Hiland v. Scholz

2023 IL App (4th) 220820-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 6, 2023
Docket4-22-0820
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2023 IL App (4th) 220820-U (Hiland v. Scholz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hiland v. Scholz, 2023 IL App (4th) 220820-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE 2023 IL App (4th) 220820-U FILED This Order was filed under July 6, 2023 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is NO. 4-22-0820 Carla Bender not precedent except in the 4th District Appellate limited circumstances allowed IN THE APPELLATE COURT Court, IL under Rule 23(e)(1). OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

JOYCE HILAND, Administrator of the Estate of Dean ) Appeal from the Meyersick, Deceased, ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Adams County v. ) No. 17L40 CHRISTOPHER G. SCHOLZ, Special Representative ) of the Estate of Dale S. Monroe, Deceased, ) Honorable Defendant-Appellee. ) Scott Douglas Larson, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice DeArmond and Justice Zenoff concurred in the judgment.

ORDER ¶1 In Missouri, Dean Meyersick was involved in a three-vehicle traffic accident. His

car hit Dale S. Monroe’s pickup truck, which was disabled on the highway, and then ran into

Jackson D. Dolbeare’s oncoming car. In a hospital in Quincy, Illinois, Meyersick died of his

injuries. Plaintiff, Joyce Hiland, is the administrator of Meyersick’s estate. Hiland sued Monroe in

the Adams County circuit court, pleading counts under the Wrongful Death Act (740 ILCS

180/0.01 et seq. (West 2014)) and the Survival Act (755 ILCS 5/27-6 (West 2014)). During the

pendency of the proceedings below, Monroe died of causes unrelated to the traffic accident.

Defendant, Christopher G. Scholz, was substituted for Monroe as the special representative of

Monroe’s estate. The jury returned a verdict in defendant’s favor.

¶2 Plaintiff appeals. She argues that, in addition to committing several other errors, the

circuit court erred on a conflict-of-law question. By granting some of defendant’s motions in limine, the court declined to recognize Monroe’s duty, under Missouri law, to warn approaching

drivers that his truck was stalled in the travel lane of the highway. This in limine ruling was

prejudicial, plaintiff argues, because, in accordance with that ruling, the court gave jury

instructions that left it up to the jury whether Monroe’s alleged failure to warn was negligent.

Plaintiff maintains that, under Missouri law, by contrast, such a failure to warn was in itself a

breach of duty and, hence, was negligence per se. Because we find merit in this conflict-of-law

argument, we do not reach plaintiff’s other claims of error. We reverse the judgment and remand

this case for a new trial.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 A. The Three-Vehicle Accident

¶5 On November 10, 2015, Monroe was driving a pickup truck north on Missouri State

Highway B (Highway B), a two-lane country road that runs northeast and southwest. About a mile

south of LaGrange, Missouri, Monroe hit a deer. His truck went over the center line and came to

rest in the southbound lane, with the left tires on the shoulder and the right side of the truck

protruding into the southbound lane. Thus, the truck ended up pointing north in the southbound

lane of Highway B. Because the bumper was bent onto the front driver’s-side tire, which remained

fully inflated, the steering wheel would not turn, making it impossible to maneuver the truck the

rest of the way onto the shoulder—and the truck was on a curve of the highway. To get by

Monroe’s truck, a southbound vehicle, coming around the curve, would have to go into the

northbound lane.

¶6 After Monroe’s truck became immobilized in the southbound lane by the collision

with the deer, Dolbeare approached in the northbound lane. Simultaneously, Meyersick

-2- approached in the southbound lane. Meyersick’s car hit Monroe’s truck, careened into the

northbound lane, and hit Dolbeare’s oncoming car.

¶7 B. Defendant’s Tenth and Eleventh Motions in Limine

¶8 In his tenth and eleventh motions in limine, defendant requested the circuit court

bar plaintiff from mentioning, in the jury’s presence, that Monroe “had any duty to warn the

[p]laintiff [sic]” such as by waving his hands or his cell phone. The court granted these motions.

The reason for this ruling, the court explained, was that “the plaintiff ha[d] not presented sufficient

statutory citation or case law authority for the court to find that[,] in addition to the exercise of

ordinary care, the defendant had an affirmative duty to warn plaintiff and any oncoming

motorists.”

¶9 Plaintiff moved for reconsideration, arguing that this in limine ruling was

inconsistent with Hacker v. Quick Concrete Co., 857 S.W.2d 402, 408 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993), in

which the Missouri Court of Appeals stated, “As a general rule, a person who obstructs a roadway

with his or her vehicle has a duty to remove it and warn other drivers of the possible hazard.”

(Internal quotation marks omitted.) Nevertheless, the circuit court adhered to its in limine ruling.

The court found no conflict between Illinois statutory law (625 ILCS 5/11-402(a) (West 2014))

and Missouri statutory law (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 304.151 (2016)), both of which required “ ‘every

reasonable effort to move the vehicle or have it moved so as not to block’ ” traffic. The court

declined to “use Missouri case law to impose a corollary duty to warn approaching motorists of a

hazard the driver created on the traveled portion of a highway.” The court held that, instead, “the

Illinois Vehicle Code and the Illinois Civil Pattern Jury Instructions set forth the applicable duties

of drivers or operators of motor vehicles upon public highways.”

¶ 10 C. The Jury Instructions

-3- ¶ 11 Plaintiff tendered jury instructions that, as plaintiff’s attorney told us in oral

arguments, reflected the applicable Missouri law.

¶ 12 Plaintiff’s jury instruction J defined Monroe’s duty. This proposed instruction read,

“It is the duty of every driver of a vehicle using a public highway to exercise ordinary care at all

times to avoid placing others in danger and to exercise ordinary care at all times to avoid a

collision.”

¶ 13 Plaintiff’s jury instruction L and plaintiff’s instruction No. 12 were issues

instructions for counts I and II of the complaint, the wrongful-death action and the survival action.

They stated:

“The issues to be decided by you *** are as follows:

The plaintiff *** claims that she was injured and sustained damage and that

the conduct of Dale Monroe was negligent in one or more of the following respects:

***

v. Failed to warn motorists of the obstruction of Highway B and the

dangerous condition caused by his vehicle ***.”

¶ 14 Plaintiff’s jury instruction Nos. 14 and 15 explained that plaintiff “ha[d] the burden

of proving” several propositions in counts I and II, including the following proposition: “that Dale

Monroe acted or failed to act in one of the ways claimed by the plaintiff, as stated to you in these

instructions and that in so acting, or failing to act, Dale Monroe was negligent.”

¶ 15 Plaintiff’s jury instruction G in turn defined “negligence” as follows:

“When I use the word ‘negligence’ in these instructions, I mean the failure

to do something which a reasonably careful person would do, or the doing of

something which a reasonably careful person would not, under the circumstances

-4- similar to those shown by the evidence. The law does not say how a reasonably

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hacker v. Quinn Concrete Co., Inc.
857 S.W.2d 402 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1993)
Townsend v. Sears, Roebuck and Co.
879 N.E.2d 893 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2007)
Gleim v. Roberts
919 N.E.2d 367 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2009)
Pruneau v. Smiljanich
585 S.W.2d 252 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1979)
Eastman v. Brackman
347 S.W.2d 126 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 IL App (4th) 220820-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hiland-v-scholz-illappct-2023.