Chaar v. McLoon

263 S.W. 174, 304 Mo. 238, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 502
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 10, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 263 S.W. 174 (Chaar v. McLoon) 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
Chaar v. McLoon, 263 S.W. 174, 304 Mo. 238, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 502 (Mo. 1924).

Opinion

*242 JAMES T. BLAIR, P. J.

Frank Chaar, Jr., aged nine years and ten months, was struck and killed by an automobile driven by respondent. His parents brought this action for damages. The jury returned a verdict against them, and they appealed. A number of errors are assigned. Respondent contends there was no error and, in any event, the judgment should be affirmed on the ground that no case was made for the jury.

The petition contains (1) .allegations which state a case under the humanitarian doctrine, and allegations that respondent (2) operated his automobile at a negligent and dangerously high rate of speed; (3) negligently failed to sound the horn or give other warning of approach; (4) and negligently failed to stop or turn aside or check his speed; and alleges these negligent acts were the cause of the child’s death. The fourth allegation is coupled with a repetition of allegations under the doctrine under which the first charge of negligence is drawn. The answer first denies, the allegations of the petition and then avers (1) that the boy’s death resulted from his own negligence, “directly contributing thereto,” in jumping suddenly in front of the automobile respondent was driving.

The evidence was quite conflicting. Applying the approved rule (Buesching v. Laclede Gaslight Co. 73 Mo. 219) and stating the evidence in accordance with it, there was substantial evidence to prove appellants’ case. The automobile involved was a large, seven-passenger, 1917 model, Jeffrey’s car, and was owned and was being driven by respondent. His wife and sister-in-law were *243 in the hack seat. The back curtains were on. Lemay Ferry road runs about north and south, and respondent was driving northward upon that thoroughfare. On its west side, and in the highway, there are car tracks. Next to these and east of them is an asphalt driveway fifteen or twenty feet wide. The evidence varies. Just east of this driveway the street is unimproved for a width of eleven or twelve feet, and adjoining* this there is a pathway used by pedestriahs and called a “sidewalk.” Hoffmeister Avenue crosses. Lemay Ferry road. To the north, the next east-and-west street is Louisa Avenue, which runs east from Lemay Ferry road, but does not cross it. The distance between the north line of Hoffmeister Avenue and the south line of Louisa Avenue is 250 feet. Between these avenues, and on the east side of Lemay Ferry road, are several improved lots. The roadway in this block is frequently and habitually used by pedestrians and has been so used for a long time. There is a “medium” down-grade from Hoffmeister to Louisa Avenue. The child was struck at a point on the asphalt driveway 162 feet north of the north line of Hoffmeister Avenue. At that place the distance from the west side of that driveway to the west side of the • Lemay Ferry road is thirty-eight feet and four inches. The distance from the eást side of the asphalt driveway to the path or “sidewalk” is eleven feet and eleven inches, and the distance from the west side of the sidewalk to the building line on the east is six feet and nine inches. A furniture truck was moving south along the west side of the asphalt driveway. Eespondent was driving north along the east side of the same driveway. There is eye-witness testimony that as respondent crossed Hoffmeister Avenue, going north, the three boys were standing in the middle of the asphalt driveway .162 feet north of the north line of Hoffmeister avenue; that they were looking toward the east; respondent admits he saw them at a distance of 150 feet, though he says they were on the east side of the asphalt driveway, “you might say up against this asphalt, very close to *244 it.” He says two of the boys were looking east and the ‘ ‘ other little fellow was standing kinda facing’ them. ’ ’ There is other testimony that the three boys were standing about seven and one-half feet west from the east edge of the asphalt driveway when appellant crossed Hor'fmeister Avenue, and that he was driving north on the same driveway about three feet from its east edge; that the boys continued to look toward the east and at no time looked in the direction of respondent’s approaching car, and that respondent continued to drive toward the boys without sounding any warning or cheeking his speed of twenty miles per hour, and without turning out on either side until he reached a point within two or three feet of the boys. The evidence tended to show that from the point, in the east half of the asphalt driveway, 162 feet north of Hotfmeist,er Avenue, at which the boys were standing when respondent crossed that street, they started to walk slowly to the east and that they were struck by the right-hand fender and thrown off of the east side of the driveway nearly or quitp to the edge of the sidewalk. There was also evidenpe for respondent that the boys moved from- a place of safety into the path of the approaching automobile too late for the driver to avoid striking them. There was also evidence that their actions before they s'o moved showed that they were about to run into the street in front of respondent’s car. The question as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict does not require a detailed statement of the evidence tending to prove facts which would exculpate respondent. Some further details are stated in another connection.

Appellants urge that certain given instructions were erroneous. Respondent contends the instructions were correct and that, in any event, no case was made for the jury.

*245 *244 I. Respondent’s contention that no case was made for the jury is founded upon evidence he offered. If these boys,- as the direct testimony tends to prove, were *245 standing in the asphalt roadway, seven and one-half feet west from its east edge, when respondent crossed Hoffmeister Avenue 162 feet away, and he was driving along the same roadway three feet from its east edge, they were then in the path along which he was moving toward them, and unless they moved or he changed his course or stopped he was bound .to strike them. The jury would have been justified in accepting his testimony that he saw them 150 feet away and in rejecting his testimony as to their position at that time. Respondent’s testimony tends to show the boys did not see him. as he approached them, and there is testimony of several other witnesses that they never did look in his .direction, but, as he says of the two who were struck, they looked to the east. There is no testimony they saw the car until it was upon them. The testimony is ample to sustain a finding that there was nothing to obstruct respondent’s vision, and he does not claim there was. If the testimony of some of the witnesses is to be believed, and that was for the jury to decide, when the two boys who were struck started walking toward the east they did not move into the path of the car in such sense as to bring into operation the rule which respondent invokes. They were already in the path of the car and had been at least since respondent crossed Hoffmeister Avenue, according to this testimony, and were oblivious of respondent’s approach and merely moved from one point in respondent’s path to another point in the same path.

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Bluebook (online)
263 S.W. 174, 304 Mo. 238, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaar-v-mcloon-mo-1924.