Liles v. Associated Transports, Inc.

220 S.W.2d 36, 359 Mo. 87, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 591
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 9, 1949
DocketNo. 41029.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 220 S.W.2d 36 (Liles v. Associated Transports, Inc.) 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
Liles v. Associated Transports, Inc., 220 S.W.2d 36, 359 Mo. 87, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 591 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

Action for damages for personal injuries sustained when plaintiff's automobile collided with defendant's truck. Intervenor, as assignee of plaintiff, seeks to recover the damages to plaintiff's automobile, since payment therefor was made to plaintiff under a policy insuring against damage by collision. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff for $37,500 and for intervenor for $1105.00. Defendant has appealed. Error is assigned on the refusal of defendant's requests for directed verdicts, on the giving and refusal of instructions and on an alleged excessive verdict for plaintiff.

The cause was submitted to a jury on alleged negligence of defendant under the humanitarian doctrine in failing to stop or swerve its truck to the right and avoid a collision. Appellant contends that "plaintiff offered no evidence as to the distance within which he *Page 94 might have stopped" his automobile; that "the time when his peril became imminent is left to conjecture"; and, that "he therefore failed to make a submissible case on humanitarian negligence." The argument is based on the recognized theory that a situation of imminent peril is the basic fact of the humanitarian doctrine; and that no duty whatever arises under that doctrine unless and until a situation of imminent peril comes into existence. Steuernagel v. St. Louis Pub. Serv. Co., 357 Mo. 904,211 S.W.2d 696; Blaser v. Coleman (En Banc), 358 Mo. 157,213 S.W.2d 420.

The collision occurred on U.S. Highway No. 67, near Neeleyville, in Butler County. The highway was straight and level and the concrete pavement 20 feet in width, with a 10 foot earth shoulder on either side. Immediately east of and adjoining the highway was a commercial development with three business places fronting west on a graveled areaway some 400 feet in length. Beginning at the north was a filling station and a garage, then a restaurant and, at the south, a liquor store. Three graveled drives entered the areaway from the highway.

Defendant's outfit consisted of a Ford truck chassis designed for school bus purposes. It was somewhat larger than the ordinary truck chassis and had dual rear wheels, the usual hood and brakes, no rear fenders and no cab or body. A seat for the driver was fastened to the frame. A second chassis of the same type was attached to the first in semi-trailer fashion with the front end mounted on the rear of the first chassis. The total length of the vehicle (tractor and trailer) was 42 feet. Two of these outfits, each with its own [39] driver, were proceeding from Lima, Ohio to Conway, Arkansas.

About 9:30 a.m., March 23, 1947, the first unit pulled in and parked near the restaurant mentioned above. The driver of the second unit slowed down and pulled off on the right shoulder, but was going too fast for either the first or second drive, and undertook to turn left (east) into the third drive, 135 feet beyond the second drive. As this unit (referred to as a truck) turned to the left across the highway, it blocked the path of plaintiff's automobile, which was proceeding south on the same highway and was attempting to pass. Plaintiff's automobile (hereinafter referred to as a car) struck the left rear side of the tractor section near its rear wheels, broke it loose from the semi-trailer section and turned it over into a ditch on the south side of the drive. As the truck and car had approached the commercial development in question, both caught up with and passed around the automobile of one McCauley, who was traveling in the same direction, and then, when the driver of the truck decided to turn left into the third drive, he looked back, saw what he said was the McCauley automobile safely to his rear, and turned left across the highway. He did not see plaintiff's car until he saw it swerve and skid immediately before the collision. *Page 95

Plaintiff testified that, after the truck pulled around McCauley, the truck driver pulled "clear off" the road "quite a ways down the road in front of me . . . and I thought he was bringing the truck to a stop and I went around McCauley and attempted to pass the truck." The truck had passed two wide gravel driveways and was on the west shoulder of the road, with only its left rear wheel still on the pavement. Plaintiff's car was "about the center of the highway and had just passed McCauley and pulled over." The highway ahead was clear and plaintiff was traveling 45 to 55 miles per hour. Plaintiff saw the truck when it first started to turn to the left, but he had already sounded his horn and "had already started around." He did not know exactly how close he was to the rear of the truck, probably 150 feet back, "approximately 150 to 200 feet back," when he saw the truck start to turn. "Naturally I thought he was going to stop and I veered over to the center and left side of the pavement and applied my brakes. . . . When he came on across I veered to the right side but he was completely across the highway." Plaintiff "had probably slowed down to 30 to 35 miles an hour" before the impact. The truck wasn't blocking the highway when plaintiff was 150 to 200 feet back, but plaintiff put his brakes on just as soon as the truck started across in front of him. He was trying to stop his car, but he traveled "a certain distance" before he could get his foot off the accelerator and on to the brake. He thought he skidded the wheels for a distance of about 20 feet.

McCauley's testimony tended to show that when the truck turned out on the highway, plaintiff's car was between McCauley and the truck. McCauley saw the wheels of plaintiff's car sliding immediately before the collision and knew the brakes were on, the whole road was blocked and plaintiff could not have avoided the collision by going either to the right or to the left.

Plaintiff's wife, who was with him, testified that they had passed a "car and straightened up and right ahead of us we saw a vehicle pulled off the highway as if to stop." Just as plaintiff started or swerved out a little bit to the left to pass and speeded up to pass, the truck "started to pull off" and "came directly across the highway." Plaintiff was far enough back for the truck to get across and block the highway before the collision.

For defendant, the truck driver testified that the front end of his truck and the left front wheel were off the east edge of the pavement at the time of the impact. He didn't know whether the right front wheel was off or not. He fixed his rate of speed on the left turn at about 15 miles per hour. Defendant's other driver fixed plaintiff's speed at 60-70 miles per hour and the truck's speed on the turn at 15 miles per hour, but admitted he had probably testified before that the truck's speed was about 5 miles an hour, or between 5 and 10 miles an hour. On cross examination, he fixed the speed at between *Page 96 5 and 10 miles per hour, "a low rate of speed." Another witness for defendant fixed the speed of the truck on the [40] turn at 10-15 miles per hour and said he heard plaintiff's "brakes scream," when the car was 20 to 30 feet from the truck. The truck crossed the pavement somewhat at an angle, not a sharp turn to the left. When the truck started its left turn, and even after both front wheels were on the pavement, it could have been swerved or turned right and proceeded down the highway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 S.W.2d 36, 359 Mo. 87, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liles-v-associated-transports-inc-mo-1949.