Degan v. Jewell

239 S.W. 66, 293 Mo. 80, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 239 S.W. 66 (Degan v. Jewell) 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
Degan v. Jewell, 239 S.W. 66, 293 Mo. 80, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 5 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

JAMES T. BLAIR, J.

— This is an appeal from an order granting a new trial after verdict for defendant in an action brought by respondents for damages for the death of their three year old son who was killed by appellant’s truck.

Tenth Street, in St. Joseph, runs north and south. Corby runs east and' west. At their intersection each is thirty feet between the curbs, and about fifty feet between the property lines. The truck was used for delivery purposes, and was being driven by an employee of appellant. It had stopped some distance north of the street intersection on the east side of Tenth Street, and then started south and crossed to the west side of Tenth, and continued on that side southward at the rate of ten to fifteen miles per hour. The child, just before it was struck, was standing on the sidewalk at the northeast ■corner of the street intersection. The testimony of the one eye-witness, other than the driver of the truck, tends to show that she had seen the child at the place stated; that she walked eastward a short distance and heard the rattling of boxes in the street; that she turned and looked just in time to see the child fall and the wheels of the truck pass over him; that when he fell the child was going southwestwardly, and had reached a point on Tenth about three feet west of the street car track, in the middle of Tenth, and about three feet south of the south property line of Corby Street. The evidence tends *84 to show that the sidewalks were ten feet wide. The distance the child traveled across the intersection to the point where he fell and was struck, according to the witness referred to, was about forty-seven feet, as a calculation from the distances given will show. It was necessary for him to pass over the part of the street between the northeast corner of the intersection and the point where the truck ran over him. There was no other, vehicle on the street, and nothing to prevent the driver from seeing the child in the street. While he contradicts the other witness as to the point of collision, he does say he saw the boy in the middle of the street car track and running sonthwestwardly when the truck was near the northwest corner of the street intersection. This point is over forty feet north of the place at which the first witness says the truck struck the child. The truck must have been north of Corby Street when the child left the curb at the northeast corner of the intersection. At the championship speed of nine and three-fifths seconds for one hundred yards more than one and one-half seconds would be required to cover forty-seven feet. At the best rate of the average man about two and one-third seconds would be required. This three-year-old child could hardly have made it in less than twice this time. Four seconds before the boy was hit the truck was about sixteen feet north of the north curb line of Corby Street if it was running ten miles per'hour, and about forty-five feet north of the same line if it was running fifteen miles per hour. The driver testified it was running ten to fifteen' miles per hour. During this time and space the boy was in the street going toward the place where he was about to be run over. The truck was stopped in eight feet when the brakes were applied. There is countervailing evidence, but it is to be rejected in considering the contention that the case should not have been submitted to.the jury.

The ground assigned by the trial court for granting a. new trial was that an instruction given for appellant was erroneous. Appellant contends (1) the instruction *85 was -not erroneous, or (2) at least not prejudicial, and 'that (3) no case was made by the evidence.

Humanitarian Rule I. The evidence made a case for submission under the humanitarian doctrine. [Cornovski v. Transit Co., 207 Mo. l. c. 274, 275, and cases cited; Turnbow v. Dunham, 272 Mo. l. c. 63 et seq.; Spivack v. Bakery Co., 214 S. W. 166; Frankel v. Hudson, 271 Mo. l. c. 503, 504.] In the cases cited by appellant [Shanks v. Traction Co., 101 Mo. App. 702; Ries v. Transit Co., 179 Mo. 1) to support a contrary view, the injured persons were adults. Shanks was deaf and was walking along the track ahead of the car, and the question was whether the motorman discovered his obliviousness of peril as soon as he should have done. Warnings were sounded. No heed was given them. The motorman did not know Shanks could not hear them. In the other case deceased had stepped from a place of safety to a place in front of a car of the approach of which he knew and was “immediately struck and killed.” These decisions are not applicable to this case.

Instruction. II. Instruction fourteen given for appellant reads thus: “The jury are instructed that if you should find for the plaintiffs in this case in estimating their damages ■ you cannot take into consideration any sufferings by reason of the loss of the child, but only can consider the amount which the deceased would have probably earned and accumulated by his own efforts, and which would have gone to the benefit of his parents, taking into consideration all of his surroundings and the probabilities of his earning or not earning, and the probability of his turning it over to his parents and working for their benefit, or not doing so, until he should have arrived at the age of twenty-one years.”

This instruction confines the damages the jury may allow for the death of respondents’ son to money the child might have earned during his minority and voluntarily turned over to his parents. The measure of par *86 ents ’ damages for the loss of a minor child is the value of the child’s services during his minority, and burial and other expenses incurred by his death or sickness, less the expense of his support and maintenance during that time. [Leahy v. Davis, 121 Mo. l. c. 233; Meeker v. Union Elec. L. & P. Co., 216 S. W. 934.] This clearly includes other elements than were allowed by the instruction. The recovery for services is limited to their money value, but is not limited to the amount of money a, child might earn “by his own efforts.” and voluntarily turn over to his parents. [Kelly v. Higginsville, 185 Mo. App. l. c. 64.] The instruction was erroneous. It is suggested it should be upheld “as every element of that instruction enters into the estimation of damages in a case of this kind.” The objection now made to the instruction is not that it contains too much, but that it excludes damages respondents were entitled to recover. Nothing appears from the decisions in other states cited in this connection which seems to warrant the belief that the rule of the instruction finds support in them.

The real insistence of appellant is that the instruction relates solely to the measure of damages and that since the jury found for defendant that error is harmless. Decisions' are cited. In Ewalt v. Garnett the action was for damages for the killing of a dog. Error in an instruction “as to what the jury might take into consideration in estimating the value of the dog” was assigned. The court held the error, if any, was harmless because the jury had found for defendant on the issue of liability. That issue was made by a defense that the dog had been guilty of chasing or killing sheep and his life was forfeited under the statute upon that subject.

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W. 66, 293 Mo. 80, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/degan-v-jewell-mo-1922.