Davis v. Werremeyer

377 S.W.2d 319, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 778
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1964
DocketNo. 50253
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 377 S.W.2d 319 (Davis v. Werremeyer) 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
Davis v. Werremeyer, 377 S.W.2d 319, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 778 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

A trial jury returned a verdict for $15,-663 in favor of Wallace Kirk Davis in his personal injury and property damage suit against Arthur Harry Werremeyer. Defendant has appealed from the judgment entered upon the verdict, following the filing of an unavailing motion for new trial.

Plaintiff’s Chevrolet collided with defendant’s automobile in a three-vehicle collision on Lindbergh Boulevard in St. Louis County, a four-lane, north-south trafficway. A Volkswagen Microbus, proceeding south, its driver intending to turn left into a filling station, stopped in the southbound lane next to the center line to permit northbound heavy traffic to pass. Defendant, driving a Thunderbird, coming from the north in the southbound lane next to the center line at a speed of 45-50 miles an hour, approached and struck the Microbus from the rear, then struck plaintiff’s Chevrolet.

Defendant testified that he did not see the Microbus until he was 150 feet north of it, although under the evidence he could have seen it for as much as 443 feet. According to defendant, when he saw the Microbus in front of him and that it was stopped in his path he made a very sudden, hard application of the brakes. Proceeding on the straight highway the brakes held and nothing happened for 75 feet, but as he kept applying the brakes the Thunderbird went into a skid or slide, went over into the northbound lane, spun sideways and went sliding down the highway “sideways” for another 75 feet, started to pivot counterclockwise, swung around “somewhat across the lane” and on the wrong side of the highway, going south and east sideways, until the right rear of the Thunderbird hit the rear of the Microbus. Then the Thunderbird went another 5 or 10 feet and, either “instantaneously” or within a couple of seconds and while still in motion, collided with plaintiff’s Chevrolet, which was northbound in the lane next to the center line. Defendant could not say what happened except that he applied his brakes and that the car went into a skid. He could not say whether he attempted to turn the steering wheel in any direction at this time, and testified that he lost control of the Thunderbird.

Plaintiff testified that when he first took particular notice of the Thunderbird in the oncoming line of traffic the Thunderbird was about 30 feet north of the Microbus and plaintiff’s Chevrolet was 50 feet south of the Microbus. Plaintiff was then traveling 40-45 miles an hour. Plaintiff observed that at that instant the Thunderbird started to veer over and come across into plaintiff’s lane, swerving sideways, “coming sideways” into the lane of traffic the Chevrolet was occupying. The Thunderbird kept coming sideways, at 50 miles an hour. Plaintiff applied his brakes, reducing his speed from 40 to 20 miles an hour, the Thunderbird still moving and still coming sideways in the northbound lane until it collided with the Chevrolet. At the moment of impact the front portion of the Thunderbird was in the northbound lane, the rest of the Thunderbird in the southbound lane, astraddle the center line, headed generally southeasterly. When the Thunderbird and Chevrolet came to rest they were both in the northbound lanes, headed north, parallel to each other.

In this factual situation plaintiff offered and the court gave three verdict-directing instructions, No. 1 on “vigilant watch and lookout,” No. 2 on excessive speed, and No. 3, which it is alleged submitted negligent failure to drive to the right of the center line so as to pass plaintiff’s automobile without interference, and give plaintiff his half of the major traveled portion of the highway (violation of § 304.015, par. 5, V. A.M.S.), combined with negligent failure to keep a “vigilant watch,” stop or slacken speed (antecedent negligence).

Defendant-appellant’s first complaint is that the court erred in giving Instruction No. 1 on lookout, directing a verdict for plaintiff upon a finding that defendant “operated” his Thunderbird southwardly on [322]*322Lindbergh, and east of the center line and over and upon the wrong side of the highway; that while defendant was “operating” his Thunderbird southwardly there was a Volkswagen Microbus standing still in the inside southbound lane “at said point mentioned in evidence”; that by keeping a vigilant watch and lookout for plaintiff’s automobile and the Microbus defendant could have discovered them “in time thereafter to have avoided a collision” between plaintiff’s and defendant’s automobile; that defendant failed to exercise the highest degree of care to keep a vigilant watch and lookout, and that such failure constituted negligence, “and that defendant knew, or by the exercise of the highest degree of care, would have known that a collision was likely to occur if he did not take precaution to prevent a collision,” and that as a direct result of such failure there was a collision with the Microbus and immediately thereafter a collision with plaintiff’s automobile “at said point mentioned in evidence,” with consequent injury and damage to plaintiff, and that plaintiff at all times was exercising the highest degree of care in the operation of his automobile.

Defendant claims that No. 1 completely ignored the essential factual element of the skidding of defendant’s car, and does not hypothesize all of the necessary facts. Defendant asserts that his Thunderbird was not guided or driven or operated sideways, as submitted, but that the Thunderbird skidded sideways onto the wrong side of Lindbergh. Citing and relying upon Evans v. Colombo, Mo.Sup., 319 S.W.2d 549, 551— 552, defendant claims that No. 1 ignored the fact of skidding, which was “one material phase of the whole issue of negligence,” and therefore was not framed with reference to the facts; that the issue actually tried was whether the crossing of the center line by the Thunderbird onto the wrong side of Lindbergh and the subsequent collisions were “the result of negligent operation prior to the skid or accidental skidding”; that under Doyle v. Wilmesherrer, Mo.Sup., 358 S.W.2d 837, 841, a Thunderbird is not driven or guided sideways and if it moves sideways and injures someone in so doing “the facts must be hypothesized from which the jury may find that the cause of that movement was negligence.” Defendant says that No. 1 erroneously required a finding that defendant operated his car over and upon the wrong side of the highway, because the evidence showed that he did not drive and propel it over there; that No. 1 should have required a finding that defendant negligently operated the Thunderbird in such a manner as to cause it to skid across the highway, by failing to keep a lookout, as a result of which defendant was required to take evasive action which resulted in defendant skidding onto the wrong side of the road, colliding with the Volkswagen in the process and ultimately colliding with plaintiff’s car. Tied in with these considerations is the objection that the instruction assumes that the “operation” of defendant’s car on the wrong side of the road was the result of operation across the center line, thus excluding the possibility of being there by reason of skidding in an attempt to avoid colliding with the Volkswagen. Defendant also excepts to the language “at said point mentioned in evidence” on the ground that it is vague and confusing and gives the jury a roving commission as to when defendant could have discovered plaintiff’s car by maintaining a vigilant watch.

The instruction attacked is a lookout instruction.

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Bluebook (online)
377 S.W.2d 319, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-werremeyer-mo-1964.