Painter v. Knaus Truck Lines, Inc.

375 S.W.2d 19, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 871
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 13, 1964
DocketNo. 49906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 375 S.W.2d 19 (Painter v. Knaus Truck Lines, Inc.) 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
Painter v. Knaus Truck Lines, Inc., 375 S.W.2d 19, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 871 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Commissioner.

In this personal injury action, which is the result of an automobile-truck collision, defendant appeals from a judgment for plaintiff based upon the verdict of a jury •in the amount of $24,500.

Inasmuch as defendant first complains that plaintiff made no submissible case on her sole theory that defendant, by its driver, Kern, failed to keep its westbound truck on the north half of the east-west highway, but instead drove it onto the south half of the highway when the eastbound Valiant automobile operated by plaintiff was approaching so closely as to constitute an immediate hazard, we set out the facts in their light most favorable to plaintiff, and disregard defendant’s evidence except insofar as it may aid the plaintiff. Christie v. Gas Service Company, Mo., 347 S.W.2d 135, 137 [1].

On the fateful day, April 26, 1961, of the collision between plaintiff’s Valiant automobile and defendant’s tractor-trailer truck, plaintiff had driven her husband to the schoolhouse where he worked in Paris, Missouri, at about 1:00 P.M. She went to a department store in Paris, then started to [21]*21go to the IGA store, but decided she would go on out to “White’s Delight” on U.S. Highway 24 to meet a friend and to get something to eat. When she arrived there traffic was coming from behind her, from the south and from the west on Highway 24, and rather than stop traffic, she went west three miles on Highway 24 to the Mark Twain Cafe where she turned around and started back east. As she came to a hill just east of the Mark Twain Cafe and started down she saw defendant’s truck coming from the east down a hill at a speed of sixty-five miles an hour. Plaintiff was then driving in her lane on the south side of the highway about forty-five miles an hour, and she saw the north part of the truck go off of the north side of the highway “Somewhere about Junior Hogan’s house” (defendant’s vehicle came to rest in the front yard and ditch of Hogan’s house after the collision which occurred some 234 feet to the east). Then the truck came back onto the highway and crossed the center line at a time when plaintiff was 100 to 300 feet to the west of the truck when she was about Junior Hogan’s house, but she did not know whether she was east or west thereof. At this point the paved portion of the highway is 22 feet wide, with shoulders 10 feet wide on the north and 11 feet wide on the south. Plaintiff remembered taking her foot off of the accelerator when the truck crossed the center of the highway. She did not remember anything thereafter concerning the collision, and her physician described this as amnesia in this case — a partial loss of memory of unpleasant facts.

On cross-examination plaintiff stated she did not know where her car was, which side of the center line it was on when the accident occurred, and she did not know whether she put on her brakes, or swerved to the left. Plaintiff had driven a car since 1933 to town on errands, out to her folks and to her sister’s.

Witness Highway Patrolman Swartz, who arrived at the scene of the collision at 3:05 P.M., having been called thereto at 2:45 P.M., testified that he found scraped places on the pavement 4½ feet north of the center line, with tire marks southeast and east leading up to the rear of the Valiant which was headed northeast in the north lane 126 feet east of the scraped places, and witness Sheriff Bodine substantiated that testimony. Bodine also testified that there were two dark tracks that started in the south lane and went in a northeast direction across the center line to the scraped place. Witness Clyde Ragsdale, driving east, came upon the scene of the collision just as defendant’s truck was going south across the highway towards Hogan’s front yard. He saw a very faint track, two marks parallel to each other in the south lane, the left mark was three and a half feet south of the center line, which looked to him like the car (probably plaintiff’s car) had gone to the north or northeast, and from the west end of the tire marks to the point where they turned northeast it was five feet shorter than the rail in front of the jury box.

With respect to the debris on the highway near the point of the collision, the testimony conflicted, but some of plaintiff’s witnesses who were at the scene of the collision prior to and at the time some of the debris was being kicked off to the south of the highway to permit traffic to go through testified favorably to plaintiff concerning the location of debris prior to its being moved. Witness Ragsdale testified he saw quite a lot of debris on the south side of the middle line. Alva Clem testified most of it was on the south side of the division. Lester Skaggs, who started flagging cars at the scene just after the collision happened, testified that at that time all of the debris was on the south side of the road. Julius Earl Gill saw a lot of debris on the road, the bulk of which was in plaintiff’s eastbound lane — there was some over the black line too. Lindell Hol-lensteiner testified there was debris in both lanes of traffic, and the majority of it was in the eastbound lane. Raymond Hogan testified that the biggest percent of the debris, being parts off of both vehicles, was located on the south side of the center line. Jack Wills testified that he (with others) [22]*22kicked a little bit of the debris, which was located on the south lane of the highway, off the highway. Highway Patrolman Swartz testified he did not recall any debris scattered about the pavement in the general area where the scraped mark on the pavement was, but there was probably more debris south of the center line. According to other witnesses, Swartz arrived at the scene after some of the debris had been moved off the highway.

Corroborating plaintiff’s direct testimony that defendant’s truck first went off of the north side of the highway prior to the time it came over the center line into plaintiff’s lane of travel when she was 100 to 300 feet away from it, were the observations by several witnesses of dual tire marks on the north shoulder just east of where plaintiff’s Valiant came to rest. Ragsdale testified there was a dual mark in an arc which went off the road and came back on not very far east of the Valiant. Guthrie testified there was a dual wheel mark from a truck on the north shoulder which began east of the Valiant and went up past it a little ways and disappeared. Sheriff Bo-dine testified there were two dual wheel tracks running on the north half of the road and shoulder, running either easterly or westerly quite a way up from the Valiant, and the tracks could be seen on the driving portion of the road where the brakes were applied. Wills’ testimony was that there was a dual wheel mark 50 feet east of the Valiant and on the north shoulder where a vehicle had left the highway and had come back on it.

The photographs of the Valiant made after the collision show the left front end and side thereof to be more severely damaged, and the right front wheel thereof appears to be turned to the left. The front view of defendant’s tractor, taken at the point where it came to rest, shows its left front bumper to be broken and badly damaged, and the front wheels are cramped to' the right.

Section 304.015, subd. 2, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., provides, “Upon all public roads or highways of sufficient width a vehicle shall be driven upon the right half of the roadway, * *

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Bluebook (online)
375 S.W.2d 19, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/painter-v-knaus-truck-lines-inc-mo-1964.