Meyer v. Pevely Dairy Co.

64 S.W.2d 696, 333 Mo. 1109, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 687
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 19, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 696 (Meyer v. Pevely Dairy 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
Meyer v. Pevely Dairy Co., 64 S.W.2d 696, 333 Mo. 1109, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 687 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

Action for damages by a widow under the wrongful death statutes (Secs. 3262, 3263 and 3264, R.S. 1929) on account of the death of her husband alleged to have been caused by the negligent acts of defendants. Plaintiff's husband, Matthew O'Malley, a pedestrian while crossing Grand Boulevard in the city of St. Louis near the plant of defendant Pevely Dairy Company, was struck and killed by an automobile owned and being driven by defendant William J. Doran. The petition charges negligence against the Pevely Dairy Company in that (1) said defendant "negligently, carelessly and unlawfully drove" one of its wagons from a driveway, leading from its premises, into Grand Boulevard, "which was a legally designated boulevard there, without bringing the aforesaid vehicle to a full and complete stop before entering or crossing said boulevard, in violation of" an ordinance of the city of St. Louis, referred to by number, section and paragraph, and which provides in substance that every vehicle shall be brought to a full and complete stop before entering or crossing any street lawfully designated as a boulevard" and (2) that "defendant Pevely Dairy Company, in driving said wagon into said Grand Boulevard, failed to stop the same before entering said boulevard, and did continue to drive the same into said boulevard in such close proximity to the automobile of defendant Doran as to cause him to swerve said automobile in such manner as to strike and injure and kill plaintiff's husband." Other charges of negligence made against the dairy company were abandoned. The jury found for defendant Doran and for plaintiff as against defendant Pevely Dairy Company assessing damages in the amount of $10,000; from the judgment entered thereon against it the dairy company appeals.

The unfortunate event which resulted in O'Malley's death occurred about two-thirty A.M., November 4, 1927. The situation and preliminary facts may be briefly sketched. O'Malley was employed by the defendant dairy company as a driver of one of its horse-drawn delivery wagons and assigned to a certain regular route in the city of St. Louis. The dairy company plant out of which O'Malley worked, was located at the southwest corner of the intersection of Choteau Avenue, an east and west street, and Grand Boulevard, a north and south street, the property extending some distance south along and adjacent to the west side of Grand Boulevard. The dairy company maintained a driveway upon and at the south side of its premises which led out from its yard and loading docks and extended to and connected with the west side of Grand Boulevard. It seems that daily, at about this hour, a large number of delivery wagons were loaded at the loading docks and dispatched to their respective routes. As the wagons were loaded and dispatched they left defendant company's premises over this driveway, into Grand Boulevard. On this morning O'Malley's wagon, having been *Page 1113 loaded, was left standing on defendant's premises while he, with the announced intention of "getting something to eat and some cigarettes" before starting on his route, walked across Grand Boulevard to a restaurant on the east side of that street. He was returning from the restaurant, crossing Grand to the dairy company plant on the west side of that street when he was struck by the Doran automobile. We come now to a statement of the evidence most favorable to and tending to support and sustain plaintiff's theory as to the manner and cause of O'Malley's injury and death. Doran was driving his automobile south on Grand Boulevard traveling to the right of the center of that street at a speed of from twenty to twenty-five miles an hour. As the automobile neared the point where defendant company's driveway connected with and entered Grand Boulevard on the west side of that street one of the company's delivery wagons drawn by a horse, without making a stop at the entrance of the driveway into the boulevard and without signal or warning being given, came out of the driveway and continued straight ahead toward the east and center of the street and directly in the path, and in front, of the south bound automobile. Doran testified the horse came out of the driveway "on a run." To avoid the impending collision with the horse and wagon Doran swerved to the left (the east) and "just missed the horse and wagon" by "possibly a foot or something like that." This swerve turned the automobile to the east and slightly to the east or left of the center of the street and it was there and then that it struck O'Malley who was in the act of crossing from the east side of the street to the company plant on the west side. The front left side of the automobile struck O'Malley. Doran stated that "the first I saw of Mr. O'Malley he just popped up in front of me" and "I saw Mr. O'Malley about the time I hit him." Reiper, defendant's driver in charge of this wagon, testified that his wagon had been loaded at the loading dock about fifty feet west of the intersection of the driveway with Grand Boulevard; that he "had a piece of ice on the wagon" and as the wagon on neared the intersection he moved the ice with his foot and the horse "got scared and started to run." The driver does not say that the horse was at any time out of control or that he tried to check the horse but rather seems to have given his attention to the ice and made no effort to stop the horse before proceeding into the boulevard or to check it upon entering that street or to turn south thereon but permitted the horse to continue past the intersection of the driveway with the boulevard toward the east and near to the center of the street; as indicating this we refer to Reiper's statement that, "I was trying to hold the ice with my foot and he (the horse) started going fast on me . . . as he (the horse) came out of the driveway" and "if there had been no ice involved I could have turned the horse to the south immediately without going over to the center of the street." *Page 1114 Reiper further stated that he did not make a stop before entering upon the boulevard from the driveway and that when he first saw the Doran automobile it was within fifteen or twenty feet of the wagon; that as Doran swerved the automobile to the left "I drew my horse back and swung him over to the right" and the automobile missed the horse "about a foot." It was admitted that Grand Boulevard was a public street, and at this point was a legally designated boulevard, of the city of St. Louis. Plaintiff introduced in evidence an ordinance of the city of St. Louis which requires that "every vehicle shall be brought to a full and complete stop before entering or crossing any street lawfully designated as a boulevard." Defendant's evidence was to the effect that none of its wagons drove out of the driveway at the time or immediately prior thereto; that Reiper's wagon was standing some distance back in the yard at the time O'Malley was struck and had not yet started to leave the yard; that no wagon drove in front of the Doran car but that Doran's automobile traveling at a speed of forty or forty-five miles an hour struck O'Malley as he was crossing the street and nothing intervened on the street to cause it to change its course. The conflict in the evidence was, of course, resolved by the verdict of the jury.

Four minor children born of the marriage between plaintiff and O'Malley survived. As stated O'Malley was killed November 4, 1927. On November 14, 1927, this suit was filed, the petition naming William J. Doran alone as defendant. On the 27th day of September, 1928, being more than six months after the death of her husband, but within one year thereafter, plaintiff filed an amended petition making the Pevely Dairy Company a defendant with said Doran and the cause proceeded to trial, upon that petition, against both defendants with the result as above noted.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 696, 333 Mo. 1109, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-pevely-dairy-co-mo-1933.