Mulanix v. Reeves

112 S.W.2d 100, 233 Mo. App. 143, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 2
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 112 S.W.2d 100 (Mulanix v. Reeves) 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
Mulanix v. Reeves, 112 S.W.2d 100, 233 Mo. App. 143, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 2 (Mo. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

*146 REYNOLDS, J.

— This is an appeal by the defendants from a judgment for $1750 rendered against them in favor of the plaintiff in the Circuit Court of Adair County, Missouri, for damages for personal injuries caused by an automobile (of which the defendant W. T. Reeves was owner) being driven by his son, the defendant William N. Reeves, on December 11, 1936, colliding with a trailer upon which the plaintiff was riding, which at the time was being drawn by a railroad section gasoline motor car along the main track of the Wabash Railway Company across Jefferson Street in the city of Kirksville, Missouri.

The suit wherein such judgment was rendered was instituted by the plaintiff’s filing his petition in such court on December 29, 1936.

The defendant William N. Reeves, at the time being a minor under the age of twenty-one years, the Honorable Chas. E. Murrell, Jr., Avas by the court appointed guardian ad litem for him; and such guardian ad litem filed a separate answer for such defendant denying each and every allegation in the plaintiff’s petition.

The defendant W. T. Reeves also filed separate answer denying each and every allegation in the plaintiff’s petition.

Upon a trial had at the February Term, 1937, of the court, before the Honorable Noah W. Simpson, special judge of the court, and a jury, a verdict was returned, finding the issues for the plaintiff against both the defendants and assessing his damages at $1750, upon which verdict a judgment was in due time rendered in the plaintiff’s favor against both the defendants in the said sum of $1750, from which judgment both the defendants, after unsuccessful motions for a new trial, have appealed to this court.

The evidence tends to show that the Wabash Railway Company operated and maintained a main line of railroad and side tracks upon éither side, running north and south through the city o'f Kirks-ville, Missouri, which intersected with and crossed Jefferson Street, a public street in said city running east and west across the city, at a point a block or so south of its depot and carhouse in said city and that on the morning of December 11, 1936, the plaintiff was riding on a low, flat-topped trailer car being drawn along the main line of the railroad in said city by a railway section gasoline motor car, which trailer car as it- passed over Jefferson Street was run into by the automobile of the defendant W. T. Reeves, at the time being driven by his son (the defendant William N. Reeves) east along Jefferson Street, with such force ad to tear the trailer car loose from the motor car and hurl it from the track, severely injuring the plaintiff.

*147 The evidence shows that the plaintiff was, at the time of his injury, in the employ of the receivers of said company, on his way to engage in his work of repairing and maintaining the roadbed and tracks of said company; that the trailer and motor ear were at the time being operated by the plaintiff’s foreman, one Powell, who was also an employee of the receivers; and that the trailer and motor car were supplied or furnished by the receivers for transporting the plaintiff and other employees from place to place along the railway to pursue their work.

The defendant W. T. Reeves, the owner of the automobile, was at the time of the accident school physician of Kirksville and had been such for a period of about eleven years. He used such automobile in the practice of his profession and in the prosecution of his business. The automobile was also used by other members of his family, including the defendant William N. Reeves, in the prosecution of their own affairs and for their own pleasure, when desired or needed.

The evidence discloses that the defendant William N. Reeves on the date of the accident was attending school at the State Teachers College and had been enrolled in that school for a considerable length of time prior to the date of the collision; that he was paying at least a part of his expenses, including his tuition, out of the money which he himself earned; that the automobile, while owned by the defendant W. T. Reeves, was a family ear and was used as such by the various members of his family at pleasure; that it had been used by the son at all times that he needed to do so; that, on the morning of December 11, 1936 (that being the date of the accident), the son was using the car for the purpose of going to visit one Dr. Beatty, who lived in the Rollins Apartment in Kirksville, by whom he was employed to give certain attentions before going to school; that he left the house of his father about seven o’clock A. M., driving the automobile in question; that, on the date of the accident, the son was eighteen years of age and was residing with his parents knd it had been his custom over a period of a year and a half to attend to the duties for which he was employed early in the morning and to drive to Dr. Beatty’s in the automobile; and that, on some occasions, he would proceed from there to school and, on others, he would return home. The evidence does not show that William N. Reeves was engaged in any business or mission on behalf of his father at the time of the accident or that his father had anything to do with the employment of his son by Dr. Beatty or that his father was a party to the arrangement or contract therefor or interested therein in any way. Dr. Beatty paid the son for his services and such funds as the son derived on such account were kept and retained' by him. The evidence fails to disclose any connection between the defendant W. *148 T. Reeves and Dr. Beatty as physician and patient or otherwise but shows to the contrary that there was none.

At the time of the collision between the defendants’ automobile and the trailer upon which the plaintiff was riding, the plaintiff was traveling south, going to his work. He had boarded the trailer at the carhouse of the railway company, about a block from its depot north of Jefferson Street around seven o’clock the morning' of that date. Other employees engaged in like work with the plaintiff were also riding on this trailer going to their work. When the driver of the gasoline motor car drawing the trailer reached Jefferson Street, he slowed up his car almost to a stop just before coming upon the street on account of the approach of an automobile from the east on Jefferson Street, which he allowed to cross the railroad track in front of his motor car and trailer and proceed to the west. There was testimony to the effect that this car, approaching from the east, had no lights turned on. As soon as the automobile from the east cleared the crossing, the driver, of the gasoline motor car and trailer resumed movement upon and across Jefferson Street; and, when the trader had reached the south edge of Jefferson Street and was ready to go off the street, the defendants’ car appeared, coming from the west, and ran into it while it was yet on the. south half of the street. There is evidence to the effect that the defendants’ automobile was not lighted at the time that it approached and ran into the trailer and that it was traveling forty-five to fifty miles per hour. There is also evidence by the defendants to the contrary. There is evidence that the motor car and trailer were traveling at the rate of five to eight miles per hour when the áccident occurred. There was no light upon either the motor car or the trailer.

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.W.2d 100, 233 Mo. App. 143, 1937 Mo. App. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulanix-v-reeves-moctapp-1937.