Larsen v. Webb

58 S.W.2d 967, 332 Mo. 370, 90 A.L.R. 67, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 502
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 16, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 967 (Larsen v. Webb) 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
Larsen v. Webb, 58 S.W.2d 967, 332 Mo. 370, 90 A.L.R. 67, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 502 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

Plaintiff, respondent here, brought this action in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, for damages, in the amount of $30,000, for personal injuries which he alleges he sustained when an automobile, owned by defendants W.S. Webb and Mrs. W.S. Webb, husband and wife, and being driven in an alleged negligent manner, by their daughter, defendant Mina Mary Webb, as their agent, collided with an automobile driven by plaintiff *Page 373 at the intersection of Indiana Avenue and Seventh Street in the city of Lawrence, Kansas.

The trial resulted in a verdict for defendants. Upon plaintiff's motion the verdict was set aside and a new trial granted. Defendants appealed from the order of the court granting a new trial.

[1] The sole ground, specified of record by the trial court, for granting a new trial is, "that error was committed in the giving of Instruction P," which the court gave at request of defendants. The instruction is as follows:

"The court instructs the jury that the burden of proof rests upon the plaintiff to prove to your reasonable satisfaction by the greater weight of all the credible evidence in the case that defendants were guilty of negligence as submitted to you in other instructions herein. By the greater weight of the credible evidence is meant the greater amount of evidence which you believe to be truthful and accurate; and in this connection youare instructed that if you believe any person testifying in thiscause to have willfully sworn falsely to any fact or circumstancethen you are at liberty to disregard all or any part of thetestimony of such person." (Italics ours.)

The propriety of giving an instruction, in this case, applying the maxim, "Falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus," as attempted in the italicized portion of the foregoing instruction, was not challenged by the plaintiff. The testimony of plaintiff and two of the defendants is so sharply contradictory and at variance as to the material facts that plaintiff seems to concede that an instruction correctly advising the jury as to the principle laid down in this maxim was warranted. But the alleged error, in the italicized portion of the instruction, of which plaintiff complained and which the trial court found and specified as a ground for granting a new trial, is that the instruction is too broad, fails to limit the false testimony to any material fact in the case and authorizes the jury to disregard the entire testimony of a witness if they believe the witness has sworn falsely as to any statement he may have made though such matter is not connected with or material to the decisive issues and questions involved. In 14 Ruling Case Law, page 736, we find this statement: "It has been uniformly held that it is error to instruct them (the jury) that if they find a witness has testified falsely in one part of his testimony, they may disregard the whole of the testimony of such witness, without limiting the word `falsely' by a qualifying word such as `knowingly,' `wilfully,' or `corruptly,' and without adding thefurther limitation `upon a material matter.'" The authorities consistently hold that, in cases in which such an instruction is proper, the jury should be informed that the false testimony must be as to a material fact. "`Falsus in uno, falsus in *Page 374 omnibus,' is recognized as one of the leading maxims of legal jurisprudence. From the early history of our State to the present time, the principle of law announced in the above maxim has been recognized as being properly presented" by an instruction advising the jury "that if you believe any witness has knowingly" (or wilfully or intentionally) "sworn falsely to any material fact" you are at liberty to disregard all or any part of such witness's testimony. [State v. Hamilton, 304 Mo. 19,263 S.W. 127, and cases there cited.] [2] However it is not essential that the word "material" be used and a failure to use that particular word does not make the instruction erroneous "if the same meaning is conveyed by other equivalent expressions," or language. [First National Bank v. Minneapolis N. Elevator Co., 11 N.D. 280, 91 N.W. 436.] In Hart v. Hopson, 52 Mo. App. 177, the instruction was that if the jury believed "any witness has wilfully sworn falsely as to any of the facts mentioned in the instructions herein, as bearing on plaintiff's alleged claim or defendant's defense thereto, then you are at liberty to disregard entirely the testimony of such witnesses." It was held that the instruction limits the false testimony to the "hypothetical facts stated in the instructions" and therefore to material facts in the case. [3] In the instruction under examination neither the word material was used nor any equivalent expression or language but the jury was told "that if you believe any person testifying in this cause to have wilfully sworn falsely to any fact orcircumstance then you are at liberty to disregard all or any part of the testimony of such person." [See White v. Lowenberg,55 Mo. App. 69, and Lloyd v. Meservey, 129 Mo. App. 636, 108 S.W. 595.] We are constrained to hold with the trial court that the instruction, as given, was erroneous.

[4] But defendants, appellants here, contend, that although the instruction was erroneous plaintiff's motion for a new trial should have been overruled; that under the evidence and the law of Kansas, as defendants say same is declared by the decisions of the Supreme Court of that State which they cite, no case was made for submission to the jury and that the instructions in the nature of demurrers to the evidence, asked by defendants at the close of all the evidence in the case, should have been given. Liability must be determined by the law of Kansas and if sufficient evidence is not found in the record to make out a submissible case under the applicable law of Kansas then the court should have directed a verdict for defendants. In such situation plaintiff would not have been entitled to a new trial for he could not have been prejudiced by the erroneous instruction. [Trainer v. Sphalerite Mining Co., 243 Mo. 359, 148 S.W. 70.]

The challenge defendants thus make to plaintiff's case requires *Page 375 that we look to the evidence. The collision occurred in the intersection of Seventh Street and Indiana Avenue, in the city of Lawrence, Kansas, between one-thirty and two o'clock in the afternoon of October 24, 1927. Indiana Avenue runs north and south, Seventh Street east and west. Both streets are paved. Indiana Avenue is thirty-five feet wide and a single street car track runs north and south in the center of the avenue. East of Indiana Avenue, Seventh Street is about thirty-five feet wide but west of the avenue is only about twenty-seven feet wide, the north curb line of Seventh Street west of Indiana Avenue being four feet south of the north curb line east of Indiana and the south curb line, west of Indiana being four feet north of the south curb line east of Indiana. There were no stop signs at the intersection. Victory Highway, a cross-state highway, in passing through Lawrence, is routed along and upon Seventh Street. Plaintiff was traveling upon Victory Highway from Kansas City, Kansas, to his home in Florence, Kansas. He left Kansas City, Kansas, at eleven o'clock A.M., traveling alone, driving a 1924 model Dodge roadster.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 967, 332 Mo. 370, 90 A.L.R. 67, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larsen-v-webb-mo-1933.