Loveless v. Berberich Delivery Co.

73 S.W.2d 790, 335 Mo. 650, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 440
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 9, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 790 (Loveless v. Berberich Delivery Co.) 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
Loveless v. Berberich Delivery Co., 73 S.W.2d 790, 335 Mo. 650, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 440 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

This case has been reassigned to the writer at the present term. It is an action for damages for personal injuries growing *Page 653 out of an automobile collision on State Highway No. 13, in Illinois. The suit was brought in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, where plaintiff had judgment for $10,000 against defendant Berberich, from which the latter appealed. Originally there was another defendant, the Pulitzer Publishing Company, but at the close of plaintiff's evidence plaintiff dismissed as to that defendant. The assignments of error urged on this appeal are predicated upon two instructions given for plaintiff; one relating to the statutory duty of an automobile driver to turn to the right of the center of the road upon meeting another vehicle, the other relating to violation of a statutory speed regulation. No question is raised as to the pleadings or that plaintiff did not make a submissible case.

At the time of the collision, which occurred about 1:30 A.M. July 11, 1927, plaintiff was driving a 1923 model Ford automobile, going west on said Illinois Highway No. 13, and one Feldscher, employee of defendant Berberich, was driving the latter's delivery truck east. His business was delivering newspapers to dealers in a number of towns in that part of Illinois. The highway was paved with an eighteen-foot concrete pavement having a black line running lengthwise through the middle, and was straight at the place where the collision occurred. Plaintiff's evidence tended to show that it was a moonlight night; that his car was equipped with magneto lights which were burning, although dimly; that he first discovered defendant's truck, running without headlights, when it was about two hundred feet from him; the truck was "crowding the black line" when he first saw it and when it was about seventy-five feet from him he noticed it coming over across the black line whereupon he at once "cut his steering wheel" to his right and started to apply his brakes, "and by that (time) I was hit." He testified that he was to the north (his right) of the black line at all times and that at the moment of collision his left wheels were about three feet north of said line; that he was rendered unconscious by the collision and did not regain consciousness until some time later in a hospital. Other witnesses who arrived very soon after the accident testified as to the location of the cars, which had not been moved. Plaintiff's witnesses testified that the Ford, which was practically demolished, was lying on the dirt shoulder of the highway north of the concrete, and that the truck was lying on its right side diagonally across the pavement, its front end toward the northeast and four or five feet north of the middle or black line of the pavement. Defendant's witnesses testified that the front end of the truck was about two or two and a half feet north of said line, and that the Ford was only partially off the pavement on the north side, one end of it being still on the pavement. Feldscher, the driver of the truck, a witness for defendant, testified that he did not see plaintiff's car; that plaintiff was driving without *Page 654 lights; that just before the collision, when, as he thought, he must have been within twelve or fifteen feet of plaintiff, the lights of his truck, with which he had been having some trouble, went out and he "pushed in" his clutch and shut off the gas and was coasting to a stop, when he hit plaintiff's car. We quote his testimony as to his position relative to the middle of the pavement:

"Q. Where abouts were you in the road at the time of this accident, with reference to which side of the road? A. Well, at the time my lights went out I was over to the right side, as far over as I could get.

"Q. At the time of the collision did you note the position of your car? A. Well, I didn't have time to get over, that is, on the wrong side, I know that. I had my steering wheel about straight.

"Q. You had your steering wheel about straight? A. Yes, sir; and I couldn't have gotten over the black line."

[1] I. Appellant's first contention is that the court erred in giving plaintiff's Instruction No. 1, reading as follows:

"The court instructs the jury that at the time when and the place where the automobiles mentioned in the evidence came into collision with each other, the law of Illinois imposed upon the driver of a motor vehicle when meeting another vehicle on a public highway, in operating such motor vehicle to seasonably turn the same to the right of the center of the beaten track of said highway so as to pass without interference.

"And if the jury find and believe from the evidence that route No. 13 mentioned in the evidence was at the time and place mentioned, a public highway in the State of Illinois and further find that the defendant Berberich's driver of said automobile truck while driving and operating the same on said highway at the time of and immediately before said automobiles in question came into collision, negligently failed to seasonably turn defendant's automobile truck to the right of the center of the beaten track of said highway so as to pass the automobile in which plaintiff was riding without interference, then such failure, if any, was negligence on the part of the defendant, Berberich's driver; and if the jury find and believe from the evidence that as a direct consequence of such negligence above specified, if any, plaintiff was injured, and at the time plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety, then you will find for the plaintiff and against the defendant, William Berberich."

The Illinois statute, pleaded and introduced in evidence by plaintiff reads:

"Whenever a person operating a motor vehicle shall meet on a public highway any other person riding or driving a horse or other draft animal, or any other vehicle, the person so operating such motor vehicle *Page 655 or vehicles, or riding or driving a horse or other draft animal, shall each seasonably turn to the right of the center of the beaten track of such highway so as to pass without interference."

Appellant's contention is that the instruction is erroneous because it assumes that appellant's truck driver was on the north, that is his left, side of the roadway immediately before the collision, and negligently failed to seasonably turn to the right of the center. He argues: "He could not turn it to the right side of the beaten track unless it was on the left side thereof and this assumes necessarily that he was on the left side. Otherwise, if he was on the right side of the beaten track already, then the instruction required him to turn further to the right even to getting off the highway, if necessary to avoid a collision with the Ford car, even if it was on the wrong side." Appellant's contention goes too far. The instruction clearly does not assume that the truck driver failed seasonably to turn to the right but expressly requires the jury to so find. The instruction may be subject to criticism on the ground that technically it may be said to assume that the truck driver was on the left of the center of the roadway before the collision, because otherwise, as appellant argues, he could not have turned to the right of the center line. We cannot agree with appellant's further argument that under the instruction the truck driver was required to turn still further to the right even though, prior to the collision, he was on his own side of the road. It only required, in the language of the statute, that he turn to the right of thecenter of the beaten track so as to pass plaintiff's car without interference. It also required the jury to find that plaintiff was at the time in the exercise of ordinary care himself.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 790, 335 Mo. 650, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loveless-v-berberich-delivery-co-mo-1934.