Ozbun v. Vance

323 S.W.2d 771, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 832
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1959
Docket46970
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 323 S.W.2d 771 (Ozbun v. Vance) 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
Ozbun v. Vance, 323 S.W.2d 771, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 832 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

VAN OSDOL, Commissioner.

Plaintiff Richard Ozbun, an infant, instituted this action by next friend against defendant, Mrs. W. A. (Myrtle) Vance, for $25,000 for damages for personal injuries sustained when the automobile driven by defendant struck plaintiff as he was running southwardly across County Road “A” in Dunklin County. The jury returned a verdict for defendant, and plaintiff has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

Plaintiff’s case was submitted to the jury by his verdict-directing Instruction No. 1-P on primary negligence of defendant in driving the automobile at a speed which was excessive and negligent under the circumstances, and in failing to operate the automobile at a rate of speed that defendant could have avoided striking plaintiff; and, conjunctively, negligence under the humanitarian rule in failing to swerve the automobile to the left and thus avoid striking plaintiff.

Questions of error are presented relating to instructing the jury, and in excluding evidence.

Plaintiff principally relied upon statements of defendant by deposition in making out his case. Defendant, in testifying in her own behalf, was the only witness produced who was an eyewitness of the occurrence.

A few miles southwest of Kennett, County Road “A” of Dunklin County traverses an east-west segment something more than one-half mile in length. On this segment of the highway “A” the traveled portion of the roadway is of tarvia or “blacktop” pavement twenty feet in width with earthen shoulders six feet wide on either side of the pavement. Plaintiff, a child four years old, lived with his parents and his brother eight years old in a house on the south side of the highway.

At approximately eleven-fifteen in a clear morning in June, plaintiff and his brother were standing on the shoulder north of the pavement. They were standing “there with a cow. * * * Grazing, I suppose.” Defendant, driving eastwardly, approached in her husband’s 1950-model, two-door Mercury. The brakes of the motor vehicle were in good working order, and the tarvia pavement was dry. When one hundred yards away, defendant saw plaintiff and his older brother (and the cow). Defendant was “making about 50. * * * I (defendant) was coming up the road and saw the children out there on the road, and I think I was going something near 50 mile an hour, and I applied my brakes a little bit, just slowed down, and they were still standing there, and I thought to myself I *773 could go on, I released my brakes and started on, but just about the time I started on this child (plaintiff) started ácross the road, but he went just a few steps, I don’t think it would have been more than five, if it was that many, and turned right around and went back — as he started, though, I applied the brakes again, and he turned around and went back to his brother just like he was handing him something or getting something from him. Well, I started to speed up again, but he did it real quick and started again. Then I applied the brakes with all my might right there.”

When the child started across the roadway the first time defendant reduced the speed of the motor vehicle to twenty-five or thirty miles per hour, and when he turned back northwardly, defendant released the brakes and “speeded up.” She was thirty feet or more from the point where plaintiff and his brother were at the time plaintiff started across the roadway the second time, plaintiff “was trotting, seemed like, not just a hard run,” and “why, he wasn’t very far across until I applied the brakes (again).” The center, “a little over to the (right) side,” of the hood of the Mercury struck plaintiff, and plaintiff fell on the south side “just about to the edge” of the pavement. Defendant had all but stopped the vehicle. Defendant had driven on the (right) south side of the pavement entirely. There was no traffic “on this highway to the east” of defendant. “I almost got past him. * * ⅜ I was on my side, of course.”

Plaintiff’s mother, having heard the sound of the application of brakes, went to the roadway and carried the injured plaintiff to the Ozbun house. Defendant accompanied them and remarked, “ T was coming from the Bible School, and I was in a hurry and was driving too fast, and ■saw I was going to hit the child, and all I knew to do was call on the Lord and throw on my brakes. * * * I was driving too fast, I realize that, and I was in a hurry to get home and cook my husband’s dinner, for I was running late.’ ”

As we have said, plaintiff submitted his case to the jury on primary negligence of defendant in moving at excessive speed in the circumstances and in failing to operate the motor vehicle at a speed at which she, with available appliances, could have avoided striking plaintiff; and, as stated, humanitarian negligence of defendant, in failing to swerve to the left, was submitted conjunctively in the same instruction (No. 1-P).

At defendant’s request the trial court gave verdict-directing Instruction No. 1-D, which was as follows,

“The Court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that the Plaintiff started running from the north shoulder of County Road ‘A’ toward the south and into the path of Defendant’s approaching automobile and was thereby struck on the south half of the said road at the time and place mentioned in evidence, and that when plaintiff started running, as aforesaid, the automobile operated by the defendant was in such close proximity to the plaintiff, that the defendant in the exercise of the highest degree of care could not have avoided striking the plaintiff by stopping the automobile, slackening the speed thereof, or swerving the same, and if you further find that defendant was not guilty of any negligence as submitted to you in other instructions, then your verdict must be for the defendant and against the plaintiff.”

Plaintiff (appellant) complains that the instruction (No. 1-D) erroneously limited the submitted negligent (primary and humanitarian) conduct of plaintiff to the time plaintiff for the second time started running southwardly from the north shoulder. Moreover, plaintiff says, the instruction is confusing and misleading, and is in conflict with Instruction No. 1-P given in behalf of plaintiff. But defendant (respondent) contends the Instruction No. 1-D is a con *774 verse humanitarian rule instruction in the sense that it required a finding- of the negative of an essential element of plaintiff’s humanitarian rule submission — the ability of defendant to act, after plaintiff was in a position of imminent peril; that Instruction No. 1-D should not be said by plaintiff to be erroneous in unduly restricting the zone or position of peril, because plaintiff’s Instruction No. 1-P restricted the submission of the humanitarian duty to act to avert plaintiff’s injury to the time “when plaintiff Richard Ozbun started to cross said highway.” Defendant further contends plaintiff failed to make a case submissible to the jury on the theory of humanitarian negligence because (it is said), since defendant, moving at twenty-five to thirty miles per hour when but thirty feet from plaintiff (at the time he started running across the roadway the second time) could not have thereafter acted in averting the 'casualty. And furthermore, defendant says, even if it were assumed that Instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
323 S.W.2d 771, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ozbun-v-vance-mo-1959.