Helton v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

538 S.W.2d 569, 260 Ark. 342, 1976 Ark. LEXIS 1797
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 19, 1976
Docket75-34
StatusPublished

This text of 538 S.W.2d 569 (Helton v. Missouri Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helton v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 538 S.W.2d 569, 260 Ark. 342, 1976 Ark. LEXIS 1797 (Ark. 1976).

Opinion

J. Fred Jones, Justice.

This is an appeal by Joseph Helton and Elgin Bush, individually, and as next friends of their minor sons Danny Helton and Donald Bush, hereafter referred to as “Helton” and “Bush,” in a suit they filed against the appellees Missouri Pacific Railroad and Robert D. Selby.

The facts appear as follows: Helton was 16 years of age and owned a Honda motorcycle. Bush was 14 years of age. The two boys were close personal friends and Bush was in the habit of riding around with Helton on Helton’s motorcycle. On November 19, 1974, Bush was riding behind Helton on the motorcycle with Helton driving as they crossed the Missouri Pacific Railroad tracks at an elevated street crossing inside the city limits of Lake Village. As the boys approached the railroad crossing, they were unable to see what was beyond the crossing and at that point they observed a pickup truck belonging to, and being driven by, the appellee Selby backing into the street approximately 92 feet ahead of the motorcycle and in the same lane of traffic. Another automobile was approaching from the opposite direction the motorcycle was traveling and the motorcycle collided with the back portion of the pickup truck. The motorcycle was damaged and both boys were injured.

Two separate suits were filed by Bush and Helton and they were consolidated for trial. The complaints alleged that the collision was the result of the negligent acts of Missouri Pacific Railroad in constructing and maintaining an unsafe street crossing on an elevated dump or roadbed in such manner that the vision was obstructed from one side of the crossing to the other; that Selby was negligent in his failure to yield the right-of-way; failure to keep a proper lookout for oncoming traffic and in driving his vehicle from a private driveway into the plaintiffs’ traffic lane in violation of statute. A jury trial resulted in verdicts for the defendant-appellees Missouri Pacific and Robert D. Selby in both cases.

On appeal to this court the appellants have designated the points on which they rely for reversal as follows:

A. Appellant Bush—
I
The trial court erred by instructing the jury that passenger assumed the risk of his injuries when the uncontradicted facts show that the passenger could not have known or anticipated the risk that appellee would illegally back his vehicle into the motorcycle’s lane of traffic from a private driveway when under the law there is no duty to assume that another person will violate the law.
II
The trial court committed reversible error in instructing the jury on joint enterprise as between operator and passenger of a motorcycle when the ride was within the corporate limits of Lake Village and for no particular purpose except pleasure.
B. Appellant Helton—
I.
The trial court erred by submitting an instruction to the effect that the mere happening of an accident is not of itself, evidence of neligence when there was uncontradicted proof in the record that appellee had been negligent by violating Ark. Stat. Ann. 75-624 by failing to yield the right-of-way by pulling his vehicle from a private driveway into a public street.

Appellant Bush, the passenger on the motorcycle, contends the trial court erred in giving AMI Instruction 612 as the court’s instruction 17. This instruction permitted the jury to render a verdict in favor of Selby if the jury determined that Bush had “assumed the risk” for his injuries. Bush argues that the evidence failed to show that Bush assumed the risk for Selby’s actions. Appellee Selby argues that the risk Bush assumed was not the risk of negligent acts on the part of Selby, but the risk of appellant Helton’s negligent acts in the operation of the motorcycle and, therefore, Selby contends instruction 17 was proper.

In Prosser, Torts § 68 (4th ed. 1971), appears the following:

It is here that is the greatest misapprehension and confusion as to assumption of risk, and its most frequent misapplication. It is not true that in any case where the plaintiff voluntarily encounters a known danger he necessarily consents to negligence of the defendant which creates it. A pedestrian who walks across the street in the middle of a block, through a stream of traffic traveling at high speed, cannot by any stretch of the imagination be found to consent that the drivers shall not use care to avoid running him down. On the contrary, he is insisting that they shall. This is contributory negligence pure and simple; it is not assumption of risk. And if A leaves an automobile stopped at night on the traveled portion of the highway, and his passenger remains sitting in it, it can readily be found that there is consent to the negligence of A, but not to that of B, who runs into the car from the rear. This is a distinction which has baffled a great many law students, some judges, and unhappily a few very learned legal writers.

Thus, if Bush did assume the risk of Helton’s negligent driving, the proper instruction should have been one concerning Bush’s comparative neligence, that is, Bush was negligent in riding with Helton. The jury should have been instructed to compare the negligence of Bush and Selby instead of ruling in favor of Selby because Bush assumed the risk. See AMI 2102.

Appellee Selby cites a portion of 61 C.J.S. Motor Vehicles, § 486 (7), quoted by this Court in J. Paul Smith Co. v. Tipton, 237 Ark. 486, 374 S.W. 2d 176 (1964), and in Hass v. Kessell, 245 Ark. 361, 432 S.W. 2d 842 (1968), as authority for the questioned instruction.

A guest’s assumption of risk, in case of a motor vehicle collision, applies only as between the guest and his host, and does not bar recovery from a third person for injuries to which the third person’s negligence proximately contributed, unless the acts of the host, in which the guest acquiesces, operate as the cause of the collision.

Neither this rule from C.J.S. nor the Arkansas cases where it was quoted call for the instruction 17. Bush was not suing the driver Helton for negligence; the C.J.S. rule limits the assumption of risk defense to the driver charged with negligence. Cases from other jurisdictions, Calahan v. Wood, 24 Utah 2d 8, 465 P. 2d 169 (1970); Keowen v. Amite Sand & Gravel Co., 4 So. 2d 79 (La. App. 1941); Guile v. Greenberg, 192 Minn. 548, 257 N.W. 649 (1934), as well as the two Arkansas cases, supra, clarify the last clause of the C.J.S. (“unless the acts of the host, in which the guest acquiesces, operate at the cause of the collision.”) Where the host causes the collision, the recovery of the guest is affected by the guest’s comparative negligence in riding with the negligent host. However, the guest’s recovery is not barred by assumption of risk. In J. Paul Smith Co. v. Tipson, supra, Tipton was a passenger in an automobile driven by Woolsey. Woolsey drove his automobile into the rear of a truck which negligently drove onto the highway. Tipton was killed in the collision and the Tiptons sued the truck company and driver and also sued Woolsey.

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Related

Calahan v. Wood
465 P.2d 169 (Utah Supreme Court, 1970)
Wymer v. Dedman
350 S.W.2d 169 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1961)
J. Paul Smith Co. v. Tipton
374 S.W.2d 176 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1964)
Hass v. Kessell
432 S.W.2d 842 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1968)
Woodard v. Holliday
361 S.W.2d 744 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1962)
Keowen v. Amite Sand Gravel Co.
4 So. 2d 79 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1941)
Guile v. Greenberg
257 N.W. 649 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
538 S.W.2d 569, 260 Ark. 342, 1976 Ark. LEXIS 1797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helton-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-ark-1976.