Grover v. Grover

972 S.W.2d 568, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 982, 1998 WL 260645
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1998
Docket71938, 71947
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 972 S.W.2d 568 (Grover v. Grover) 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
Grover v. Grover, 972 S.W.2d 568, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 982, 1998 WL 260645 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

GRIMM, Presiding Judge.

Son 1 sued his father and Wal-Mart for injuries he received when son’s pickup truck rolled off a set of Wal-Mart’s vehicle ramps. Although the legal file does not contain the jury’s verdicts, the trial court’s judgment reflects that the jury found son’s damages to be $115,000 and his wife’s damages at $22,-500. The judgment reflects that the jury apportioned fault as follows: 80% to son; 10% to father; and 10% to Wal-Mart. Thus, *570 the trial court entered judgment against defendants for son for $23,000 and for wife for $4,500.

Father did not appeal, however both son and Wal-Mart appeal. Son’s points include allegations that the trial court erred: (1) in failing to grant a mistrial or new trial because of defense counsel’s prejudicial closing arguments; (2) in giving a comparative fault jury instruction; and (3) in admitting and excluding evidence.

Wal-Mart’s cross appeal raises one point with three subpoints. It contends the trial court erred in failing to direct a verdict in its favor because son failed to establish: (1) the ramps were in a defective and unreasonably dangerous condition when sold; (2) the ramps were used in a reasonably anticipated manner; and (3) proximate cause between any design defect in the ramps and son’s injuries. We affirm. 2

Background

Son and father frequently worked together on various projects, dividing up the work. This included the mechanical repair of motor vehicles. After father retired from his job, he established a workshop in the garage behind his house. Son frequently came and assisted him in the workshop.

In 1979, father’s wife purchased two vehicle ramps at Wal-Mart and gave them to father as a gift. The ramps were used to raise vehicles about a foot so that work could be done under them.

On April 6, 1990 son took his pickup truck to father’s garage to work on it. The truck is a 1977 Series 15 GMC heavy duty half-ton 4x4 pickup, with full-time automatic transmission. It has two drive shafts, one for the front wheels and one for the rear wheels.

It is also equipped with a “lock-out” hub on the front wheels. Engaging the hub requires going to the front wheels and turning a dial indicator to lock or unlock the wheels, making the vehicle either two or four wheel drive.

Son told father he had to replace a gear at the bottom of the speedometer cable. Son drove the truck up onto the ramps while father guided him from in front of the ramps. After the truck started to move up the ramps, father moved to his right and watched the left front driver’s side and signaled son to stop when the tire was squarely on the left ramp.

Son put the truck in “park.” He does not remember whether he applied the emergency brake or not. As he got out of the truck he said something like “you’ll block it won’t you,” and father responded he would. Father normally did this type of thing for plaintiff.

In the past, different items were used to block the wheels, including bricks. On the day of the accident, father was walking by an air compressor to go outside to get some bricks when son indicated he would have to wait for the exhaust to cool before working on the truck. Because the air compressor needed to have some work done on it, the two proceeded to do that work. Then they talked awhile. Father never got the bricks to block the wheels, son never saw father go behind the truck, the wheels were never blocked, and son never looked to see if the wheels were blocked.

The truck was on the ramps for at least twenty minutes before son got under it. He fixed the speedometer cable located on the driver’s side. He then went to the opposite side of the truck to put grease in the front differential. Father then left the garage to go check on his garden.

Son then started to disconnect the drive shaft. To do this, he had to unhook the universal joint, which was held in place by four bolts. He removed three of the bolts and began to remove the fourth, when he heard or felt something pop. The drive shaft began to turn and the truck began to roll off the ramps.

He reached up and grabbed the universal joint to try to stop it from turning, but was unable to stop it. He saw the truck starting to descend down the ramps, and raised his *571 left leg to try to push away from it. As he tried to get out from underneath the truck, it rolled onto him, severely breaking his leg. He had worked under the truck for twenty to forty minutes before the accident occurred, but had not put the vehicle in four-wheel lock.

SON’S APPEAL

I. Closing Argument

In his first point, son alleges the trial court erred in fading to grant a mistrial and a new trial “based on the unduly prejudicial conduct of defense counsel in closing arguments.” In his lengthy point, he refers to more than ten instances of alleged misconduct. He argues “the conduct of defense counsel was sufficiently egregious that a new trial should have been granted.”

In his motion for new trial, son refers to only one instance of alleged misconduct. There, he contended the trial court erred in overruling his objection and request for a mistrial concerning a statement father’s counsel made. In that motion, son complains defense counsel asserted “that counsel for plaintiffs fabricated the facts and evidence of the case it (sic) presented to the jury during trial.” Because the other alleged instances of misconduct were not raised in the new trial motion, they are not preserved for review. Beis v. Dias, 859 S.W.2d 835, 841 (Mo.App. S.D.1993).

In his opening statement, son’s counsel explained that he was going to give an outline of what the evidence will be. “It’s a story that you will hear, and you will find that there’s never been a father and a son that’s been any closer.”

In his opening statement, father’s counsel also referred to a story. After stating some evidence different from that mentioned by son’s counsel, father’s counsel said, “You will have to wait until you hear all of the evidence then you will see there’s two sides to this story.”

In father’s counsel’s closing argument, he attacked the credibility of several witnesses, suggesting that son’s injuries and damages were inflated. Counsel argued that son’s injuries did not diminish his earning capacity. He argued son’s job as a marina operator remained the same before and after the accident, and that son wanted it that way. He pointed out that four years after the accident, son had renewed his lease to run. a marina for ten years. He then argued that if son was ever going to get out of that business, that is the time he would have done so.

Father’s counsel then said:

Ladies and gentlemen, plaintiffs attorney told you in opening statement, and he used the words “I am going to tell you a story.” And that’s what he’s done since the day he was hired is fabricate a story.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
972 S.W.2d 568, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 982, 1998 WL 260645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grover-v-grover-moctapp-1998.