Melenson v. Howell

130 S.W.2d 555, 344 Mo. 1137, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 453
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 7, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 555 (Melenson v. Howell) 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
Melenson v. Howell, 130 S.W.2d 555, 344 Mo. 1137, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 453 (Mo. 1939).

Opinions

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff had a verdict for $25,000. The trial court required aremittitur of $10,000, which was made, and final judgment was entered for $15,000. Defendant has appealed from this judgment.

[1] Plaintiff makes the contention "that defendant is in the same position on this record as if none of the points raised were mentioned in a motion for new trial." The basis of this claim is that, although defendant filed a timely motion for new trial, this went to the first judgment entered for $25,000, and that, when, after remittitur, a new judgment was entered for $15,000, no motion was thereafter filed. Plaintiff says "the motion for new trial filed March 2, 1936, was directed to `the verdict and judgment' then existing, and could not have been directed to the final judgment entered some four months afterwards." The same point is made as to motion in arrest of judgment. This is a misconception of the functions of such motion. A motion for new trial is a common law motion to prevent judgment, so it is directed only to the verdict and not to any judgment. [State ex rel. Conant v. Trimble, 311 Mo. 128, 277 S.W. 916, l.c. 920.] Its primary purpose is to prevent the entry of a final judgment, on the verdict, which it would accomplish if sustained. The usual practice in this State is to immediately enter a judgment on a verdict. However, such a judgment remains interlocutory and does not become final until after the time for filing motions to prevent entry of judgment has expired (Sec. 1005, R.S. 1929) without such motions being filed, or, if filed, until they are determined. [Cox v. Schaab Stove Furniture Co., 332 Mo. 492,58 S.W.2d 700; Stephens v. Oberman Mfg. Co., 334 Mo. 1078,70 S.W.2d 899.] The secondary function of a motion for new trial is to preserve matters of exception for appellate review, which purpose is accomplished, as to all such matters mentioned therein, when the trial court overrules it, and enters final judgment, or makes the judgment final if already entered. [Castorina v. Herrmann, 340 Mo. 1026, 104 S.W.2d 297.] Only one motion for a new trial is necessary to accomplish either purpose. In fact, a second motion, filed more than four *Page 1142 days after verdict, amounts only to a suggestion and would not authorize any court to do anything that it could not do without it. [State ex rel. Conant v. Trimble, 311 Mo. 128, 277 S.W. 916; State ex rel. Union Electric Light Power Co. v. Sevier,339 Mo. 732, 98 S.W.2d 980; City of St. Louis v. Senter Comm. Co.,340 Mo. 633, 102 S.W.2d 103.] There was no final judgment in this case (from which an appeal could be taken) except the one entered after remittitur. This Court en Banc in St. Louis v. Senter Commission Co., supra, finally disposed of the idea that a motion in arrest could serve any function in the preservation of any matter for appellate review.

[2] Plaintiff's case was submitted solely upon negligence under the humanitarian rule. Defendant contends that plaintiff did not make a jury case, and assigns as error the overruling of his demurrer to the evidence. Therefore, the facts hereinafter stated are those which the evidence tended to show when viewed most favorably to plaintiff.

Plaintiff was injured in an automobile collision at the junction of Valentine Road with Broadway, in Kansas City, on May 19, 1935, between 7:30 and 8:00 P.M. The headlights of plaintiff's car were on at the time. There had been a drizzling rain in the afternoon but the streets were not wet at that time. Valentine Road ran west from Broadway but did not continue east beyond Broadway. There was a filling station on the east side of Broadway, facing this junction, located where Valentine Road would have been built if it had been extended east beyond Broadway. There were two street car tracks in the center of Broadway. Plaintiff approached the junction driving south on the west (southbound) track (right wheels "a foot to the east" of the west rail) while defendant was driving north on the east (northbound) track ("astraddle of the east rail"). Broadway was seventy-two feet from curb to curb; Valentine Road was 36.4 feet. It was fourteen feet, eight and one-half inches from the west rail of the southbound track to the east rail of the northbound track. There were pedestrian lanes eleven feet wide, marked across Broadway (east and west), somewhat back from points where the sidewalks, both north and south on Valentine, reached the junction, so that these lanes were seventy-three feet apart. There were safety zones, for street car passengers, commencing just beyond these pedestrian lanes (both north and south of the intersection) and extending back fifty feet, each with a further triangular extension of twelve feet. There were traffic signal lights at this junction to control both the Broadway traffic and the traffic coming into it from Valentine Road. There was a moving picture theater and drug store on the southwest corner of the junction. On the evening of the collision it was cloudy and sunset was at 7:27 P.M.

Plaintiff was driving alone in a Ford sedan. Plaintiff's evidence was that she approached the junction at about 20 miles per hour. As she got there the lights were red. She decided to get gasoline at *Page 1143 the filling station on the east side of Broadway. The north driveway into this station began just south of the north pedestrian lane of the junction and this driveway was twenty feet wide. Plaintiff said: "There was no traffic coming out of Valentine Road, and I just presumed that it would be the logical time to make a left-hand turn." She said that there were no pedestrians on the north pedestrian lane; that she "practically stopped" (slowed to about three miles per hour) and "made my signal" (arm signal for a left turn) "pulled into the center of the street" and "then started to complete my turn" at "not more than five miles an hour," in second gear; and that when she was making the turn defendant's car was "just entering the safety zone" south of the junction, estimated by her to be "from 125 to 150 feet south" of where she was when she began to make the turn. Plaintiff made a rather sharp turn "south and east" (she "started making a big turn" when in the pedestrian lane) and was struck by defendant's automobile, when the front part of her car had "almost cleared" the northbound track ("at least the back half of it would be on the tracks"), all of her car having cleared the rails of the west track. The left front part of defendant's car collided with the right front part of plaintiff's car. Plaintiff's evidence was that her car was headed more east than south at the time of collision.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 555, 344 Mo. 1137, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melenson-v-howell-mo-1939.