Brown v. Boyd

422 S.W.2d 639, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 1085
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 8, 1968
DocketNo. 52638
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 422 S.W.2d 639 (Brown v. Boyd) 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
Brown v. Boyd, 422 S.W.2d 639, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 1085 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

BARRETT, Commissioner.

On Monday evening, about 7:40 o’clock, March 19, 1962, Dr. George Brown parked his automobile on the south side of Broadway, opposite Child’s Super Market, in Cape Girardeau. It had been raining and the streets were wet. Dr. Brown came out of the store with a sack of groceries in his left arm and again proceeded south across the 35-foot street toward his automobile. At the northwest corner of Broadway and Whitelaw, almost opposite Child’s, there was a mercury vapor light and two-thirds down the block a second light and of course there was some light from the store windows. Dr. Brown was familiar with the heavy traffic of Broadway and as he approached the curb line saw vehicles traveling east in the south lane but he saw no closely approaching vehicles westbound. But by the time he reached the middle of the street he became aware of a lighted automobile traveling west and so he took a step or two and stopped with one foot on the center line of the street. The westbound automobile, driven by Mrs. Boyd, struck Dr. Brown’s hip, knocked him down and into the path of an eastbound automobile driven by Jerry Wilkening. Jerry’s automobile ran over the doctor’s right leg.

For $500.00 Dr. Brown gave Jerry’s insurer a covenant not to sue and on September 23, 1966, four and one-half years after the occurrence, tried and submitted his and his wife’s cause of action for $16,000.00 damages against Mrs. Boyd under the humanitarian doctrine and solely upon the hypothesis that she “could have known” of his peril in time thereafter to have avoided hitting him “by either stopping or swerving.” The jury, by a vote of nine to three, returned a verdict for the defendant, Mrs. Boyd. The plaintiffs filed a six-point motion for a new trial but the trial court without specifying “of record the ground or grounds,” as required by Civil Rules 75.01, 78.01, V.A.M.R., simply “sustained said Motion for a New Trial.” The defendant. Mrs. Boyd, appealed from the order and since the court had not specified the ground or grounds Mrs. Boyd, pursuant to Civil Rule 83.06(b), served a timely notice on Dr. Brown to “prepare the original brief” thus casting on the respondents the burden of justifying the trial court’s order.

In justification the respondents have filed a three-point brief but all points are based upon the single assertion that the order granting a new trial was justified because “the closing argument to the jury of appellant’s counsel was prejudicial as a matter of law.” The respondents take the position of “prejudicial as a matter of law” for the reason that when the trial court fails to specify the ground or grounds for granting a new trial, “it shall never be presumed that the new trial was granted on any discretionary grounds.” Civil Rule 83.06(c). In claiming prejudice as a matter of law the respondent Browns assert that therefore the trial court “had no discretion in ruling on the Motion for a New Trial.” While this particular claim is not of determinative significance it should be noted in passing that the cases upon which the respondents rely do not necessarily support the assignment. In Elms v. Kansas City Public Service Co., Mo., 335 S.W.2d 26, the question was whether a state[641]*641ment a passenger-plaintiff gave a bus operator was an admission against interest. It was held that the statement exonerating the bus driver was a mere conclusion or an opinion but, bearing upon the respondents’ point and here perhaps against them the court said, “There is, of course, no discretion as to the law of the case and, if no error was committed, the court erred in granting plaintiff a new trial.” In Womack v. McCullough, Mo., 358 S.W.2d 66, a new trial was granted on the assignment of newly discovered evidence but in reversing the order with directions to reinstate the verdict, the court said, “We rule on the merits and as a matter of law that there was no showing of diligence in an effort to discover and produce the testimony of Windes at the trial; on the contrary there was and is an affirmative showing of a lack of diligence in that regard. This left no room for the exercise of a discretion by the trial court, and we hold that the granting of a new trial on this ground was an abuse of discretion.”

But, as indicated, this particular claim is not determinative and the respondents’ assignments are to be determined upon their essential merits. To demonstrate prejudice as a matter of law with respect to counsel’s closing argument the respondent Browns make these assertions and assignments: It is said that in his closing argument defendant’s counsel (1) “asserted that Respondents’ contributory negligence caused the accident,” (2) “that Respondents’ negligence was the sole cause of the accident” and (3) “that the humanitarian doctrine was a ‘rather far-out theory’ and that Missouri was the only state that has such a theory.” It is said that this argument was “all over the objection of Respondents and after such counsel had been instructed by the Court not to continue such argument” — all of which is asserted to be prejudicially erroneous as a matter of law. In this connection, although the court specified no ground or grounds, the court during the course of a colloquy said, “I’m going to overrule your motion at this time but it might be a basis for a new trial later on,” and, thereby, it is urged that the court indicated its basic reason for granting plaintiffs a new trial. And finally it is urged that in any event the argument was manifestly prejudicial and therefore should be considered as “(p)lain errors affecting substantial rights * * * though not raised in the trial court or preserved for review.” Civil Rule 79.04.

While the assignments are to be considered upon their essential merits they must nevertheless be determined and disposed of upon and in the precise context of the record. The first reference to Dr. Brown’s negligence, and inferentially to humanitarian negligence as a “theory,” was in his counsel’s opening argument to the jury: “Now, at the beginning of the trial there was a considerable amount of talk about the negligence of Dr. Brown himself, if he was negligent in walking across the street there, but this is not a part of this case now, we are not concerned at all, in accordance with what the judge has instructed you as to what the law is about what Mr. Brown did.” This is not to say that plaintiffs’ counsel injected Dr. Brown’s contributory negligence into the case and thus provoked defense counsel to retaliate or even reply to the argument. As plaintiffs urge under the humanitarian submission Dr. Brown’s contributory negligence was beside the point and was not a proper subject for argument by either party and yet, undeniably, plaintiffs’ counsel introduced the subject. The first reference in defense counsel’s argument was this: “In his argument he says there is nothing to it at all; nothing about what Dr. Brown was doing out there, what care he was taking for himself at all.” (Emphasis supplied.) Whatever interpretation may be placed on this statement, whether it refers to sole cause, contributory negligence or what not, it was obviously in answer to plaintiffs’ argument and there was no objection whatever to the argument [642]*642and in the absence of its being assigned in the court’s order as a ground it is difficult to see how it could be urged as error and a reason now. Olsten v. Susman, Mo., 391 S.W.2d 328.

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Bluebook (online)
422 S.W.2d 639, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 1085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-boyd-mo-1968.