Hannah v. Butts

14 S.W.2d 31, 222 Mo. App. 1098, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 81
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 31 (Hannah v. Butts) 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
Hannah v. Butts, 14 S.W.2d 31, 222 Mo. App. 1098, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 81 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

BLAND. J.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of $7500, and the defendant has appealed.

The facts show that plaintiff, a farmer living about three miles west of Odessa, was injured about 3:20 P. M. of Thursday, December 2, 1926, while he waft riding in a farm wagon westwardly on United States Highway No. 50 and about two miles west of that city. Tie was driving his wagon along the paved portion of the highway, the pavement being eighteen feet in width.

Plaintiff testified that he saw two automobiles coming from the ■west and an automobile approaching from the east. At this time, he was driving on the right-hand side of the pavement with two mules hitched to the wagon, with a third mule tied to the team and abreast and to the right thereof. ’On seeing these automobiles approaching he turned his mules and wagon so that the right wheels of the wagon were off of the pavement. Defendant in his automobile ■approached plaintiff from the rear at a rate of speed of from forty to fifty miles per hour. The automobile struck plaintiff’s wagon, throwing him to the pavement and resulting in plaintiff receiving severe injuries.

The evidence shows that, defendant was a resident of the State of Oklahoma but was residing temporarily in Kansas City. He was an oil operator and was engaged in “taking up leases” around Odessa. He would go to Odessa in the morning and return to Kansas City at night, in his automobile. Defendant testified that he was blinded by the lights of the two cars approaching from the opposite direction *1101 and did not see plaintiff Until almost the instant of tlie collision, when he applied his brakes. This was immediately before the. collision, We judge from the evidence that there could have been scarcely any slackening of the speed of his car before it hit the wagon. . Plaintiff was immediately taken to his home and three doctors were called, lie had a scalp wound on top of his head one and one-half or two inches long. Three or four stitches were taken, in. order., to sew up this wound, lie had an injured back, neck and right hand. X-ray pictures were subsequently taken which showed a breaking off of the lateral process of the 5th and 6th cervical vertebrae. The pictures also indicated that a ring of bone surrounding the spinal cord was broken. He had what is termed a spinal cord lesion. One of the. physicians testified that the X-ray indicated plaintiff, had “what is known as a fracture of the spine or a broken neck.”. He had a paralysis of the right leg and arm. He had a sensory, paralysis of the left side and motor paralysis of the right side.

The answer, among other things, pleaded a release .of plaintiff’s cause of action. It was alleged that a release was executed on December 4, 1926, wherein, in consideration of the sum of $165 paid to plaintiff, he released defendant from all claims and damages on account of the injuries sustained by him. The reply was a general denial and, in addition, it alleged that the release was. signed when, plaintiff was totally paralyzed and unconscious; that it was negotiated-by one Morgan, a claim agent or adjuster for an indemnity insurance company, who came to plaintiff’s home and tendered to his wife the sum of $165 as a part payment on what was owing by defendant to plaintiff on account of plaintiff’s injuries; that said Morgan, falsely and fraudulently represented to plaintiff’s wife that she was sign.ing a receipt for said sum; that Morgan represented that his company would pay plaintiff an additional sum that would reasonably compensate plaintiff for his injuries and that said payment did not constitute a full settlement of plaintiff’s claim against the defendant-; that at that time Morgan was acting as the agent of defendant and the insurance company. Plaintiff further alleged his wife had no authority to execute the settlement and release of his claim against tlie defendant; that shortly after the pretended release was executed and as soon as plaintiff had recovered consciousness and had been advised about the payment of said money and that the- defendant and the insurance company were contending that plaintiff’s claim had been settled and released, plaintiff, through his attorney, tendered to said Morgan, agent for the defendant and the insurance company, said money and that said Morgan refused to accept it; that plaintiff has ever since and now offers to return, said money.

Defendant insists that his instruction in the nature of- a demurrer to the evidence offered at the close of all of the testimony should *1102 have been given, lor Ibo masons, among others, Lliat the evidence fails to sustain the plea of fraud set up in plaintiff’s reply, and that there was no legal tender back of the money received by plaintiff in the settlement.-

■ We think there was ample testimony tending to show that plaintiff was not mentally capable of negotiating the release at the time the same purports to have been executed. The evidence shows that plaintiff received a very severe injury and that thereafter and even before he was taken home he appeared to be in a dazed condition and in great pain. When he arrived home he appeared to be a man who had suffered a severe physical and nervous shock, “lw was just limp.” “He was limp, dazed and barely conscious.” He was carried into the house and put to bed. About two hours thereafter Dr. Martin arrived and found that plaintiff had the appearance of a man who had been “in a rather severe accident, somewhat shocked and pretty well incapacitated.” “I would say he was semiconscious.” Dr. Schooley examined him that night and found that “he had loss of motion of the right leg and he had a paralysis of the right arm.” To relieve his pain the doctor gave him an injection of a quarter of grain of morphine and a hundredth of a grain of hyoscine. The doctor next saw the plaintiff the following, or Friday, morning. At that time he gave plaintiff a hypodermic of hyoscine and morphine. He saw him on Friday' evening and about three o’clock Saturday morning, at each time he gave him a hypodermic of morphine and hyoscine. He saw him again about eight or nine o’clock Saturday morning and gave him a hypodermic of morphine and hyoscine. The injections were of the same quantity each time they were given. The doctor testified that “I kept him under those (drugs) the first three days;” that these injections tended to deaden pain and “stupefy the brain,” “had a hypnotic effect,” “tended to induce sleep” and “blunt the intellect.” As a result of these injections plaintiff was partially unconscious on Saturday, December 4th. He stated that in his opinion plaintiff was not at the time last mentioned of sufficient mental capacity to transact any kind of business. The evidence show's that it w'as only a short time after the doctor gave plaintiff the injection of hyoscine and morphine on Saturday noon that the pretended release was executed.

Dr. Robinson, a witness for plaintiff, testified that he was a specialist on nervous and mental diseases; that he was called to see plaintiff on the evening of December 4th, about 7:30 or 8 o’clock; that at this time plaintiff, wrns unable to move his right arm and left leg; that plaintiff could move his left arm and right leg to some degree; that plaintiff was “in a sort of semi-stuperous.condition.” “I did a spinal puncture on him and the fluid was just a trifle dis *1103

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 31, 222 Mo. App. 1098, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannah-v-butts-moctapp-1929.