Hodge v. Goffstein

411 S.W.2d 165, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 585
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 30, 1966
DocketNo. 51925
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 411 S.W.2d 165 (Hodge v. Goffstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodge v. Goffstein, 411 S.W.2d 165, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 585 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

WELBORN, Commissioner.

Action for damages for the wrongful death of plaintiff’s husband in an automobile accident. The jury returned a verdict for $20,000 in favor of plaintiff and against the personal representative of the driver of one of the vehicles involved. The verdict was in favor of the defendant personal representative of the driver of a second vehicle. Defendant against whom the $20,000 verdict was rendered and upon which judgment was entered has appealed.

The accident out of which this cause of action arose occurred at approximately 1:00 P.M., Saturday, October 1, 1960. The scene of the occurrence was on State Highway No. 79, some 4.6 miles north of the junction of Route 79 and Interstate Route 70, in St. Charles County. Route 79, at the place of the collision, runs generally north and south and is straight and level, with a concrete roadway some 22 feet in width and shoulders on either side nine or ten feet wide. The roadway is higher than the surrounding farm land on the east, and there is an embankment along the east side of the highway. The weather was clear and the pavement dry.

Three vehicles were involved. One was a pickup truck owned by plaintiff’s husband, Aaron Hodge, and in which he and another passenger were riding. The second was a 1955 Chevrolet station wagon in which Charles W. Gray was the sole occupant. The third vehicle was a Plymouth convertible, driven by Miles W. Barber and in which Benjamin Jones was a passenger. None of the five individuals survived for a time which permitted a statement regarding the occurrence. There were no other eyewitnesses. Appellant’s contention here is that the circumstantial evidence made no submissible case on plaintiff’s theory that the cause of the occurrence was Gray’s operating his automobile on the wrong side of the road.

Both parties to this appeal concede that the evidence warranted a finding that Hodge was traveling north in his pickup. Hodge was a commercial fisherman who caught fish in the Mississippi River in the vicinity of Clarksville, located on Route 79, some 40 miles north of the accident scene. Hodge peddled his fish on a route in St. Louis. He had left Clarksville for St. Louis early in the morning of October 1 and was seen in St. Louis later in the morning. On the basis of his general op[167]*167erating precedures, he would have been returning to Clarksville from St. Louis at the time of the occurrence here.

Barber and Jones had left St. Louis at around 10:00 A.M. on October 1 to go to Jones’s place near Old Monroe, on Route 79, some eight miles from the scene of the accident. They went there to cut the grass and a reasonable assumption is that they were returning to St. Louis, proceeding south on Route 79.

Gray left his residence in St. Louis approximately an hour before the accident. He was going fishing in the Mississippi near Elsberry, some 25 miles north of the collision scene and on Route 79. The time of his departure and his destination support the deduction that he was proceeding north on Route 79 toward his destination at Elsberry at the time of the collision.

A violent collision occurred between Gray’s Chevrolet and Barber’s Plymouth. The left front portion of each of the vehicles was heavily damaged and was undoubtedly the point of impact. The entire left side of the Gray vehicle sustained sideswipe damage.

Gray’s vehicle came to rest on the east side of the roadway, facing north, partly on the paved portion and partly on the shoulder. Barber’s auto stopped on the west side of the roadway, partly on the shoulder and partly on an embankment, headed east. The two vehicles stopped some 200 to 250 feet apart according to one witness, 175 feet according to another. The Barber vehicle was some 40 feet to the south of an accumulation of dirt and glass on the roadway and the Gray Chevrolet was about three times that distance to the north of the collision debris.

The Hodge pickup came to rest below the embankment on the east side of the highway, on its top, heading south or southwest. Four tracks ran down the embankment in a northeasterly direction to the vicinity of the overturned vehicle. The pickup was to the north of the Barber vehicle and to the south of the Gray auto and nearer the latter. There was no evidence of collision damage to the pickup. A witness at a filling station some one half mile north of the collision scene and who went there immediately after his attention was attracted by a cloud of dust raised by the collision stated that the left front wheel of the pickup was still turning when he reached the collision scene.

The State Highway Patrolman who investigated the accident died before the trial. Trooper Faber, riding, on his day off, with the investigating patrolman, did testify. However, since the investigation was not his official responsibility his testimony related primarily to the position of the three vehicles when he reached the scene and the nature and extent of the damage which he observed. His other pertinent testimony was to the presence of what he described as “tell-tale marks of metal being dragged or sliding upon the highway.” According to the witness, the marks were in the northbound lane of the pavement and ran in a northeasterly direction to the area where the Gray vehicle had stopped.

The witness who had rushed to the scene of the collision from a filling station approximately one half mile away testified that he observed debris, consisting of glass and dirt. He placed the heaviest concentration of debris in the southbound lane, a few feet west of the center line of the highway. He stated that there was debris in the northbound lane also. He said that the debris “was a foot over the northbound and two and one-half feet or something over the southbound.”

Appellant contends that plaintiff’s evidence did not warrant submission of the case on plaintiff’s theory that the Gray vehicle was on the wrong side of the highway at the time of the collision, that, in any event, there is no evidence to support a finding that Gray was thereby negligent and that his negligence was the proximate cause of Hodge’s death. Respondent’s point is that the evidence would support a finding that a collision occurred after Gray entered [168]*168the southbound lane in order to pass the northbound Hodge pickup and that the collision between the Gray and Barber vehicles forced the Hodge truck off the roadway, resulting in Hodge’s death.

In support of ■ her position, plaintiff strongly relies upon the testimony that the concentration of debris was principally in the southbound lane. Plaintiff argues that this evidence is sufficient to permit the jury to infer that the point of collision was in the southbound lane of travel.

There is no doubt that the location of debris after an automobile collision is circumstantial evidence of the point of collision. See Annotation: “Sufficiency of evidence, in absence of survivors or of eyewitnesses competent to testify, as to place or point of impact of motor vehicles going in opposite directions and involved in collision.” 77 A.L.R.2d 580, 599. The significance of such evidence may be enhanced by evidence pertaining to its location with reference to “gouge” marks and skid or tire marks. Schneider v. Prentzler, Mo.Sup., 391 S.W.2d 307, 310 [3]; Martin v. Sloan, Mo.Sup., 377 S.W.2d 252

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Bluebook (online)
411 S.W.2d 165, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodge-v-goffstein-mo-1966.