Lucas v. Blanks

362 S.W.2d 736, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 564
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 11, 1962
DocketNo. 49225
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 362 S.W.2d 736 (Lucas v. Blanks) 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
Lucas v. Blanks, 362 S.W.2d 736, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 564 (Mo. 1962).

Opinions

HOUSER, Commissioner.

Action for $60,000 damages for personal injuries sustained by three-year-old Cynthia Lucas, who was struck by defendant’s automobile in a street intersection in DeSoto. Submitted to a jury on humanitarian failure to slacken, stop, swerve or sound a warning, there was a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff, pro ami, appeals, charging error in the giving of defendant’s verdict-directing Instruction D-4 and burden of proof instruction D-5. Defendant defends the action of the court in giving the instructions, and further contends that plaintiff made no submissible case.

On the afternoon of September 11, 1959 defendant was driving his automobile north on Blow Street, approaching the intersection of Blow and Miller Streets. Blow runs north and south. Miller runs east and west. Blow is steeply downhill as a northbound driver approaches Miller. There is nothing to keep one from seeing 450 feet down the Blow Street hill. Miller is generally level on each side of Blow. Blow has [737]*737a blacktop surface, and is about 25 feet wide. On each side of the blacktop there is a gravel shoulder and ditch. It is 36 feet from the east ditch to the west ditch. On the southeast corner of the intersection there is a store where candy is sold, around which children congregate. On the northwest corner of the intersection there is an unpaved area between the traveled portion of Blow and the fence which bounds the corner lot, which area is used for sidewalk purposes. At a point five feet south of the intersection a ditch had been cut across Blow Street. The ditch, which extended across the east half of the pavement, was barricaded. James Long was unloading merchandise from the rear of a panel delivery truck parked on the south side of Miller, east of Blow, headed east. Three or four children were standing in the unpaved area on the northwest corner of the intersection, 4 to 6 feet from the edge of the blacktop.

Those who testified to the facts surrounding the collision were defendant; his nephew Ralph Price, who was riding in the front seat of defendant’s automobile; James Long; and the three occupants of the Calvin Lambert automobile, which had been proceeding north on Blow about 200 feet behind defendant’s automobile.

Defendant testified that he was driving on his right-hand side at a speed of 10, 15 or 20 m. p. h. at a point some 60 feet south of the barricade. He slowed down to a speed of 5 m. p. h. for the barricade, and swung over to his left in order to get around it. At the time he pulled to the left he saw some children, “three or something like that,” standing on the sidewalk at the northwest corner of the intersection. That sidewalk is “a good four or five feet” from the edge of the blacktop of Blow Street. As his car first entered the intersection the children were in the same position. He entered the intersection at 5 m. p. h. Defendant did not see the child “run out” from the sidewalk as defendant entered the intersection. He saw her on the sidewalk, “and when [he] got around [the barricade] she hit [his] car, she run into [his car.]” Defendant testified, “I seen her on the sidewalk and when I looked, she’d run across I guess, that’s all I know.” He thought “maybe” the child had to move a matter of 25 or 30 feet to get from the sidewalk to the edge of his car. She “was so quick” he “thought she was still standing there,” but as he passed through the intersection the child came in contact with the left front fender of defendant’s automobile. In his deposition defendant admitted that prior to the accident somebody hollered “Watch it, don’t hit that girl,” or “Watch out for the little girl in front of you.” Defendant was going 5 m. p. h. at the time of the collision with plaintiff. The child was “not as tall as the fender.” Defendant testified: “[I]n my driving sight, I couldn’t see her, * * * I couldn’t see whether she was on the left side when she run into it or not, I couldn’t see her, she’s too small.” His windshield was clear. Defendant heard a thump, and he applied the brakes, bringing the automobile to a stop in 6 to 8 feet. The brakes were good. His car went about 2 feet after he “hit the brakes.” After he stopped plaintiff was lying beside the left wheel near the side of the fender.

When defendant’s automobile was 50 feet back from the intersection, Ralph Price noticed three or four children “approaching the intersection,” moving south on the sidewalk on the west side or west edge of Blow Street. As the defendant’s automobile reached and entered the intersection it was straddling the center line of Blow Street, getting back onto the right hand or east side. When the front end of defendant’s automobile reached the south edge of Miller Street, the children “were still on the west edge, or west side of Blow Street * * * in the area of the sidewalk * * * the sidewalk ends there * * * they were at the intersection of Blow and Miller.” Defendant’s car was then traveling not more than 5-10 m. p. h. Price paid no attention to the children after seeing them on the west side of Blow. He did not see plaintiff dart or move into the street. When the front [738]*738bumper had gotten not more than S to 6 yards out into the intersection he heard a noise or thump. At the time of the occurrence of the impact defendant was heading back to his lane. Defendant was just beginning to accelerate and was going not more than 5-10 m. p. h. Defendant stopped immediately, and Price found the child lying on the street not more than a foot or two back from the extreme front end of the car, to the left of the left front fender. After the accident he examined a rubbed mark on the left front fender six or seven inches back from the light.

James Long, who was unloading his truck 25 feet from the place where the collision occurred, heard someone yell “Look out,” and looked “toward the yell.” At the time he heard the words “look out” the accident had not happened. He saw the automobile hit the child, who was standing in the street, not moving, facing the automobile, at a 45-degree angle. He said she was hit by the right front fender and front portion of the automobile and thrown 15 feet down the hill in front of the automobile.

Calvin Lambert, driving his car behind defendant’s automobile, noticed defendant’s brake lights go on just as defendant’s automobile entered the intersection. He heard somebody yell at a time “fairly close” to the time the brake lights went on. From the driver’s seat he could see to the left of defendant’s automobile but he did not see any children come out into the street from the left side of the street or to the left of defendant’s car, and did not see any children standing on the left side, or any child run into the side of defendant’s automobile. When asked where this child came from he answered “She must have been already in the street, in front of the car or otherwise I’d of seen her,” but admitted he “hardly ever” looked that far ahead, and that he was not watching that far ahead at that time.

Lambert’s wife and daughter failed to see any children at any time. The daughter was sitting on the right side of the car. She saw no child come out from the right side of the road.

A police officer found fingerprints on the left side of the left front fender, 12-18 inches back from the headlight, after the accident.

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362 S.W.2d 736, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-blanks-mo-1962.