Brinkley v. United Biscuit Co. of America

164 S.W.2d 325, 349 Mo. 1227, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 28, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 164 S.W.2d 325 (Brinkley v. United Biscuit Co. of America) 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
Brinkley v. United Biscuit Co. of America, 164 S.W.2d 325, 349 Mo. 1227, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 540 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Plaintiff is the widow of Ora A. Brinkley, deceased, and brought this action to recover damages for his alleged wrongful death. The cause of action was filed in Bollinger County, but went on change of venue to Stoddard County where plaintiff obtained verdict and judgment for $8,000 against all the defendants. Motions for new trial were overruled and defendants appealed. The appeal of defendants United Biscuit Company and McDaniel is No. 38,016 and the appeal of defendants Shell and Myers is No. 38,017. These appeals were consolidated.

Plaintiff's husband was killed in a collision on highway 61, 8 or 9 miles south of Festus, Missouri, on January 13, 1939, about 6:30 or 7 A.M. Defendant McDaniel was the agent of defendant Biscuit Company and was driving the Biscuit Company truck. Defendant Myers was the agent of the defendants Shell, and was in charge of the Shell truck. Brinkley was driving his own truck. The Shells operated out of Lutesville, Missouri; the Biscuit Company truck was operated out of St. Louis, and the Brinkley truck had a load of lumber from a saw mill at Coldwater, about 22 miles south of Fredericktown, *Page 1235 Missouri, on highway 67. The Shell truck, loaded with hogs and cattle, was headed north, but, at the time of the collision, was standing. The Brinkley truck, loaded with about 5 tons of lumber, was travelling north. The Biscuit [327] Company truck was headed south, but there is a dispute as to whether it was standing or was moving. The roadway where the collision occurred extended north and south, and was straight for about 200 or 300 feet in each direction from the place of collision. The paved part of the roadway was 18 feet in width, and the dirt shoulders were 8 or 10 feet in width. At the place the roadway was on a fill, the west side of which was quite steep, and was 4 or 5 feet high.

With the Shell truck were defendant Myers and Truman Shell. They stopped at the Ponzer filling station about one-half mile south of the place of collision, and were unable to get their engine started after this stop. An attendant at the station, with a truck, pushed the Shell truck north about a quarter of a mile to the crest of a slight grade, but the engine still did not start. The Shell truck then coasted north about a quarter of a mile from the crest of the grade, but the engine did not start, and Myers said that he "saw that the truck was not going to start, so I proceeded to get it off the highway, on the right, or east side of the pavement, and due to the soft roadbed or shoulder I didn't get it clear off the highway until it bogged down." After the stop Myers said that he got out, checked his lights; that all were on, front and rear, and that from "force of habit, I always set the brakes and put it in gear to hold the car."

Truman Shell rode in the pushing truck with the station attendant up the slight grade, and returned to the station with the attendant to get a mechanic. Myers said that after he functioned about his truck as above stated, he sat in the cab waiting for Truman Shell to return with a mechanic. It was not yet daylight, and a rather heavy snow was falling. While Myers was waiting in the Shell truck cab, the Biscuit Company truck approached from the north and stopped to aid the Shell truck, according to plaintiff's theory. The Brinkley truck approached from the south and struck both the Biscuit Company truck and the Shell truck. Miles Reed, deputy constable, testified that when he arrived, shortly after the collision, the Shell truck had about 6 feet of the pavement blocked on the east side. The Biscuit Company truck, after the collision, was on the west side of the road "3 feet off the concrete and 2 feet on," as estimated by the deputy constable, and was south of the Shell truck, but the evidence is conflicting as to how far south. The Brinkley truck, after the collision, was on the west side of the road, and a short distance north of the Shell truck, and the front end was down at the bottom of the fill. The Brinkley truck was a trailer truck, and the lumber on the trailer crushed the cab, killing instantly Brinkley and a man named Plumb, who was in the cab with Brinkley. Hereinafter we refer to defendants *Page 1236 United Biscuit Company and McDaniel as the Biscuit Company defendants, and to the defendants Shell and Myers as the Shell defendants.

It will not be necessary to state the grounds of negligence alleged in the petition. The negligence relied upon by plaintiff appears in instructions P1 and P2, infra. The Biscuit Company defendants answered separately, but the answers are, in effect, the same. The Shell defendants answered jointly. The respective answers deny the allegations of negligence, and plead contributory negligence on the part of Brinkley. The alleged acts of contributory negligence appear in the instruction, infra, on that subject, and it will not be necessary to state them here. The reply denied the new matter in the answers.

The Biscuit Company defendants assign error on the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support submission as to them, and on plaintiff's instructions P1, P4, and P5. The Shell defendants assign error on the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to support submission as to them, and on plaintiff's instructions P2, P3, P4 and P5, and on the refusal of their offered Instruction 11D.

The jury was instructed, in plaintiff's Instruction P1, to find for plaintiff and against the Biscuit Company defendants, if they found that Brinkley was driving north and ran into the Biscuit Company truck, and that said truck "was at that time stopped and parked on said highway in such a manner that a part of said truck was on the west part of the pavement of said highway, and that said truck had been parked and stopped on said highway by the defendant James Francis McDaniel . . . and that said truck . . . had been stopped and parked in such a manner that its right side was not as near the right hand side of the highway as practicable and that at the time said truck was run into by the truck being driven and operated by the said Ora A. Brinkley, the said truck belonging to the United Biscuit Company of America had been stopped so close to the truck [328] belonging to the defendants Shells that Ora A. Brinkley did not have room nor time, considering the speed at which he was driving his own truck, to pass between the truck belonging to the defendant the United Biscuit Company of America and the truck belonging to the defendants Shell after the said Ora A. Brinkley saw or by the exercise of the highest degree of care could have seen the truck belonging to the defendants Shell parked on the pavement and that the defendant James Francis McDaniel failed to flag down or to in any other manner warn the said Ora A. Brinkley of the presence of the Shell truck in time for the said Ora A. Brinkley to have avoided running into the truck belonging to the United Biscuit Company of America, and that at the time of said accident it was dark and snowing and other atmospheric conditions existed which rendered the operation of motor vehicles dangerous on said highway, and if you further find that the said Ora A. Brinkley was killed and if you *Page 1237 further find that the facts that the truck belonging to theUnited Biscuit Company of America had been stopped and parked (italics ours) with a portion of it on the pavement of said highway, and that said truck had been stopped and parked in such a manner that its right side was not as near the right hand side of the highway as practicable, and that said truck had been stopped so close to the truck belonging to the defendants Shell that Ora A.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W.2d 325, 349 Mo. 1227, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkley-v-united-biscuit-co-of-america-mo-1942.