Gaehle v. Skyles

592 S.W.2d 205, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2676
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 27, 1979
DocketNo. 40275
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 592 S.W.2d 205 (Gaehle v. Skyles) 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
Gaehle v. Skyles, 592 S.W.2d 205, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2676 (Mo. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

KELLY, Judge.

Sharon Lynn Gaehle, a minor, and her father and next friend, Ervin E. Gaehle, appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County entered on a jury verdict in which the jury found against them on their claim for personal injuries and resulting medical expenses, and in favor of the defendant, Ronald Michael Skyles, awarding him $6500.00 in damages on his counterclaim for personal injuries. We affirm.

The appellants raise three Points Relied On as grounds for reversal of the judgment of the trial court. All three involve alleged error in two instructions which appellants contend deviated from the applicable M.A.I. pattern instructions submitting respondent’s theory that Miss Gaehle’s negligence in driving on the wrong side of the road caused the collision whereby Mr. Skyles was injured.

Miss Gaehle and her father instituted this proceeding by the filing of a two count petition. In Count I she sought damages for her personal injuries allegedly sustained in the collision and in Count II her father sought to recover for medical expenses he incurred by reason of his daughter’s injuries sustained in the collision. Mr. Skyles filed his answer, raising the defense of contributory negligence and a counterclaim for damages he allegedly sustained in the collision. Miss Gaehle filed a reply to Mr. Skyles’ counterclaim and alleged his contributory negligence as a defense to the counterclaim.

[207]*207The facts are rather simple. On June 7, 1975, at some time between 5:00 and 5:30 p. m., Miss Gaehle was operating her father’s 1966 Chevrolet Impala motor vehicle southward on Pond Road in St. Louis County. At the same time Mr. Skyles was driving his 1975 Chevrolet Vega in a northerly direction on Pond Road in the vicinity. The weather was dry and clear and visibility was good. Miss Gaehle was alone; Mr. Skyles had a passenger, Michael F. Morrison, riding with him. The two cars collided, left side with left side.

Pond Road, at the scene of the collision, runs north-south and has no markings or stripes identifying the center line of the roadway. The place where the collision occurred is on a flat section of the road, approximately 40 to 50 feet from a small hill in the road which constituted a visual obstruction of a southbound car to an operator of a northbound automobile until his motor vehicle came over the hill. The speed limit was 30 m. p. h. in this area.

Both drivers maintained they were on their proper side of the road as they approached each other from opposite directions. Miss Gaehle testified that she was driving between 25 and 30 m. p. h. and Mr. Skyles, that he too was driving approximately 25 m. p. h. Both sustained injuries as a result of the collision. Mr. Morrison’s testimony, by deposition, was that Mr. Skyles never crossed the center of the road and that Morrison saw the automobile operated by Miss Gaehle in the middle of the road when it was approximately 100 feet from Mr. Skyles’ automobile prior to the collision.

Mr. Skyles submitted his counterclaim on the theory that Miss Gaehle “drove on the wrong side of the road,” and was thereby negligent, and as a direct result of such negligence he sustained damage. This theory was submitted to the jury in an instruction identified as: “MAI 17.01, MAI 17.13 (modified).”

Appellants’ first Point Relied On is that the trial court erred in denying their motion for new trial because respondent’s verdict directing instruction incorporated in the M.A.1.17.01 pattern instruction a first paragraph “Wrong-side-of-the-road” submission which deviated from the approved pattern instruction in effect when the case was tried on December 5 through 8, 1977.1

Respondent recognizes that the submission of the instruction in this form was error which is presumptively prejudicial, Means v. Sears, Roebuck & Company, 550 S.W.2d 780, 786[1] (Mo.banc 1977); however, he argues that we are required by Rule 70.02(e) to judicially determine its prejudicial effect on these appellants, if any, and he accepts the legal principle that the burden is on him to convince us that no prejudice resulted.

M.A.I. 17.13 has undergone two revisions since its adoption in 1969. For some unexplained reason respondent drafted his verdict director in the pre-1973 approved instruction form. There, the jury was told that it was to find for the respondent, if Miss Gaehle drove on the wrong side of the road, was thereby negligent, and as a direct result of her negligence he was damaged. Miss Gaehle submitted a contributory negligence instruction that the jury had to find for her on respondent’s counterclaim if his “automobile was on the wrong side of the road at the time of the collision,” respondent was thereby negligent, and his negligence in this respect directly caused or contributed to cause any damage he may have sustained. It is clear from these instructions, as well as the other instructions in the case, that the principal issue for the jury to decide was which of these drivers, Miss Gaehle or Mr. Skyles, was on the wrong side of the road at the time of the collision.

According to the evidence, Pond Road, at the scene of the collision was between 15 and 20 feet wide; the Gaehle automobile was approximately 6 feet wide and the Skyles vehicle approximately 5 feet wide. There was no evidence that there were any vehicles on or at the side of Pond Road in the vicinity of the collision at the time it [208]*208occurred. Mr. Skyles’ testimony was that he was on his side of the road when the collision took place.' His testimony in this respect was corroborated by his passenger, Mr. Morrison, who also testified that the Gaehle vehicle was about two and one-half feet on the wrong side of Pond Road for southbound traffic when he first observed it about 100 feet distant and that it continued on the wrong side of the road until the left front fender of the Gaehle car collided with the left front fender of the Skyles’ vehicle. According to Mr. Morrison, Mr. Skyles was on his side of the road at all times and the impact occurred in the northbound traffic lane of Pond Road.

Under the evidence the sole issue was which vehicle was on the wrong side of the road when the collision occurred. According to appellants’ evidence respondent’s car came north on Pond Road in the southbound lane of traffic and collided with the “front left” of the Gaehle car. Respondent’s evidence was directly contradictory and was that Miss Gaehle drove the car she was operating on the wrong side of the road for a distance of 100 feet into collision with the automobile he was operating northbound.

We conclude that respondent’s submission, although error, did not prejudice appellants in light of the evidence, and did not, in fact, conflict with the other instructions in the case. Respondent’s submission actually required that the jury find more than the approved pattern instruction applicable at the time required. To find for respondent under respondent’s submission the jury not only had to find that the automobile Miss Gaehle was driving was on the wrong side of the road, but that she drove it there and in so doing was negligent.2 We cannot conceive how appellants could have been prejudiced by this portion of the submission.

However, the question remains whether the omission of the words “at the time of the collision” was error. Rule 70.01 was renumbered to the present Rule 70.02 and amended on April 7, 1977, effective December 1, 1977.

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Related

Jenkins v. Jordan
593 S.W.2d 236 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
592 S.W.2d 205, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaehle-v-skyles-moctapp-1979.