Merritt v. Wilkerson

360 S.W.2d 283, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 648
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 1962
DocketNo. 31102
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 360 S.W.2d 283 (Merritt v. Wilkerson) 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
Merritt v. Wilkerson, 360 S.W.2d 283, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 648 (Mo. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

JAMES D. CLEMENS, Special Judge.

Plaintiff recovered for injuries arising from a rear-end automobile collision. Defendant appeals, charging errors in plaintiff’s failure to negate contributory negligence in her verdict-directing instruction, prejudicial argument by plaintiff as to damages, and excessiveness of the $5,800 verdict.

The material facts are not in dispute. The defendant was called as a witness by the plaintiff, but otherwise offered no evidence. Plaintiff was a passenger in a Ford station wagon, riding behind its driver, 17-year-old David O’Dell. It was going north on Highway 67 in St. Francois County at 50-60 miles per hour, followed by the defendant driving a DeSoto automobile. The defendant began to overtake the station wagon and in doing so the right front of his DeSoto struck the left rear of the station wagon, which went off the highway to the right, across the shoulder and into a ditch. The highway was straight and had two lanes of paved concrete. There were unpaved shoulders wide enough for a parked car, plus space enough to alight from the right side. Other facts will be related in discussing defendant’s claims of error. The first concerns the failure of plaintiff’s verdict-directing instruction to negate her alleged contributory negligence.

By his answer, the defendant pleaded that the plaintiff’s injuries “were directly contributed to by the negligence of plaintiff in failing to exercise ordinary care for her own safety.” She did not challenge the generality of this defense, so the door was left ajar for defendant to submit that issue on any evidence which constituted contributory negligence. Martin v. Turner, Mo., 306 S.W.2d 473(2, 3); Holtz v. Daniel Hamm Drayage Co., 357 Mo. 538, 209 S.W.2d 883(1). The defendant submitted the issue by his Instruction No. 4:

“The Court instructs the jury that the plaintiff was under a duty to exercise ordinary care for her own safety and if you find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff immediately prior to the collision in question shouted an instruction or command to the driver of the automobile in which she was riding to ‘Get out of his way’ or words to that effect, and if you further find that the driver followed, or attempted to follow, said instruction or command and went off the highway on the right and down an embankment, and if you further find that plaintiff by shouting an instruction or command to the driver, if you so find, failed to exercise ordinary care for her own safety, then you are instructed that plaintiff was negligent, and if you further find that such negligence on the part of plaintiff, if you so find, contributed to cause her injuries, if any, then you are instructed that plaintiff is not entitled to recover on her cause of action and your verdict should be for defendant.”

The plaintiff frankly admits that her verdict-directing instruction did not negate this submitted issue of contributory negligence. Defendant claims this is reversible error, pointing to Moore v. Ready Mixed Concrete Co., Mo., 329 S.W.2d 14, 23. The plaintiff counters by claiming that the evidence did not warrant the submission of contributory negligence. This calls for a [285]*285recitation of the evidence on that issue considered favorably to the defendant.

Both plaintiff and driver O’Dell had noticed the defendant following and closing in on their station wagon, and commented on it. Mrs. O’Dell, the driver’s mother, was a passenger. She quoted plaintiff as then saying to the driver in a raised voice: “He’s going to hit you.” Plaintiff herself testified as to the comments on defendant’s approach, and also said that when the defendant was within about thirty feet of the station wagon she was frightened and excitedly shouted to the driver O’Dell to “get out of the road, that he was going to hit us.” O’Dell immediately pulled to the right onto the shoulder, and when the station wagon was partly onto the shoulder, the impact occurred. It was not severe — “just a boost,” but the station wagon went on into the ditch. The defendant testified that the station wagon reduced its speed when he was about three car lengths behind it and was beginning to make his pass. The driver O’Dell had entered into military service and was not a witness. Do these facts constitute contributory negligence?

The elements of actionable negligence are a duty, failure to do it, and resultant injury. See 65 C.J.S. Negligence § 2; Schaefer v. Accardi, Mo., 315 S.W.2d 230 (6); Eddy v. Missouri Public Service Co., Mo.App., 309 S.W.2d 4(2-7). To warrant submission of defendant’s defense of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence, it was therefore necessary that the evidence show (a) that plaintiff was negligent in so telling the driver to leave the highway, (b) that he did so because of her instruction, and (c) that his act of leaving the paved portion of the highway was a cause of her injuries. We are not prepared to say, and do not decide, whether plaintiff was negligent in shouting an excited order to the driver. Suffice it to say that there was no showing that plaintiff’s words were responsible for O’Dell taking the evasive action, nor that such action was a cause of plaintiff’s injuries. O’Dell also was aware of the imminence of the collision. To turn from the path of danger was a natural thing to do, and he might well have tried to turn away from the danger without the plaintiff’s telling him to do so. And the collision would just as well have occurred even if O’Dell had not tried to escape, although the results might well have been different. Thus, the jury could not have found either of the two elements of causation without entering the “nebulous twilight of speculation, conjecture and surmise.” [Hildreth v. Key, Mo.App., 341 S.W.2d 601(8).] The rule against submission of such an issue is tersely stated in Craddock v. Greenberg Mercantile Inc., Mo., 297 S.W.2d 541(12), loc. cit. 548: “ * * * If the cause of an injury is left to speculation and conjecture, when sound reasoning does not point to the liability of the defendants to the exclusion of other causes, there may be no recovery.” Accordingly, we find that it was error to submit the issue of plaintiff’s alleged contributory negligence.

It follows that defendant was not harmed by the absence of reference to contributory negligence in plaintiff’s verdict-directing instruction. The conflict was between plaintiff’s good instruction and defendant’s erroneously given instruction. An erring defendant cannot complain of such a conflict, for he has invited it. Jones v. Hughey, Mo., 283 S.W.2d 550(12); Hayes v. Wabash R. Co., 360 Mo. 1223, 233 S.W.2d 12(4).

We pass now to defendant’s claim of error in permitting plaintiff to invoke the golden rule in arguing the issue of damages. It is generally held to be improper argument to ask a juror to place himself in the shoes of a party and to render such a verdict or such damages as he would want rendered if he was so situated. 88 C.J.S. Trial §§ 169(n.

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Bluebook (online)
360 S.W.2d 283, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merritt-v-wilkerson-moctapp-1962.