Helming v. Adams

509 S.W.2d 159, 1974 Mo. App. LEXIS 1233
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 1974
DocketKCD 26335
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 509 S.W.2d 159 (Helming v. Adams) 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
Helming v. Adams, 509 S.W.2d 159, 1974 Mo. App. LEXIS 1233 (Mo. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This is an appeal from a judgment entered pursuant to a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff-respondent awarding her actual *162 damages of $213.00 and punitive damages of $2,500.00, in an action for false imprisonment against defendant-appellant. The parties will hereinafter be designated, respectively, plaintiff and defendant.

Defendant vies on appeal that the judgment should be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial for five reasons:

I. The trial court erred in refusing to give either Instruction D-2 or D-3, requested by defendant, thus depriving defendant of the “defense of probable cause although evidence of probable cause and justification had been pleaded and proven.”

II. The trial court erred in giving Instruction No. 5, a punitive damage instruction, absent evidence to support it, and absent the incorporation of or an accompanying definition of malice.

III. The trial court erred in refusing to admit defendant’s Exhibits 1, 2, 3 and 4, photographs of the scene of an alleged assault pertinent to the issues drawn in the case.

IV. The trial court erred in refusing to give Instruction D-l, a withdrawal instruction requested by defendant regarding damage to plaintiff’s nervous system, since all the evidence disclosed that any such damage resulted from causes other than acts of defendant.

V. The verdict was excessive and resulted from passion, prejudice or bias on the part of the jury.

The following facts are set forth, since they are indispensable to the proper resolve of defendant’s assignments of error.

On June 27, 1971, between 8:00 and 8:30 P.M., defendant, a district supervisor, and Richard Schroeder, an agent, for the Missouri Conservation Commission, were seated in Schroeder’s state owned automobile, which was parked on a dirt side road in Cole County. More particularly, the automobile was parked in a general area described as “down in the Claysville Road area, down the upper Cole Junction bottoms”. This area was in the near vicinity of the Church Prison Farm, a unit of the Missouri Department of Corrections. At that time defendant and Schroeder observed an automobile containing three people drive past them, headed north, on the Claysville Road, which ran perpendicular to the dirt side road they were parked on. This automobile stopped and parked some forty to sixty feet from the dirt side road. Two males emerged from the automobile after it stopped, Calvin Huckabee, the driver, and Stanley Helming, one of the two passengers. Plaintiff, the other passenger, remained inside the automobile at all times. Defendant and Schroeder were on “routine patrol” at the time in question.

When Huckabee got out of the car he was carrying a .22 caliber rifle. He walked over to a nearby mulberry tree in hopes of finding some squirrels to shoot. No squirrels appeared and no shots were ever fired by Huckabee. When Stanley Helming got out of the car, he proceeded down the road on foot, around a bend, for the purpose of viewing the scene of a recent fatal train accident.

During the interim, defendant and Schroeder got out of their automobile, and defendant quietly followed and observed Stanley Helming from the wooded area that paralleled the Claysville Road, while Schroeder remained at the car and kept Huckabee under surveillance. After some ten or fifteen minutes, Stanley Helming and Huckabee returned to and re-entered their parked car, which plaintiff was still sitting in. Huckabee, as driver, with plaintiff sitting in the front seat, right hand side, and Stanley Helming seated in the rear, started the car up and drove forward a short distance down the road and then proceeded to turn the car around to proceed home. According to the plaintiff’s evidence it was “haze dark” at the time. On the other hand, according to defendant’s evidence, it was still light out.

As the car driven by Huckabee started up the road, after turning around, the oc *163 cupants of the car “heard a noise in the wooded area like somebody was walking.” Huckebee asked plaintiff if she heard the noise and she answered, “We are awfully close to the prison farm, it could be an inmate.” Plaintiff also said, “We better leave.” As the car proceeded on up the road, plaintiff for the first time observed agent Schroeder. She did not know who he was. According to plaintiff’s evidence neither she, nor any of the other occupants of the car, observed any badge or name tag on Schroeder indicating that he was an agent of the Missouri Conservation Commission. When plaintiff saw Schroeder she said, “There is one now, looks like á convict all right” and she thought he was a convict. Schroeder was walking toward the oncoming car on the shoulder (on the car’s left hand side of the road) at the time. Before the oncoming car driven by Huckabee reached Schroeder, Schroeder verbally and manually ordered the car to stop for the purpose of checking whether or not Huckabee had a “hunting permit”. Huckabee accelerated the car and speeded on past Schroeder. Defendant’s evidence was that in doing so the car swerved toward and struck Schroeder. Defendant’s evidence further disclosed that thereafter the car “continued to come back and forth across the road at a high rate of speed.” Plaintiff’s evidence was that the car merely fishtailed a bit when it was accelerated and at no time ever struck Schroeder. In any event, Schroeder was not hurt or injured.

Immediately after the car passed Schroeder, he drew a Model 19, .357 Magnum, Smith and Wesson revolver issued to him by the Missouri Conservation Commission, and fired four shots into the rear of the departing car. One of the shots hit the gas tank of the departing car and another shot hit the back window and emerged through the windshield near the steering wheel. Fortunately, none of the shots struck any of the occupants of the departing car although glass from the windshield flew all over them and Huckabee and Stanley Helming were cut by the flying glass. The departing car did not stop when the shots were fired. Whereupon, defendant and Schroeder got into their automobile, turned on a red light the car was equipped with, and pursued the departing car. According to plaintiff’s evidence, she looked around after the shot was fired and observed a car behind them with its red light flashing and said, “There is a red light. You had better stop.” Huckabee stopped the car.

The car occupied by Schroeder and defendant pulled up behind Huckabee’s car and stopped. According to defendant’s evidence Schroeder drew his .357 Magnum revolver and with gun in hand approached the left hand dr driver’s side of the Hucka-bee car, while defendant, with his holster unfastened and his hand on the gun still in the holster, approached the right hand side of the car. At gun point, Schroeder ordered Huckabee out of the car and “spread eagled” him on the side of the car and searched to see if he was carrying a weapon. Defendant ordered plaintiff and Stanley Helming out of the right hand side of the car. Plaintiff’s evidence was that defendant, as well as Schroeder, had his .357 Magnum revolver drawn and in his hand, and as defendant approached the car and ordered plaintiff and Stanley Helming out, defendant had his .357 Magnum revolver in his hand and pointed toward them.

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Bluebook (online)
509 S.W.2d 159, 1974 Mo. App. LEXIS 1233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helming-v-adams-moctapp-1974.