Levin v. Caldwell

285 S.W.2d 655, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 730
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 9, 1956
Docket44745
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 285 S.W.2d 655 (Levin v. Caldwell) 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
Levin v. Caldwell, 285 S.W.2d 655, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 730 (Mo. 1956).

Opinion

HOLMÁN, Commissioner.

. - [1] Personal injury, action in which plaintiff, Etta Levin, obtained a verdict for $5,000 against defendants, Virgil E. Caldwell and Irwin Kotelov. Also involved was a:cross-claim by which Caldwell sought to recover $11,000 from Kotelov for his personal injuries-and damage to his car. - Verdict on this claim was for Kotelov. Each defendant has appealed from • plaintiff’s judgment and Caldwell also appeals from the adverse judgment on his cross-claim. This latter controversy gives us jurisdiction.

The collision in question occurred at about 3 p. m. on Sunday, July 6, 1952, at the intersection of 47th Street and the northbound lane of The Paseo in Kansas City, Missouri. Plaintiff was riding in a Pontiac automobile being driven by her nephew, defendant Irwin Kotelov'. They were going north on Paseo at a speed variously estimated from 20 to 35 m. p. h. Plaintiff stated that the car was-in the center. of this (one-way) street which was 40 feet wide-. . The north and southbound lanes of The!Paseo áre separated by a'parkway 108 feet wide; 47th Street is 48 feet wide at this point. The use hereafter of the word “ihtersection” will be understood to mean the intersection of 47th Street and the northbound lane of Paseo. According to plaintiff, when the Kotelov car was about 60 feet from the point of collision, she saw the Chevrolet driven by Caldwell -coming east on.47th about, five feet from the intersection and, either at that time or a little later, told Irwin to “watch-out.” Each Car- proceeded into%the’ intersection- and the Pontiac struck the Caldwell car at 'kbbut its’ center, causing it to be turned over. The point of collision was about the center-of Paseo and a littlp south of the center of 47th Street. Plaintiff and defendant Caldwell were both injured, but no issue upon this appeal requires.that we consider the extent of these injuries. ; ,

The traffic at this intersection was controlled by signal lights which exhibited successively the usual green, yellow and red lights; -It is obvious that the primary cause *658 of this collision was that one of the drivers proceeded into the intersection when'a red signal light was being exhibited in his direction. Each, however, testified positively that the signal light governing traffic in his direction was green at the time he drove into the intersection. This was an issue to be determined by the jury, although the positive testimony of the three disinterested witnesses who saw the lights was that the green light was being exhibited on Paseo and the red on 47th Street.

Defendant Caldwell testified that he was driving in the southbound lane of Paseo and made a left turn onto 47th Street and then drove east to the point of collision. He stated the signal light was green as he approached 47th and that it flashed yellow just as he made the left turn, and that before entering the intersection with the northbound lane he looked at the signal light and it was green. There was shrubbery in the parkway that would obscure Caldwell’s view to the right (south)- until the front of his car was fairly close to the intersection. When his car was about five feet from the intersection he saw the Kote-lov car about 75 to 80 feet to the south. He said Kotelov’s car was being driven with its left side about ten feet from the west curb of Paseo. At that time Caldwell said he was going 18 m. p. h. and Kotelov was driving about 35 m. p. h. -He assumed that Kotelov would stop, but when the Pontiac was 35 or 40 feet away Caldwell realized .the danger of collision- and attempted to speed up and thus ¿avoid being struck. Kotelov testified that when he first saw the Chevrolet it was already in the intersection and was only 10 or 15 feet away. He did not attempt to swerve but “hit the brakes” and was able to skid the wheels for three feet before his car struck the Chevrolet. Additional evidence may be detailed in connection with the points that will be hereinafter discussed.

We will first consider Caldwell’s appeal from plaintiff’s judgment. At the outset he complains of the error in giving plaintiff’s Instruction No. 2 which authorized a verdict against said defendant upon a finding of primary negligence in either of three respects, as follows, “that defendant, Virgil Caldwell, failed to use the highest degree of care in that he failed to keep a vigilant watch ahead and laterally for other vehicles traveling on, upon and across said intersection, or operated said Chevrolet, automobile at an excessive rate of speed under the circumstances then and there existing, or failed to obey the red traffic signal governing eastbound traffic, if you so find * * It is argued .that the negligence of Caldwell in failing “to keep a vigilant watch” was not submissible under the evidence. We shall assume that the hypothesized finding of failure to keep a lateral lookout for cars “traveling on, upon and across said intersection” may be construed to include cars approaching the intersection as was the car driven by Kotelov.

In determining the issue presented it is essential that we consider the evidence relating to the location of Caldwell’s car on 47th Street at the time he could have first seen the Pontiac appoaching the intersection. Plaintiff first saw the Caldwell Chevrolet when it was four or five feet west of the intersection. Caldwell and Kotelov were both called as witnesses by plaintiff. On this issue Caldwell' related that the shrubbery at the southwest corner of the intersection obstructed his view to the south and that he couldn’t see very well until he got fairly close to the intersection. Kotelov testified that the bushes obstructed his view of the Caldwell car, although they did not come out to the curb and a person could see “a little bit” to the west. No witness was examined directly upon the issue of the exact location of the front end of a car proceeding in the path used- by Caldwell when the driver could first see a car being driven in the center lane of Paseo 75 or 80 feet to the south. An examination of the whole record and the material statements in all the briefs, however, causes us to conclude that all parties assumed that the point was about five feet west of the intersection. There was no oral testimony that would place the point any farther back. The only evidence from which it might be possible to conclude otherwise is a photograph of *659 the intersection which shows the shrubbery in question. However, from a mere examination of this photograph, we are unable to conclude that Caldwell could have seen the approaching Pontiac when his car was appreciably farther back from the intersection than the five feet indicated.

Caldwell testified that he saw the Kotelov car when the front of his car was four or five feet from the intersection. There is no evidence to the contrary. If, as we have indicated, there was no substantial evidence from which a jury reasonably could have found that Caldwell could, in the exercise of the highest degree of- care, have seen the Kotelov car sooner than he did see it, then, it must follow that there was no substantial evidence that Caldwell failed to keep a lookout and hence the submission was error.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W.2d 655, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levin-v-caldwell-mo-1956.