Brown v. Meyer

21 P.2d 368, 137 Kan. 553, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 294
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 6, 1933
DocketNo. 31,090
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 368 (Brown v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Meyer, 21 P.2d 368, 137 Kan. 553, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 294 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The action was one by plaintiff as executrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Columbus Brown, to recover damages for his, death wrongfully caused by defendant. Plaintiff recovered, and defendant appeals.

On the evening of Saturday, November 16,1930, Columbus Brown was struck by defendant’s automobile at the intersection of Minnesota avenue and Twelfth street, in Kansas City, Kan. As a result of the accident, Brown died of traumatic pneumonia.

The evening was dark, and it was raining. Defendant was driving westward near the center of the street. With him in his automobile were his wife, Lillie A. Meyer, and his son, Carl J. Meyer. After striking Brown, defendant drove over to the curb, and he [554]*554and his son went back to the place where the accident occurred. Brown had been knocked down. • He got up by himself, but could not stand upright, and either defendant or his son said, “Let’s take him to a doctor.” Defendant took Brown in the automobile to Doctor Barney’s house, but Doctor Barney was not at home. From Doctor Barney’s house defendant took Brown to John A. Anderson’s place of business. Brown was an employee of Anderson. At Anderson’s place of business defendant introduced himself, said he had struck Brown on Minnesota avenue, and said Brown wanted to tell Anderson he would not be at work Monday morning. Defendant then took Brown to Doctor Barney’s office. Defendant told Doctor Barney defendant did not know he had struck Brown, but from defendant’s conclusion that must have been the way it occurred. Based on what defendant and Brown told him, Doctor Barney examined Brown for injuries resulting from being struck by an automobile. Doctor Barney was employed that night by defendant, but Doctor Barney was paid by Frank M. Wisdom, who represented the insurance company which had insured defendant.

Defendant took Brown home, introduced himself to Mrs. Brown, told Mrs. Brown he ran into her husband, and gave an account of the accident. He said the cause of the accident was, he was pulling around another car, which caused him to strike Brown. He did not see Brown before striking him. His wife said he hit somebody. He said, “No, I didn’t,” and his boy said, “Yes, you did, papa.” Then he halted his car.

As soon as Mrs. Brown could undress her husband and get him to bed, she called Doctor Blount, who found wounds and bruises, on Brown’s chest. Brown was suffering severely, and was expectorating blood.

Defendant visited Brown several times before Brown’s death, and telephoned Mrs. Brown several times. On one occasion, just after defendant concluded a telephone conversation, Wisdom came to Brown’s house. On one occasion, when defendant was at Brown’s house, defendant gave an account of the accident to a visitor who called to see Brown. On an occasion Harry Bell was at defendant’s place of business, and defendant told Bell he hit a darkey at Twelfth and Minnesota; his wife and son were with him and it was dark and raining.

Several doctors were called, and examined Brown before his death. After his death, an autopsy was held. Doctor Barney was present, [555]*555paid by Wisdom. Doctor Nesselrode arranged for the autopsy, and made a report to Wisdom, who was investigating the case, and who stated to the doctor that Brown was struck by an automobile.

The result of the foregoing is, there was no room for doubt that defendant’s automobile struck Brown and injured him, and the testimony left no room for doubt that the injury caused Brown’s death.

Defendant contends some testimony was improperly admitted. The proceedings under review are those of a second trial. At the first trial, a verdict was returned for defendant. Afterwards a new trial was granted, and the contention makes it necessary to review the proceedings antedating admission of the testimony.

At the first trial, Joseph H. Brady conducted the defense in a perfectly honorable manner, and he is blameless for what occurred. At the hearing on the motion for new trial it was made to appear that Mr. Brady was not employed by Meyer. He was employed by representatives of the General Indemnity Corporation of Rochester, N. Y.’ That corporation is an insurance company which had issued to Meyer an automobile insurance policy in which the company agreed to pay damages, costs and expenses on account of accident, and to defend any suit brought against Meyer on account of accident which Meyer might have while operating his automobile. Frank M. Wisdom, some of whose activities with respect to the accident which did happen have been alluded to, was an investigator or claim agent of the company, and Wisdom made an investigation of the accident. None of these facts were contested at the hearing on the motion for new trial.

At the first trial, Wisdom assisted Mr. Brady — testified he was helping Mr. Brady the best he knew how. Because Wisdom had investigated the accident, he was called as a witness by plaintiff. He admitted talking to Meyer, and testified as follows:

“Q. Will you state to the jury exactly what Mr. Meyer said to you with reference to said accident? A. He told me -he didn’t have an accident at Twelfth and Minnesota avenue, or his car ever hitting or striking some one.”

Wisdom also testified Meyer’s statement was not reduced to writing, and testified further as follows:

“Q. Did you ever see a written statement signed by Henry C. Meyer? A. I told you, Mr. Koehler, I don’t remember. I do not remember ever seeing a written statement signed by Mr. Meyer.”

It was a little queer Meyer should tell Wisdom he had no accident, when he was acting as if he might have struck Brown, and [556]*556was freely telling others besides Wisdom he did strike Brown. It was also a little queer that with Meyer acting and talking as he did, Wisdom did not, for the information and protection of his company, commit Meyer to the truth by signed written statement. This court knows from reading many, many records that claim agents do that as a part of the routine of accident investigation.

After the first trial, the attorneys for plaintiff made some investigation. They applied to the insurance commissioner of this state, who applied to the insurance commissioner of New York, who applied to the insurance company for its files relating to the Brown accident. The result was, there was delivered to plaintiff’s attorneys a copy, of a written statement concerning the accident, signed by Meyer, in the presence of a witness, and initialed “F. M. W.,” who was Frank M. Wisdom. A part of the statement reads:

“Just after I crossed Twelfth str.eet, I struck a negro who was crossing Minnesota avenue. I did not see him at all, but my wife told me that I struck a man, so I pulled over to the north curbing and stopped. This negro was crossing Minnesota avenue, at an angle. He was about twenty feet west of the curb line of Twelfth street, and in the center of the two car tracks, when I struck him.”

There was also delivered to plaintiff’s attorneys a copy of a written statement concerning the accident, signed by Mrs. Meyer, in the presence of a witness, and initialed “F. M. W.” A portion of that statement reads:

“On November 15, 1930, about 6 p. m., I was in a Buick sedan with Mr. Meyer when an accident happened at Twelfth and Minnesota avenue. I'was seated in the front seat. My son Carl was in the back seat. ...

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Related

Riley v. Holcomb
359 P.2d 849 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1961)
Kelly v. Meyer
134 P.2d 658 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1943)
Wood v. McKeever
41 P.2d 989 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 368, 137 Kan. 553, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-meyer-kan-1933.