Daily v. Maxwell

133 S.W. 351, 152 Mo. App. 415, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 107
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 2, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 351 (Daily v. Maxwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daily v. Maxwell, 133 S.W. 351, 152 Mo. App. 415, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 107 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiff Aims injured in a runaway accident on one of the public streets of St. Joseph and claims in her petition for damages that her injuries AArere caused by negligence of defendants in the operation of a gasoline automobile which frightened the horse attached to the buggy in which she AAras riding and caused him to run aAvay. She prevailed in the trial court where- a jury gave her a verdict of one thousand dollars against both defendants and the cause is here on the appeal of defendants from a judgment rendered on that verdict.

The injury occurred about ten o’clock in the morning of June 25, 1908, near the.corner of Folsom street and Ashland avenue, both of which are paved streets much used by travelers. The roadAvay of Folsom street is thirty-six feet wide and, for convenience, we shall speak of its directions as being east and west, though the streets at this place are not laid with cardinal points of the compass. Ashland avenue is twenty-four feet Avide and runs at right angles with Folsom street. Plaintiff, who lived at Avenue City, a village northeast of St. Joseph, drove to the city in company with her daughter Avho Avas then sixteen years old. They were riding in a buggy and their horse, though spirited, Avas gentle and had been used by plaintiff and her family as a family horse. Her daughter was driving and they were going south on the AA-est side of Ashland avenue when, as they neared the intersection of Folsom street, the automobile dashed around the corner at high speed and without warning. Its sudden- appearance in close proximity to the horse so frightened him that he whirled, around to the left, made a complete turn and bolted northward. He had run but a short distance when the vehicle was upset and both occupants were thrown out and injured.

There is a residence at the northeast corner of Folsom street and Ashland avenue and the premises are so much higher than the streets that the automobile [421]*421could uot be seen until it reached the corner, and the horse was startled and scared, not only by the sudden and unheralded appearance of the swiftly running car which came from the west and was turning north, but also by the heading of the machine on the turn in a way to point it towards the horse. Witnesses for plaintiff estimate the speed of the car on the turn at twenty or twenty-five miles per hour and state that its motor made a loud and terrifying noise. While we think that owing to the narrowness of the streets this estimate of the speed must be wide of the real fact, we find the evidence of plaintiff to the effect that the car was running at a high and, under the circumstances, dangerous rate of speed, is substantial. As to the noise, uncontradicted evidence shows that the car was new, was of a standard make, was provided with appliances for muffling the noise of the motor, and that it made no more noise than is usually made by automobiles under similar conditions. Further, we find substantial evidence tending' to show that the horn was not sounded as the car approached the corner and that the autoist — the defendant Ernest — was talking to his seat companion and was not looking ahead.

The foregoing statement is gleaned from the evidence most favorable to plaintiff. On the part of defendant, the evidence shows that the horn was blown as the car approached the corner; that the turn was made sloAvly and on as large a circle as the limits of the roadway Avould permit, and that on account of the restiveness of another horse being driven northward, the car was stopped at a point on the east side of Ashland avenue before plaintiffs’ horse took fright and became unmanageable.

Being in conflict Avitli the evidence of plaintiff, AAdiich, as we have said, we find to be substantial, we reject-this view of the facts in our' consideration of the demurrer to the evidence offered by defendants and refused by the court and shall consider the facts only [422]*422from the viewpoint of plaintiff. Other material facts about; which there is no controversy thus may be stated. The car belonged to defendant Wm. P. Maxwell, who had owned it about one month. It was a new five-passenger Oldsmobile and had been purchased by Mr. Maxwell for the use of himself and his family. Before buying the car he had owned' a Buick automobile and while he had that car he and his son — his co-defendant — had operated it. He did not learn how to operate the Oldsmobile oar and relied on his son, who was sixteen years old, to perforin the duties of chauffeur to the family. All of the testimony shows that Ernest was a brig-ht and careful boy and that he had become proficient as' a chauffeur. On the occasion in question he had asked and obtained the consent of his father to take some of his young friends — three girls and a boy — whose ages ranged from sixteen to twenty-one years — automobile riding. It was the boy’s party and his father had nothing to do with it except to give his consent to the use of the car for the pleasure of his son and his son’s friends.

An ordinance of the city was pleaded and proved restricting the speed of motor cars to ten miles per hour on tangents and six miles per hour on turns at street corners. Plaintiff seeks to recover from the boy on the ground that his negligence in the operation of the car was the proximate cause of the injury of the plaintiff, and from his father on two grounds, viz.: (1) Negligence in employing an incompetent chauffeur and (.2) that under the rule of respondeat superior, the son being the servant of the father in the operation of the oar, the father must respond in damages for the consequences oí the sou’s negligence.

In the instructions given at the request of plaintiff and on the court’s own motion, the jury were told that “an automobile when run upon the public highways is considered a dangerous appliance as a matter of law,” and a verdict against the senior defendant was authorized in the event the jury found that negligence of the [423]*423junior- defendant caused the injury and further found either that the young man on account of his age was incompetent to be entrusted with the operation of the machine or that he was acting as the servant of his father and was about his father’s business when the injury was inflicted.'

In the determination of the questions of law we shall first dispose of the demurrer to the evidence offered by defendant Ernest.

An automobile is recognized by courts as a lawful vehicle under the rules of the common law and, as such, its operator stands on equal ground with the drivers of other conveyances with respect to the right to enjoy the use of the public highway. The mere fact that plaintiff’s horse took fright at the machine, of itself, would not give her a cause of •action. As long as an autoist observes the laws of the road, he should not be held responsible for the consequences of a meeting between his machine and a vicious or high strung and insufficiently broken horse. But on account of its speed and power and the noises it emits, an automobile when carelessly run may be exceedingly terrifying even to gentle and well broken horses, and the rules of the common law, as Avell as those of the statute (Rev. Stat. 1909, ch. 83, sec. 8516, et seq.), demand of the drivers of such vehicles the observance of a due regard for the rights and safety of others. To run so powerful a vehicle at a high rate of speed on busy streets without warning and without keeping a vigilant lookout is negligence amounting to a wanton disregard for the rights of others. It is the assertion in the most truculent way of a superior right to that which belongs to all in common.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 351, 152 Mo. App. 415, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daily-v-maxwell-moctapp-1911.