Frye v. Baskin

231 S.W.2d 630, 241 Mo. App. 319, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 334
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1950
Docket6874
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 231 S.W.2d 630 (Frye v. Baskin) 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
Frye v. Baskin, 231 S.W.2d 630, 241 Mo. App. 319, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 334 (Mo. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

*328 VANDEVENTER, P. J.

This is an action for damages to a jeep. It was begun in the magistrate court of Cape Girardeau County. The defendant was permitted to file a third party petition against *329 John Frye, minor son of plaintiff. The canse was tried in the magistrate’s court, where a verdict was rendered against plaintiff but there was no verdict on the third party petition. Guardians ad litem were duly appointed for John Frye and Kathryn Baskin, who was also a minor..

Plaintiff appealed to the circuit court of Cape Girardeau County, a change of venue was taken and it was tried in Mississippi County on the pleadings filed in the magistrate’s court. The jury there returned a verdict against plaintiff and against defendant on her third party petition. From judgment rendered upon these verdicts, plaintiff, alone, has appealed.

There is very little contradiction in the evidence. Plaintiff lived ten or twelve miles from Cape Girardeau. On March 1, 1947, he purchased a new jeep, paying therefor the sum of $1443.37. Nine days later and when it had been run approximately 150 miles, plaintiff let his son, John Frye, have it to drive to a National Guard meeting in Cape Girardeau. Plaintiff offered to show that he instructed his son “to let no one drive that car under any circumstances.” The court refused this offer. About 9 o’clock that night, John Frye and a friend, Don Carner, appeared at-a theater in Cape Girardeau where defendant Kathryn Baskin worked as an usher. Her friend, Jacqueline Brunke also worked there. The two boys made a date with the two girls to return about ten o’clock and take them for a ride. They returned about that time and Don Garner and Jacqueline Brunke got in the front seat, Don Garner driving, with John Ftye and Kathryn Baskin in the rear seat. They first drove to a Barbecue Stand, where they obtained refreshments. When they left that place, John Frye drove the jeep, Kathryn Baskin riding with him in the front seat and the two others in the rear. While they were driving around, John Frye asked Kathryn Baskin if she could drive a car. She said she could but had never driven a jeep or been in one before. He stopped the car a little later, got out and went around to the right side. She asked what he was doing and he said he intended to let her drive. She then told him she was merely joking when she said she could drive, that she had never driven a car and knew nothing about it. He then told her he would teach her to drive, and at his request, she got under the wheel and he sat in the front seat beside her. He showed her how to start the car, how to use the clutch, how to shift the gear and where the brakes were. Under his tutelage, she drove down through the main part of town and turned to the right on Independence Boulevard. This is a thoroughfare running east and west and across U. S. Highway 61 at the west edge of town. It was ábout 10:30' or 10:45 p. m. When they approached Highway 61, Kathryn said, *330 “What way should we go?” and someone said, “Turn to the right.” Kathryn Baskin did not know who said it, but Jacqueline Brunke thought it was John Frye as he was in the front seat directing the operations. Kathryn turned the car to the right to go north on Highway 61, had proceeded until the the car was at about a 45 degree angle to 61, when John must have changed his mind, for he said, “No, turn to the left.” She immediately turned the wheel of the car to the left and apparently was too far across Highway 61 to make the turn and ran off into a ditch, six or eight feet deep, and turned over one time, at the southwest intersection of Independence Boulevard and Highway 61. The damage to the car was about $200.00.

Kathryn testified that as she approached Highway 61, she guessed she was travelling about 50 or 60 miles an hour, that she did not know. There. was no dashlight on the car and she never saw the speedometer. Jacqueline testified that their speed out Independence Avenue was about 25 miles per hour, that they slowed down and as they approached Highway 61, they were going at about 20 miles an hour. They were the only witnesses, who testified as to the accident. Kathryn was called as a witness by plaintiff. Jacqueline was called by defendant Baskin. Neither John Frye nor Don Garner testified.

Appellant, in his brief, asserts and here proceeds upon the theory, that his action from the beginning was one for trespass. He insists that the allegations of negligence should be treated as surplusage. His petition in full follows:

“For his cause of action plaintiff states:
“1. That on May —, 1947 plaintiff allowed his son John to drive plaintiff’s jeep.
‘12. That said son John, without authority of plaintiff, allowed defendant to drive said jeep and she carelessly and negligently drove at a high and dangerous rate of speed under the circumstances and overturned the same, wrecking it, marring and scarring it, and damaging it in the sum of $150.00.
“3. That defendant is a minor and has no legally appointed guardian.
“Wherefore, plaintiff prays judgment against defendant for $150.00 and further prays that a guardian ad litem be appointed to represent her in these proceedings.” ' (Italics ours.)

At the close of all the evidence plaintiff, as attorney for and on behalf of his son, third party defendant, moved the court for a directed verdict in his son’s favor upon the ground that defendant’s evidence was insufficient to show his son’s acts constituted any negligence as to her and that the testimony showed that she was negligent as a matter of law.' It was insisted that to drive at the speed shown by the evidence at the intersection, where the accident occurred, constituted negligence as a matter of law and that though John told *331 her to turn to the left, she was under no obligation to do a negligent act because suggested by someone else.

' Plaintiff, as attorney for third party defendant, also requested’ the court to give an instruction on contributory negligence as applied to defendant Baskin. The instructions given by the court, at the request of defendant, were upon the theory of negligence. The motion for new trial nowhere mentions or suggests that the theory at the trial was one of trespass. It is a well known rule of law that the appellate courts will review the case only upon the theory presented in the trial court. Ellis Gray Milling Co. v. Sheppard (Mo. App.) 215 S. W. (2) 57. Kolb v. Howard Corp. (Mo. App.) 219 S. W. (2) 856. Humphries v. Shipp, 194 S. W. (2) 693, 238 Mo. App. 985. Simmons et al. v. Friday (Mo. Sup.) 224 S. W. (2) 90. One cannot abandon the theory upon which his case was tried and have it reviewed upon an altogether different one.

However, the evidence in this case does not show such a trespass on the part of defendant as to make her liable to plaintiff. Trespass involves the idea of force. The principle’ is elementary that trespass lies whenever an injury to plaintiff’s property, against his will, is the immediate result of a forceful, unlawful or wrongful act (not in a criminal sense) by the trespasser, the consequences of which make them tortious. Mawson v. Vess Beverage Co. (Mo. App.) 173 S. W. (2) 606. 52 Am. Jurs. Trespass, Sec.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W.2d 630, 241 Mo. App. 319, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frye-v-baskin-moctapp-1950.