Lyons v. Taylor

333 S.W.2d 346, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 560
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1960
DocketNo. 30347
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 333 S.W.2d 346 (Lyons v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyons v. Taylor, 333 S.W.2d 346, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 560 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $7,000 which a jury unanimously awarded respondent, hereinafter called plaintiff, for personal injuries suffered as a result of a collision at Sarah and Olive Streets in the City of St. Louis, on August 3, 1956, between a tractor (truck) operated by plaintiff and an automobile driven by appellant, hereinafter referred to as defendant. The action was originally brought by one Emig, against Auffenberg Auto Sales, Oscar Taylor, Proctor Sales Co., and Francis Lyons. Lyons filed a crossclaim against Taylor, one of his co-defendants, and, Emig having dismissed his action, this cause was tried upon the crossclaim.

The facts were that plaintiff was operating a cab over engine diesel tractor without trailer attached, on which he had received delivery that afternoon, and was going from his home at 4326 Maryland Avenue to the Mack Motor Company, which was located on Chouteau Avenue, to pick up his automobile. He got on Olive Street at Boyle, and was traveling eastwardly. The time of the collision was between 10:00 P.M. and 11:0Q P.M., and it occurred at the intersection of Sarah and Olive Streets. At that intersection, there are stop signs on all four corners.

Concerning the collision, plaintiff testified that there were cars parked alongside the curb on both sides of Olive Street at the place where this collision occurred; that he made his stop at the intersection where the front of his vehicle was 10-12 feet back from Sarah, and traveled that distance, plus the width of Sarah, about 40 feet, plus a few more feet when he saw a car starting to come out of a parking space on his side of the street about four parking spaces from the corner. He gradually reduced his speed from 20 mph to 2-3 mph, and traveled about three car lengths (he estimated a car length at 15-16 ft.) from the time he applied his brakes, and was then struck from the rear, causing an “awful bad jolt.” Plaintiff did not collide with the car that pulled out from the curb. He did not notice an automobile coming up behind him. The front end of defendant’s automobile struck the center rear of plaintiff’s tractor. Plaintiff, when struck, was leaning forward shifting gears, and he was thrown to the rear of the seat and his head was thrown back. After the collision, he started to move his tractor to the curb and, over objection, was allowed to testify that the defendant jumped up on the running board and swung in the window and hit him in the face, on the nose, with his fist. Plaintiff stated that he then decided to leave, and drove east on Olive to Vande-venter, then south on Vandeventer to Lin-dell, and west on Lindell, heading for the police station on that street. He looked back as he drove away and saw Emig, whom he later learned was a passenger in defendant’s car, standing beside the car. He also heard some noises which he was allowed to testify, over objection, sounded like gunshots. As he was driving west on Lindell, he was told to pull over to the curb by a policeman who pulled alongside him. At this time, Emig drove up behind him in the car that had struck him, and the three of them returned to the scene of the accident. When plaintiff returned to the scene, he saw the defendant sitting on the sidewalk. He testified that the whole front of [349]*349the car defendant was driving was caved in, and that his tractor was damaged in that the right rear inside tire was cut across the fiber, a taillight and the air tank were smashed, and the copper air lines were jammed all the way up to the compressor. In addition, the edges of the frame were bent in. At the time he was struck, plaintiff was in the right-hand driving lane, Olive Street having one driving and one parking lane on each side of the center line.

On cross-examination, plaintiff testified that there was an officer standing on the corner when the accident took place, who later stopped him on Lindell, but he didn’t know his name. He had gotten past Lin-dell and Sarah, on Lindell, when he was stopped. The exhaustive testimony as to the ownership and registration of plaintiff’s tractor, and the vehicles he traded in on the tractor, is not pertinent to this appeal, the plaintiff having abandoned any claim for property damage, and submitting his cause only on his claim for personal injuries. Boyle Avenue, where plaintiff came onto Olive, is two blocks from Sarah Street. Plaintiff stated that he did not pass defendant. Plaintiff’s stop was dead at Sarah and he shifted gears, and it was about 65 feet from this stop to where he was when the car pulled out of the parking space in front of him. He was then going 20 mph and was going at approximately that speed when he put on his brakes and slowed to 2-3 mph in the next 50-60 feet, but was still rolling when this accident happened, and had the clutch depressed to shift gears. The width of his tractor from outside to outside of the rear wheels is 8 feet; the A frame sticks out behind the rear wheels about 15 inches and is approximately 4 feet wide. The plaintiff had another person with him at the time of the accident who had applied to him for a job, but he didn’t know his name, nor has he ever seen this person since.

Defendant’s evidence was that on the date of the accident he was employed by Auffenberg Motors as assistant manager, working on the Gravois lot of that firm, and George Emig, also an employee of that firm, worked on the Natural Bridge lot as a salesman. Defendant had gotten off work at 9:30 P.M., and had driven up to pick up Emig, whom he had previously called, and they had driven over to a cafe at Newstead and Olive Streets to eat. They left the cafe after eating only (having nothing to drink at the cafe, nor did he have anything that evening) at about 11:05 or 11:10 P.M., going east on Boyle. The plaintiff was traveling closely behind him, right on his bumper, and did not pass until defendant stopped at the stop sign at Sarah, when he went around defendant at a speed of 20-30 mph, and got back in front of defendant when defendant was just past the comer of Sarah Street. Defendant testified that when he started up, it appeared to him that plaintiff was going to proceed at that speed, but when defendant got to within 10-15 feet of plaintiff, plaintiff made an abrupt stop; that when the tractor came back in front of defendant, the distance between the two vehicles was about 5-10 feet, and they got as far as 15-20 feet apart. When the vehicles were this distance apart, defendant was traveling 20-30 mph and could stop in 25 feet, including reaction time. Defendant applied his brakes, hearing the squeal of rubber, and reduced his speed before the impact. Contact took place between the part of defendant’s car between the headlights and the A frame of the tractor. After the impact, defendant started to get out of his car, and heard the tractor motor revving up and the tractor starting off. He ran after it and caught up with it, swinging up on the running board, and told plaintiff to turn off the key and stop. When plaintiff said “No,” defendant reached in the window for the key, and plaintiff pushed him off of the truck. Defendant saw the witness Dolan, a police officer, stop the next passerby and jump in that car and go after the plaintiff and Mr. Emig, who' had started up defendant’s automobile and had gone after plaintiff. Defendant further testified his car was just like a new auto[350]*350mobile, and that a vehicle equipped with airbrakes could stop about twice as fast as his car equipped with hydraulic brakes. Defendant testified he never struck plaintiff at any time.

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Bluebook (online)
333 S.W.2d 346, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyons-v-taylor-moctapp-1960.