Granger v. ITT Continental Baking Co.

536 S.W.2d 894, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 1970
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1976
DocketNo. KCD 27101
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 536 S.W.2d 894 (Granger v. ITT Continental Baking Co.) 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
Granger v. ITT Continental Baking Co., 536 S.W.2d 894, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 1970 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

SWOFFORD, Judge.

The appellant (hereafter plaintiff), after a jury trial, was awarded a verdict and judgment for $4,000.00 damages for personal injuries sustained in a collision between an automobile being operated by him and a bread truck owned by the respondent (hereafter defendant), and being operated by its employee, John Delbert Shores (hereafter Shores). This cause was submitted to the jury solely upon the theory of humanitarian negligence, in Instruction No. 4. The trial court sustained defendant’s motion for a new trial for the reason (without further elaboration in the record) that “an error was made in submitting Instruction No. 4”. From this order, plaintiff appeals, asserting as reversible error that Instruction No. 4 was a proper instruction, was not a deviation from MAI, and in the alternative, if it was a deviation, defendant was not prejudiced thereby.

A resolution of the problem thus presented necessitates a summary of the evidence as to the liability factors in this case.

On September 23, 1972, at about 2:15 p. m., the plaintiff was driving his 1972 Dodge automobile in an easterly direction upon U.S. Highway No. 69 near Fishing River in Clay County, Missouri. He was a member of the Air Force, stationed at Whiteman Air Force Base, and he and three other service men were en route to Excelsior Springs, Missouri. At the point of the collision, No. 69 is a divided highway with two lanes eastbound and two westbound, divided by a median strip; the paved portion of the eastbound lanes is 24 feet in width; there is a driveway apron on the south side of the highway about ten feet in width giving ingress and egress to and from a filling station-cafe establishment; there is a crossover north of this drive to the westbound lanes of No. 69; approximately 323 feet west of this driveway a girdered bridge carrying eastbound vehicles crosses the river; and west of this bridge there was a 55 m. p. h. speed limit sign controlling eastbound traffic.

The weather was clear and the pavement dry on the afternoon here involved. There was no obstruction to vision in either direction from the east end of the bridge to the filling station-cafe driveway, although the visibility from the east of a car on the bridge would be somewhat obstructed by the bridge girders.

The plaintiff testified that west of the bridge his speed was 60-70 m. p. h.; that in obedience to the speed sign, he slowed his car; that as he came off the east end of the bridge, traveling in the right eastbound lane, he saw the defendant’s truck stopped in the filling station driveway with its front end about 5 feet south of the pavement; that he proceeded eastbound until his car was 150 to 200 feet from the point of collision, traveling at a speed of 50-60 m. p. h., when the truck started up toward the highway; that he hit his brakes, honked his horn and swerved to the right (south), then realized he did not have room to pass behind the truck; that he then swerved to the left (north), but another vehicle was in the median crossover, headed south, facing the bread truck, so that the plaintiff could not use that area to avoid collision; and, that at the time he went through these various maneuvers, the truck had again stopped completely blocking the right eastbound lane (in which the plaintiff had been traveling) and partially blocking the left eastbound lane. The plaintiff stated that “I hit him”, the points of impact being the right front of his car and the left front wheel and forward on the truck.

The defendant’s driver, Shores, testified that after making a bread delivery to the cafe south of the point of collision, he drove north from its parking area, stopped his truck with the front end about 10 feet south of the south pavement of the highway and looked for cross traffic, observed [896]*896none, and started up, attaining a speed of 2-5 m. p. h.; that he then observed plaintiff’s vehicle just coming off the end of the bridge to the west, applied his brakes and brought the truck to a stop with the front end approximately two feet south of the center line between the two eastbound lanes; that he heard the plaintiff’s brakes “squealing” about the time he stopped the truck; and that the plaintiff’s car followed a fairly straight line into the collision from the time he observed it.

The highway patrolman who investigated the accident placed the majority of the debris or “shakedown” in the right (or south) eastbound lane with some north of the center line.

An eastbound motorist testified that the plaintiff passed him about a mile west of the bridge at a speed of 75-80 m. p. h., and the operator of the filling station stated that the speed of the plaintiff’s car at the east end of the bridge was 75-80 m. p. h.

Instruction No. 4, as given to the jury, is as follows:

“Your verdict must be for the plaintiff whether or not plaintiff was negligent if you believe:
First, plaintiff was in a position of immediate danger of being injured and was injured, and
Second, defendant knew or by using the highest degree of care could have known of such position of immediate danger, and
Third, at the moment when defendant first knew or could have known of such position of immediate danger, defendant still had enough time so that by using the means available to him and with reasonable safety to himself and all others and by using the highest degree of care, he could have avoided injury to the plaintiff by remaining to the south of Highway 69 until after the automobile in which plaintiff was riding had passed, and
Fourth, defendant negligently failed to so remain to the south of said highway 69 until after the automobile in which plaintiff was riding had passed, and
Fifth, plaintiff’s injury directly resulted therefrom.” (Emphasis supplied)

This instruction was obviously modeled after MAI 17.14 and 17.15, except for the emphasized portions above noted.1 In the model MAI 17.14, the acts which defendant could have taken to avoid injury to plaintiff are “slackening his speed and swerving”, followed by this comment in “Notes on Use”: '

“Other acts which may be hypothesized include: stopping, swerving, slackening his speed, sounding a warning, and appropriate combinations.”

Further, in the “Committee’s Comments” following MAI 17.14, it is pointed out that the term “immediate danger”, as used therein, is substituted for the traditional term “imminent peril”, as theretofore used in humanitarian negligence submissions, in order to avoid the necessity of an instruction defining “imminent peril” as “certain and immediate danger”. The terms in this context are obviously synonymous.

Defendant strongly asserts (among other things) that Instruction No. 4 represents an unwarranted deviation from MAI 17.14, and 17.15, with reference to the hypothesis that plaintiff was in “immediate danger” when defendant’s truck was stopped, and that defendant could have avoided injury to plaintiff by remaining stopped south of the highway. The plaintiff argues that the deviation from MAI was necessary and not prejudicial to the defendant.

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Related

Wilson v. Tabor
656 S.W.2d 299 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1983)
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661 S.W.2d 29 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
536 S.W.2d 894, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 1970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granger-v-itt-continental-baking-co-moctapp-1976.