Creech v. Riss & Company

285 S.W.2d 554, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 803
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 12, 1955
Docket44880
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 285 S.W.2d 554 (Creech v. Riss & Company) 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
Creech v. Riss & Company, 285 S.W.2d 554, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 803 (Mo. 1955).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

About 9 o’clock on the dark, clear night of January 5, 1954, at a place on U.. S. Highway 66 just east of the point at which U. S. Highway 50 enters and joins it from the west, a collision occurred between a tractor-trailer owned by appellant Riss & Company, Inc.,, and a stock truck, owned-by appellant Elmer Boss .and operated by appellant Otto Boss. As a result of, that collision, the northbound traffic lanes on 66 were blocked and respondent, operating a northbound tractor-trailer, collided with one or both. of the trucks involved; in- the prior collision, We shall hereinafter refer *556 to the parties as' they were designated in the trial court.

• A jury awarded plaintiff $17,500 for personal injuries and defendants now contend. that they should have had judgment because plaintiff was contributorily negligent as a matter of law. Defendants Boss also contend: that the evidence failed to show their negligence or proximate negligence ; that the trial court erroneously permitted plaintiff to amend his petition during the trial and erroneously admitted evidence pertaining to the subject of the amendment; and that instructions 3 and 4 are reversibly erroneous.

In determining whether plaintiff was contributorily negligent as a matter of law, we are mindful of the fact that plaintiff’s negligence was a jury question unless it may be said from all the evidence and the reasonable inferences therefrom, viewed in the light • most favorable to plaintiff, that the only reasonable conclusion was 'that plaintiff was proximately negligent. Johnson v. Lee Way Motor Freight, Inc., Mo. Sup., 261 S.W.2d 95, 96 [1].

Viewing the evidence in the light of the foregoing, the jury reasonably could have found the facts to be as herein stated. Highway 50, .at the place where it joins 66/ runs east and west, and Highway 66 northeast-southwest. One traveling east on 50 enters 66 at an angle of about 40 degrees. Highway 66 is divided with two lanes, each 12 feet wide, for southbound, and two like lanes for northbound traffic, separated by a 13'-wide parkway. For our purposes, we shall consider that Highway 50 ran east and west and 66 ran north and south.

Defendant Otto Boss, traveling east on 50, stopped at a stop sign about 12 feet from the west edge of the outer southbound traffic lane of 66. The view to his right was such that' he could have seen the lights of northbound vehicles for a distance of ½⅛ mile. He looked to his right, saw no approaching traffic, and drove forward slowly across the two southbound lanes, the parkway, and turned left into the outer (east) northbound lane of 66. He had looked to his right at various points while traversing that distance. He testified that his vision to his right decreased as he proceeded eastwardly because of the angle of the crossover but that when’he was at the west edge of the inner northbound lane of 66 he could see to his right for a distance of 150 feet. The jury, however, could have found that at the times he looked to his right, the Riss tractor-trailer with its headlights burning was within his range of vision. Boss failed to see the, Riss truck northbound in the shoulder lane and continued east, completing a left turn into the northbound shoulder lane.

■ In the meantime, the Riss operator, traveling about ¡35 miles per hour, applied his brakes when about 25 to 40 feet south (to the right) of the Boss truck, swerved to the right'and partially onto the east shoulder. As he continued north, partially on the shoulder, he scraped one of the posts which supported a chain to prevent drivers. from going down an embankment on the east side of 66, swerved back onto the highway and into the side of the Boss truck, knocking it west into the inner northbound lane, Riss turned over on its right side with its wheels facing south. The exact point of the collision was estimated to be from 6 to 55 feet north of the north edge of the crossover which Boss had used as he entered 66. After the collision there were no lights visible on either the Boss or Riss vehicles.

Highway 66, from immediately south of the 50 crossover, begins a gradual uphill curve to the left so that one traveling north on 66 descends a hill in a gradual right-hand curve until he reaches the .level, straight road at the point of entry of 50., The Riss driver, when 800 feet away, had seen Boss leave his position at the stop sign and continued to watch as Boss traveled across 66 and turned left.

A drivers’ safety engineer for the Coca Cola Bottling Company of St. Louis was operating a passenger car (sometimes called hereinafter the Coca Cola car) north on the inner lane of 66 some distance behind the Riss truck. As he approached the intersection, the Coca Cola driver observed the re *557 spective approaches of the' Boss'and Riss trucks and stopped his automobile close to the crossover and watched the ensuing collision. When, during his approach, he beL came cognizant of a possible impending collision, he flipped a gadget on his car causing both his car’s taillights to blink simultaneously.

A Ford truck had followed Boss to the stop Sign at the west edge of 66. From the time Boss left the stop sign until after the second collision, the Ford truck’s headlights ghone directly eastwardly into the crossover and eastwardly beyond the east edge of 66. There was no permanent artificial lighting • of the general accident area.

The time interval between the first and second collisions was variously estimated as from 2 to 10 seconds; one witness, however, was content to say that a “few seconds” intervened. Plaintiff, who was generally familiar with the intersection, traveling north-wardly on the outer northbound lane of 66, decreased his speed, to 40' m.p.h. when he reached a 40-mile speed limit sign about 1,300 feet south of the crossover. As he traveled northwardly, he did not see the Boss truck pull across or turn left on 66, nor did he notice the Riss truck prior to the second collision. His attention was directed to the blinking lights of the Coca Cola car as he speculated on what its driver intended to do and because he had been following that car, his lights were on low beam. After he passed the Coca Cola car, he flicked his lights to high beam and for the first time saw the Riss and Boss vehicles completely blocking the. northbound traffic lanes. At that time, although he had decreased to less than 40 m.p.h., he could not estimate his exact speed. He immediately applied his' brakes and tried to stop. He could not effectively swerve either to his left or right and was unable to stop before striking the Boss truck.

Defendants here contend that plaintiff, as a matter of law, failed to exercise the highest degree of care in the operation of his tractor-trailer in that he traveled at an ex-céssive speed under the circumstances and failed to observe the Riss and the Boss trucks in time to have avoided a collision with them. As we see it, the issue of excessive speed is necessarily an integral part of the question as" to whether plaintiff should hake seen the Riss and Boss Vehicles in time to have avoided running into them. This is because plaintiff’s testimony was to the effect that he traveled at not in excess of the 40-m.p.h.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W.2d 554, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creech-v-riss-company-mo-1955.