Daniels v. Smith

471 S.W.2d 508, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 598
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 18, 1971
Docket9059
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 471 S.W.2d 508 (Daniels v. Smith) 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
Daniels v. Smith, 471 S.W.2d 508, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 598 (Mo. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

TITUS, Presiding Judge.

When the concerned casualty occurred, plaintiff was a front seat passenger in a Dodge being operated by Donald Houston in a westerly direction on Seminole Street in Springfield, Missouri. Lee Payton, driving an Oldsmobile, and Carolyn Sue Dillinger, driving a Chevrolet, were traveling north on Glenstone Avenue when their automobiles successively collided with the Dodge at and north of the intersection of the two thoroughfares. Plaintiff initially sued the three drivers but, ere trial, settled with Payton for $10,000. The jury in the first trial exonerated Mrs. Dillinger and returned a verdict for plaintiff against Houston in the sum of $25,000, which prompted entry of a $15,000 net judgment. Thereafter, plaintiff settled with Houston for $4,000 and the trial court granted her a new trial against Mrs. Dillinger on the issue of liability only. We affirmed the new trial order. Daniels v. Dillinger, Mo.App., 445 S.W.2d 410. Following remand, Mrs. Dillinger died and the administrator of her estate, Robert J. Smith, became the defendant. The second trial resulted in a defendant’s verdict and the azygous product of plaintiff’s present appeal is the extraordinary asseveration that the trial court erred in refusing- to lade defendant with the burden of proving that plaintiff’s injuries were not caused by Mrs. Dillinger’s negligence.

Because the issue here involved is limited, we need not give a full account of the accident circumstances. Those interested in more details may find them in Daniels v. Dillinger, supra. It suffices to say that while traveling at a reported speed of 85 miles per hour, the Oldsmobile first struck the Dodge in the intersection and propelled it northward. Some eight to ten seconds later the Chevrolet, driven by Mrs. Dillinger at an estimated speed of 65 miles per hour, collided with the Dodge approximately 75 to 80 feet north of the intersection. At some time in the course of the accident, so it is assumed, plaintiff was thrown from the Dodge and came to rest supine upon the pavement with her head against the east curb of Glenstone 60 to 70 feet, more or less, north of the intersection. In the first trial and appeal, plaintiff alternatively claimed that Mrs. Dillinger’s negligence had caused her harm either (1) when the Chevrolet hit the Dodge while she was in the Dodge, or (2) when she was struck by the Chevrolet as she lay on the pavement after having been dispatched from the Dodge by the force of its collision with the Oldsmobile. The second alternative claim was abandoned at the last trial. Consequently, as the matter now stands if Mrs. Dillinger’s negligence was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries, it would be because plaintiff was still in the Dodge at the time it was struck by the Chevrolet. Plaintiff has no recollection of the accident nor the events which transpired immediately before or after. Defendant produced an eyewitness who stated that she had seen a woman come out of the Dodge “from the front seat on the right-hand side” at the time of the first impact and that the woman was lying on the pavement before the Chevrolet collided with the Dodge, but no one identified the woman as being the plaintiff. Although it is reasonable to conclude that plaintiff was not in *510 the Dodge following the impacts, the witnesses could not state positively that plaintiff had been thrown from the Dodge at any time or, if so, at what particular moment that event transpired.

Plaintiff’s specific complaint is that the trial court refused her proffered Instruction No. A, thereby requiring her to offer Instruction No. 2, which was given. Refused Instruction No. A reads:

“Your verdict must be for plaintiff if you believe:
“First, Carolyn Dillinger either: drove at an excessive speed; or knew, or by the use of the highest degree of care could have known that there was a reasonable likelihood of collision in time thereafter to have slackened her speed and swerved, but she failed to do so; and
“Second, Carolyn Dillinger’s conduct, in any one or more of the respects submitted in paragraph First, was negligent ; and
“Third, such negligence directly caused or directly contributed to cause the collision between the Dillinger [Chevrolet] and Houston [Dodge] vehicles. * * *”

Instruction No. A concluded with a definition of negligence in the words of MAI 11.03. Instruction No. 2 was in the same form as Instruction No. A, except for paragraph Third which was in the words required by the second alternate of MAI 19.-01, i. e., “Third, such negligence directly caused or directly contributed to cause damage to plaintiff.”

If MAI contains an applicable instruction, such an instruction must be given to the exclusion of any other on the same subject. Civil Rule 70.01(b), V.A. M.R. Paragraph Third of refused Instruction No. A represents a clear deviation from the third paragraphs prescribed in either MAI 17.02 or MAI 19.01. Undoubtedly one of the submissions in MAI 19.01 (preferably the second alternate) was applicable in this case (Joly v. Wippler, Mo., 449 S.W.2d 565, 569), and had the trial court given Instruction No. A, which it did not, it would have been presumed that the charge was prejudicially erroneous. Brittain v. Clark, Mo.App., 462 S.W.2d 153, 155(1), and cases there cited. Nevertheless, plaintiff argues the deviation from the applicable instructions was proper in this instance because she is “unable to prove causation” in the acceptable fashion due to the circumstances peculiar to this action. She further urges that “the principles of fault and compensation to the innocent injured party demand that the burden of proof as to causation, * * * be transferred to the negligent defendant” and that “to avoid manifest injustice” we should this once, at least, depart from the rule in “the normal case” which casts upon plaintiff the burden of proof as to all elements of the cause of action. Farnham v. Boone, Mo., 431 S.W.2d 154, 156(2); 31A C.J.S. Evidence § 104 b, at p. 176.

Plaintiff’s “point” is difficult for us to grasp, principally because it consists of a trifurcated statement entangled in conclusionary abstractions which do little towards satisfying the requirements of Civil Rules 83.05(a) (3) and (e), V.A.M.R. The first branch is that Instruction No. A was proper because “(A) In analogous situations the courts have utilized a variety of procedural devices to relieve plaintiffs of related burdens and thus avoid manifest injustice.” Inter alia, the “analogous situations” to which plaintiff alludes in her argument are res ipsa loquitur and rear end doctrine cases, and causes involving accidents where the defendant’s car skids onto the wrong side of the road. She argues that in “instance after instance, the courts have shifted the burden of proof, or the burden of going forward with the evidence, to the defendant in order to avoid manifest injustice or inequity.” Albeit the terms “burden of proof” and “burden of going forward with the evidence” are sometimes ambiguous, one is rarely, if *511 ever, used to synonymize the other (31A C.J.S. Evidence § 103, pp. 164-168, and § 110, pp.

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Bluebook (online)
471 S.W.2d 508, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-smith-moctapp-1971.