Krudwig ex rel. Krudwig v. Fowler

394 S.W.2d 290, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 729
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 13, 1965
DocketNo. 50833
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 394 S.W.2d 290 (Krudwig ex rel. Krudwig v. Fowler) 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
Krudwig ex rel. Krudwig v. Fowler, 394 S.W.2d 290, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 729 (Mo. 1965).

Opinion

STOCKARD, Commissioner.

Plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment in favor of defendant entered pursuant to the unanimous jury verdict. Plaintiff George Krudwig sought damages for personal injuries in the amount of $45,000, and plaintiffs John B. Krudwig and Eleanor Krudwig, parents of George, sought to recover $15,000 for medical expense and loss of services of their son.

George was injured about 9-:30 o’clock of the evening of July 14, 1962, when the motorcycle he was operating on the property of a gasoline service station collided with an automobile operated by defendant. The circumstances of the collision are in dispute and the conflicting versions need not be set out.

Appellants’ first point is that the trial court erred in permitting counsel for respondent, “over repeated objections by plaintiff, to deliver an unbridled harangue to the jury under the guise of voir dire interrogation, and in permitting defendant’s counsel to instruct the jury that plaintiff had the burden of proving freedom from contributory negligence ‘because the defendant has pleaded contributory negligence in this case.’ ”

Appellants have set forth in their brief the voir dire examination about which complaint was made. There is no question but that some of the statements and questions by counsel were outside the scope and purpose of a voir dire examination. However, the trial court sustained appellants’ objections to each and every improper statement and question, including the statement referred to in the point pertaining to contributory negligence. Appellants make no specific reference in their point, or in their argument, to those matters to which objections were overruled. Two pertained to an inquiry of the jury panel as to whether they understood that the fact plaintiffs had brought the suit did not entitle them to a verdict, and the other was an inquiry as to whether any member of the panel would favor plaintiff for the reason that he was injured. While perhaps these questions were ineptly worded, they are not subject to the general accusation made in appellants’ point.

Appellants attempt to excuse their failure to ask for additional relief on the theory that they did not want a mistrial because of the resulting delay. However, there was other relief available. We refer to a request that the jury panel be instructed to disregard statements, and a request that counsel be admonished or reprimanded. As far as shown by the record before us, there is no reason to assume that such remedial action would not have been forthcoming if requested and if the trial court had believed that remedial action appropriate. But in the absence of unusual and patently prejudicial matters, not here presented, counsel cannot pursue a course which in effect expresses satisfaction with the action taken by the trial -court, and then complain on appeal that the trial court should have done more on its own initiative.

Appellants argue that “the trial court’s rulings were inconclusive, and in the aggregate had the overall effect of leaving the jury in confusion as to how much counsel’s bombast was controlling upon them.” We cannot agree. The court’s rulings concisely disposed of everything presented to it by appellant. The trial court necessarily has considerable discretion to exercise control of the voir dire examination, and generally .speaking it -is in a much more favorable position to determine the proper limits of such examination, and the existence of abuse and the resulting -prejudicial effect, if any, than an appellate court. It is only when there has been manifest [293]*293abuse of that discretion, and where there is probability of prejudice to a party that an appellate court should interfere. Olsten v. Susman, Mo., 391 S.W.2d 331, 335. In this case the trial court granted all the relief appellants requested as to their meritorious objections, and it had the opportunity to review the entire situation when ruling on the motion for new trial. We cannot find any basis for ruling on this appeal that the trial court abused its discretion in its control of the voir dire examination.

Appellants next assert prejudicial error resulted because the trial court permitted respondent’s counsel to comment unfavorably, in his argument to the jury, upon appellants’ failure to call Jack Schroeder as a witness in their case in chief. They contend that he was equally available to all parties.

Jack Schroeder was a passenger on the motorcycle, riding behind George Krud-wig, at the time of the collision. Appellants did not call him as a witness in the presentation of their case in chief. However, he was called by them.as a rebuttal witness. Miss Creech, a witness for respondent, had testified that when George Krudwig, with Jack Schroeder riding behind him, drove away from the gasoline pumps where the motorcycle had been serviced, he then drove without stopping out into Bellefontaine Road and made a complete turn, and then came back onto the service station property at a speed not less than twenty-five miles an hour. Jack Schroeder, as a rebuttal witness, testified that they stopped about ten feet from the pumps and then turned around and did not go out onto Bel-lefontaine Road. During argument to the jury the following occurred:

“Mr. McLaughlin: I think it is significant to note that there was a lot of talk about where this motorcycle was going. Mr. Schroeder, who came in, although an absolute witness, a passenger on the motorcycle, was not brought in the plaintiff’s case in chief * *
“Mr. Landau: I object. That is highly prejudicial, improper. He was just as available to the defendant as he was to the plaintiffs. That is an improper comment.
“The Court: All right, I will sustain that.”

We find it difficult to determine on what basis appellants contend that the trial court erroneously permitted the comment. In view of the relationship between George Krudwig and Jack Schroeder, it is not immediately evident that the comment was beyond the permissible limits, but in any event, the trial court sustained the objection, and that is all appellants requested. We find the same situation as to appellants’ seventh point in their brief where error is asserted in that the trial court permitted counsel for respondent to argue that appellants’ witnesses did not have on their leather jackets. The trial court agreed that the argument was improper and promptly sustained appellants’ objection, the only relief requested.

In appellants’ sixth point it is asserted that the trial court erred “in failing to grant a new trial for the prejudicial argument of defendant’s counsel in arguing to the jury that the plaintiff was a victim of malpractice, and that plaintiffs had a valid cause of action against the St. Louis County Hospital for such malpractice.” Appellants assert that at “intermittent intervals” respondent’s counsel argued to the jury “through the guise of objections to evidence, and otherwise” that the permanent impairment of George Krudwig’s arm resulted from malpractice.

Appellants’ counsel requested permission of the court to read to the jury portions of the medical records of Faith Hospital pertaining to George Krudwig. Respondent objected because George Krudwig had testified that the broken bones sustained in the collision with respondent’s automobile were set at the County Hospital, and “if they were improperly set, these are elements [294]*294of damage they may have against the St.

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Bluebook (online)
394 S.W.2d 290, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krudwig-ex-rel-krudwig-v-fowler-mo-1965.