Kelly v. Kansas City Public Service Company

335 S.W.2d 159, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 786
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1960
Docket47461
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 335 S.W.2d 159 (Kelly v. Kansas City Public Service Company) 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
Kelly v. Kansas City Public Service Company, 335 S.W.2d 159, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 786 (Mo. 1960).

Opinion

BARRETT, Commissioner.

The plaintiff, Gerald R. Kelly, driving a 1956 Plymouth station wagon north on Prospect Avenue passed through the light-controlled intersection of 27th Street and by reason of a “traffic jam” at 26th Street stopped with the traffic ahead opposite 2619 Prospect, just behind a Sears delivery truck. While he was thus stopped a Kansas City Public Service Company trolley bus, operated by Harold B. Backer, ran into the *161 rear end of the stopped station wagon, jamming the front end of it into the rear end of the stopped Sears truck. To recover damages for his resulting personal injuries and the injury to his station wagon Kelly instituted this action against the Kansas City Public Service Company and its trolley bus operator, Backer. A jury awarded the plaintiff a total of $36,000 damages and upon this appeal the defendants make four principal claims: that they are entitled to a new trial because the court erred in giving to the jury instructions 1 and 8, abused its discretion in permitting the plaintiff to, offer evidence in rebuttal, and if they are not entitled to a new trial that the verdict is excessive and should be reduced by re-mittitur.

First as to the rebuttal evidence: at the close of the defendants’ case the plaintiff, over the objection of the defendants, called five witnesses in rebuttal. The defendants, while asserting that the court abused its discretion, admit that they “have found no Missouri decision holding that the trial court had abused its discretion in this regard.” And, 6 Wigmore, Evidence, Secs. 1873, 1876, pp. 510, 519, the' authority upon which they rely, likewise does not indicate that the court erred in this particular regard. The defendants’ tacit admission is perhaps sufficient to dispose of • this claim of error. However, without detailing at length and illustrating, some of the testimony was in point of fact rebuttal in character, some of it was collateral if not immaterial, and some of it was appropriately a part of the plaintiff’s case in chief. The subject was recently reviewed in Peters v. Dodd, Mo., 328 S.W.2d 603, 609-610, in which the court excluded rebuttal testimony and here as in that case it does not plainly appear that the court’s discretion “has been clearly abused.” And see Jones v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 343 Mo. 1104, 1127, 125 S.W.2d 5, 17-18.

Instruction 1 was the principal instruction and hypothesized the defendants’ liability upon a finding of negligence in that the trolley bus operator failed to keep a lookout for plaintiff’s station wagon or operated the bus at a greater speed than was reasonable or prudent under the circumstances or operated the bus at a greater speed than would permit the operator to exercise proper control of the bus and to decrease its speed or stop and thus avoid colliding with the station wagon. The appellants have lodged eight specific objections to this instruction: (I) failure to hypothesize the alleged negligent rate of speed shown by the respondent’s evidence, (2) submitting plaintiff’s signals of stopping but failing to submit whether they were timely, (3) submitting that “Plaintiff was not negligent in any respect” which conflicts with instruction 2 defining “ordinary care” and therefore requires of plaintiff only that standard of conduct, (4) it assumes that the operator did operate the bus at a greater speed than was reasonable or prudent, (5) assumes that he operated the bus at a greater speed than would permit him to exercise proper control of the bus and decrease its speed or stop, (6) assumes that he failed to keep a lookout, (7) in saying “Such negligence, if any, directly caused injury to plaintiff” the instruction assumes that the acts set forth in paragraphs 1 and 2 were negligent and (8) assumed that plaintiff was not negligent.

Objections 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 7, particularly the arguments with respect to “assumption” of fact or of negligence are all based upon the appellants’ assertion that the rate of speed of the trolley bus, what the bus operator was or was not doing, and all other matters involved in the instruction “were in dispute” or “were controverted issues” or “disputed issues” and therefore the instruction erroneously and prejudicially assumed them. What the appellants must mean by their assertion and argument is that in their pleadings they denied these particular matters and, therefore, the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to sustain his claim by proof and furthermore to specifically hypothesize the proof in his principal instruction. What the appellants overlook is that long after *162 the pleading stage and by the time the case was submitted to the jury there was not in point of fact any real dispute or controversy as to a single essential fact. As to the facts of the occurrence the only difference between the plaintiff and the defendants was whether there was once another vehicle between the trolley bus and the station wagon. The bus operator said there was, an “old model” car 70 feet ahead, and that it pulled into the curb near 2619 Prospect without warning and that was his excuse, as he repeatedly admitted, for taking his “eyes off of the straight-ahead traffic” and - “just momentarily” watching to see what became of that old vehicle. No one else, and there were several witnesses, saw this “old model” car and Mr.- Backer was unable to otherwise identify it or to pick it out from photographs (taken but a few minutes after the collision) of vehicles along the curbing.

But the presence or absence of this old vehicle aside the facts were that Mr. Backer stopped the trolley bus at 27th Street for passengers and as he pulled away saw the Plymouth station wagon north on Prospect, he said 85 feet away. As he drove down the street he did not apply his brakes, instead he “just released the power” when his attention was “diverted” by the old vehicle and when he again looked ahead at the traffic the station wagon was stopped “45 to 50 feet” away and it was too late to stop and, of course, the front end of the bus crashed into the rear end of the station wagon and knocked it into the rear end of the Sea-rs truck. The plaintiff and the Sears driver who heard the conversation testified that the reason Backer gave for hitting the station wagon was “ T just wasn’t looking.’ ” An investigating police officer asked Mr. Backer what happened and this was his cryptic report: “He stated he was northbound on Prospect at 20 to 25 miles per hour and .realized danger 40 to 50 feet away but was unable to avoid.”

But as to the facts bearing upon the acts submitted in the instruction; on a clear, sunny afternoon, about 5:30 on July 18, 1956, the trolley bus admittedly ran into the rear end of the station wagon while it was stopped in the traffic. There were at least three eyewitnesses other than the plaintiff and Mr. Backer and the only difference in their testimony and that of Mr. Backer is that some of them said that the trolley bus was 150 to 175 feet up the street when the station wagon stopped in the traffic. Kelly said that he had been stopped 10 to 12 seconds when the bus struck his station wagon. One witness, a pedestrian, said that when he first saw the bus it was 250 feet away and traveling “at a rapid speed, very rapid speed.” Another witness, a young boy on the porch at 2619 Prospect said that the bus was traveling at a speed of 30 to 35 miles an hour 250 feet from the point of collision.

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Bluebook (online)
335 S.W.2d 159, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-kansas-city-public-service-company-mo-1960.