Michaud v. Burlingame

490 S.W.2d 680
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1973
DocketNo. 9323
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 490 S.W.2d 680 (Michaud v. Burlingame) 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
Michaud v. Burlingame, 490 S.W.2d 680 (Mo. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

TITUS, Chief Judge.

Philip Michaud perished in a black Cá-maro that figured in a collision with a lighter colored Bel Air driven by defendant. Decedent’s children instituted this wrongful death action (§ 537.080 et seq., RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S.) and now appeal because the Circuit Court of Jasper County [682]*682directed a verdict for defendant at the conclusion of their evidence.

To reecho — In deciding whether plaintiffs made a submissible case, we accept their evidence and all reasonable inferences springing therefrom as true [Brubaker v. Moore, Mo., 432 S.W.2d 216, 217(1)], mindful that when a trial court assumes the drastic course of granting a motion for a directed verdict, it may do so unerringly only when all of the evidence and permissible inferences so strongly oppose the plaintiffs there can be no room for sensible minds to disagree. McCarthy v. Wulff, Mo., 452 S.W.2d 164, 168(3); Wehrkamp v. Watkins Motor Lines, Inc., Mo., 436 S.W.2d 698, 700.

The evidence set the scene thus!y: 529 feet south of eastwest Mount Hope Road between Joplin and Webb City, U. S. Highway 71 (a/k/a Range Line Road) runs straight north and south and presents a “real slight” upgrade to northbound motorists. The concrete traveled portion of the highway is 48 feet 16 inches wide and marked into four unseparated lanes — two each for northbound and southbound traffic. Three or four residences are situate west of the highway; an open field lies east of the east graveled highway berm. The posted speed limit was 45 miles per hour. No traffic signs, signals or artificial highway lights were in the area. Prior to the casualty it had been raining hard, it was still “raining” or “misting rain” at the time of impact and the pavement was “very wet.” The impact occurred near 10 p. m. under light conditions described as “pitch black.”

Portions of defendant’s deposition read to the jury reveal that at and before the collision, she was driving north in the easternmost traffic lane at a speed of 30 to 35 miles per hour. The headlights on defendant’s car were burning on “drive” (as opposed to high beam), the windshield wipers were in operation and the misting rain did not “in any way interfere with [her] vision ahead.” Defendant’s automobile was “in good mechanical condition,” the brakes operated properly, it had “good lights on high beam,” and the tires had a “good tread.” Defendant had traveled a considerable distance north on the highway before reaching the site of the occurrence without encountering any northbound or southbound vehicles. She said no cars were following her and nothing transpired to divert her attention as she was driving “within the last two or three minutes before the collision.” We repeat some of the exact questions and answers: “ ‘Question. In other words his car was directly ahead of you when you first saw it? Answer. Yes.’” “ ‘But to my left. . . . ’ ” “ ‘Question. What part of your car came into contact with what part of his car? Answer. My half of the car came into contact with his hind fender. Question. The left rear fender? Answer. Yes.’” “‘. Question. You use the phrase that when I caught a glimpse of his car out of my left eye. Is your vision good in both eyes? Answer, Yes.’ ” “ ‘Question. When you first saw the Michaud car it was straight ahead of you, was it? [Answer] No, he was to my left.’ ”

Officer Norman Boyd investigated the accident for the Joplin Police Department. Several people (including Webb City’s Police Sergeant George Hancock) were already at the accident scene when he arrived. Ambulance attendants informed him that Michaud, the Camaro’s sole occupant, was dead. In the course of the investigation, Boyd discovered debris in the east traffic lane which he “figured was the approximate point of impact.” Neither vehicle had been moved before he arrived. The decedent’s Camaro was 30 feet 2 inches north of the debris, headed north-easterly across the line dividing the two northbound traffic lanes. Defendant’s automobile was 20 to 25 feet south of the Camaro headed due east; its front wheels were on the east shoulder “right at the grass area and part of the back was in the outside lane.” There were no tire or skid marks on the pavement. The officer observed [683]*683defendant’s car had received damage to the left front and left side with “a crumpling back on the right front fender.” Mi-chaud’s Camaro had sustained damage to the left rear quarter panel and left side. This witness recollected that lights were burning on defendant’s vehicle but he could not recall whether or 'not any lights were burning on the Camaro. When Boyd subsequently interviewed the defendant, she recounted that she was traveling north in the outside (east) lane about 35 to 45 miles per hour and had not seen the Camaro until she was “just approximately 10 feet from him and that he was sideways in the road.” The officer’s written report, based upon what defendant had related, showed the Camaro “was headed west” when observed by defendant. Defendant did not tell the officer the Camaro had no lights or that it “was stopped in her traffic lane.”

Sergeant Hancock of the Webb City Police (who arrived ahead of Officer Boyd) testified the left headlight, “two running lights or parking lights,” and the left rear tail light were burning on the Camaro when he got to the scene. This witness also identified marks appearing in a photograph illustrating the driver’s side of defendant’s vehicle as “black paint.”

The final witness for plaintiffs was the service manager of a new car dealer whose employer was authorized to conduct safety inspections and braking tests for the State of Missouri. In a car similar to defendant’s, he had conducted stopping tests at the scene of the involved accident on dry pavement. The witness said at 30 miles an hour the stopping distance was 30 to 32 feet; at 40 miles an hour the automobile was stopped in 40 to 44 feet. On wet pavement, the witness opined, the braking distance would be 35 feet at 30 miles an hour and 44 to 45 feet at 35 miles per hour. These distances did not include the “standard reaction time,” which the service manager said was “three-quarters of a second.” Both this witness and Officer Boyd agreed with plaintiffs’ counsel that by “Missouri Statute” and “under the law” the “legal distance for high beam that the lights must show objects ahead [is] 500 feet.” [Contrary to this, § 307.060 RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S., requires that multiple-beam headlamps should be of such intensity as to reveal persons and vehicles ahead at least 350 feet for the uppermost distribution of light and at least 100 feet for the lowermost distribution of light. Save for the dimming regulations contained in § 307.070 RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S., it provides: “Every person driving a motor vehicle equipped with multiple-beam road lighting equipment, . . . shall use a distribution of light . . . directed high enough and of sufficient intensity to reveal persons and vehicles at a safe distance in advance of the vehicle.”]

Specifically, in their brief, plaintiffs say the trial court erred in directing a verdict for defendant because “[t]here was evidence from which the jury could have found that defendant was negligent in failing to keep a careful lookout, or saw or could have by the exercise of the highest degree of care seen plaintiffs’ father in a position of imminent peril in time to have avoided this collision and his resulting death.”

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Bluebook (online)
490 S.W.2d 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michaud-v-burlingame-moctapp-1973.