v. Burton) 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
Boydston v. Burton, 379 S.W.2d 536 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

LEEDY, Judge.

Action by Joy Boydston for damages for personal injuries; trial to a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff and against defendants William L. Burton and Dale Boydston in the sum of $60,000, from which judgment the named defendants prosecute separate appeals.

Plaintiff was a passenger in the front seat of a Chevrolet owned and being driven by her 19-year-old brother-in-law, defendant Dale Boydston. This car was involved in a head-on collision with a Volkswagen being driven by defendant Burton. The driver of a third vehicle (Lester E. Tins-ley) was joined as a party defendant, but at the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court sustained his motion for a directed verdict. That action is not challenged, so Tinsley’s role as a defendant has passed out of the case.

The collision occurred about 11:30 a. m., on Sunday, March 22, 1959, on a graveled county road in Platte County known as the Hampton road. The weather was clear and the road dry. At the place in question the road runs in a generally east-west direction. It was described in the evidence as being hilly and “curvy,” conditions verified by the photographic exhibits. The Chevrolet in which plaintiff was riding was eastbound, and the Volkswagen driven by Burton was traveling west. The Tinsley car (a Chevrolet) was following the Burton Volkswagen at a distance of about three car lengths. The collision occurred at or near the crest of a hill, and the point of impact on each car was from about the center to the left side of the front.

Plaintiff’s case was submitted as against the defendants severally by separate verdict-directing instructions (Nos. 2 and 3) which instructions hypothesized negligence on the part of each defendant in failing to keep a reasonably careful and vigilant lookout for approaching vehicles, and, disjunctively, failure to drive upon the right half of the roadway. As a part of the submission of the first of the foregoing negligent omissions (failure to keep a lookout), instruction No. 3 (having to do with Boydston alone) included the further hypothesis, in the conjunctive, “that in the exercise of the highest degree of care he could and should have seen, the Volkswagen approaching in time to have swerved to the right side of the travelled portion of the road and avoided the collision * * By instruction No. 4 the jury was instructed as to the situation in which it would be its duty to return a verdict against both defendants *538 (in substance, that if the jury found “that the negligence, if any, of defendant Dale Boydston and the negligence, if any, of defendant William Burton, directly concurred, combined and contributed to cause” plaintiff’s injuries, etc.).

The points relied on by Burton are: (1) That the evidence showed plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law; (2) that certain photographs were improperly received in evidence; (3) error in the giving of plaintiff’s instruction No. 4; and (4) that the verdict is grossly excessive in amount.

Boydston’s assignments are: (1) That the evidence was insufficient to submit either the hypothesis that he was driving his car on the wrong side of the road, or that he failed to keep a lookout; and (2) the excessiveness of the verdict.

Gerald Winters, a highway patrolman, reached the scene within thirty minutes after the collision occurred, and before the ambulance arrived. He found the Boydston and Burton vehicles “were not right up against each other, but they were very close.” There was debris (broken pieces of glass, metal, oil and water) in the road under the vehicles (this point being about 20 or 30 feet east of the crest of the hill). In general, this debris was on the south half of the road (i. e., Boydston’s side), including, specifically, that under the Volkswagen. At this point the traveled portion of the road (that having gravel on it) was found to measure 24 feet in width. There were narrow shoulders (about 2 feet wide) and a grader ditch on each side. There was no marked center line of the road, and nothing to mark the edges, but “like most gravel roads, the edges kind of wavered back and forth a little bit,” so that if measured at one particular place it might be a foot or so wider than at another particular spot Estimates of their respective speeds as given to the patrolman were: Boydston, 35 m. p. h.; Burton, 35 to 40 m. p. h. Boyds-ton stated to the patrolman (and it was admitted against him alone) : “We came up over the hill and it looked like he was over on my side, and I put on my brakes and then we hit.” Burton’s statement made at the scene (and its admission similarly limited) was: “I was driving west and this car was driving east, and maybe we were both driving in the middle of the road, I don’t know, it all happened so fast, I never did see the car behind me.”

The highway patrolman described the crest as being “rather gradual * * * with the road coming up from both sides at an angle to the crest.” He, nevertheless, estimated the grade of the road to be 10% on the west side of the crest (from which side the Boydston Chevrolet approached), and 15 to 20% on the east side of said crest (from which latter direction the Burton Volkswagen approached), but he made no measurements as to visibility of travelers in the vicinity of the crest.

Boydston’s car laid down skid marks 61 feet long, and the Burton car laid down skid marks 41 feet long, measured from the point of collision west and east, respectively, thus indicating the cars were about 100 feet apart when they started to skid. Boydston’s left (or north) tire mark was 11 feet, 8 inches north of the south edge of the traveled portion of the road. Burton’s left (or south) tire mark was 10 feet north of the south edge of the traveled portion of the road.

Plaintiff testified that “maybe half a block” before they reached the crest of the hill,” and while driving at 30 to 40 miles per hour, her brother-in-law pointed out a house on the south side and adjacent to the road in which his parents had formerly lived, “and I had turned to look at the house, kind of like that [indicating] and then I turned back and we were coming over the hill then and the Volkswagen was there;” that as they came over the crest and ran into the Volkswagen there was at least “a car’s width” of space between the right side of the Boydston car and the south edge of the road, but her brother-in-law did not swerve. (Plaintiff thought she *539 heard him say later that he “just hit the brakes and kind of froze.”)

Boydston’s attack upon the submissibility of the hypothesis that he failed to drive upon the right half of the road is based on the theory and assumption that plaintiff, “by her judicial statements,” placed him (Boydston) on the right side of the road, thus precluding her use of, or reliance upon the testimony of her witness Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
379 S.W.2d 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boydston-v-burton-mo-1964.