Phillips v. Whittom

192 S.W.2d 856, 354 Mo. 964, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 382
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 11, 1946
DocketNo. 39686.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 192 S.W.2d 856 (Phillips v. Whittom) 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
Phillips v. Whittom, 192 S.W.2d 856, 354 Mo. 964, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 382 (Mo. 1946).

Opinion

*967 ELLISON, P.' J.

The appellant administrator seeks reversal of an order and judgment of the circuit court of Adair county abating his cause of action under the wrongful death statutes, Secs. 3652-3656 [references to our statutes are to R. S. Mo. 1939 and Mo. R. S. A.] for the negligent killing of his intestate, Audra Phillips, on August 27, 1942, in a collision in Scotland county between the decedent’s automobile and a motor truck driven by the respondent Whittom, an employee of the respondent United Biscuit Company, operator thereof.

The ultimate question in the ease is ‘whether a prior similar action which appellant had timely brought and later dismissed, tolled the special one year statute of limitations prescribed by See. 3656, and validated the instant suit brought thereafter. The trial court sustained respondents’ pleas in abatement on written findings of fact and declarations of law, on the grounds that the first action was void, and that while appellant had brought it in actual good faith, yet he had been guilty of patent negligence and want of diligence in so doing, in consequence of which the suit did not keep the cause of action alive. This ruling was based on: Wente v. Shaver, 350 Mo. 1143, 1150(2), 1154, 169 S. W. (2d) 947, 953(3), 954(4); Krueger v. Walters (K. C. Ct. Apps.), 179 S. W. (2d) 615, 618(3-8); Metzger v. Metzger (K. C. Ct. Apps.), 153 S. W. (2d) 118, 123 (10); Mertens v. McMahon (St. L. Ct. Apps.), 115 S. W. (2d) 180, 183(2, 3); Conrad v. McCall, 205 Mo. App. 640, 226 S. W. 265, 266.

*968 The facts and. applicable law' should be stated a little more fully. The intestate and the plaintiff and his counsel were residents of Scotland county. The respondent Biscuit Company was a foreign corporation but had a resident agent in St. Louis for the service of process. The respondent driver, Whittom, was a resident of Adair county, but appellant thought he lived in Putnam county. That county and Scotland county both adjoin Adair county. Laboring under the foregoing misapprehension, appellant first brought his suit in Putnam county on May 17, 1943, where none of the parties resided, in violation of our venue statute, Sec. 871. The action was void because of that court’s lack of jurisdiction over the parties defendant. Hankins v. Smarr, 345 Mo. 973, 137 S. W. (2d) 499. He ineffectually dismissed that suit on October 22, 1943, without paying the costs, in violation of Sec. 1110. In the meantime he had filed a suit on the same cause of action in Adair county on September 13, 1943, where respondent Whittom lived. Then he dismissed both of these suits on or about February 25, 1944, again failing to pay the costs, at least in the Putnam county suit, and refiled the instant Adair county suit on March 28, 1944, getting service on both respondents.

In the meantime the one year statute of limitations under Sec. 3656 had run on August 26, 1943. But the statute provides if the plaintiff take a nonsuit he may commence a new action within one year thereafter. Appellant invokes that provision. The respondents rely on the Wente and Krueger cases together with the others cited in the second preceding paragraph. The rule announced in the Wente case is that if the plaintiff makes an “innocent mistake” in filing his previous action he will not be denied the benefit of the tolling provision of the statute. And a New York decision is cited, which makes the criterion “good faith.” See also Johnson v. Frank, 354 Mo. 767, 191 S. W. (2d) 618, 621(4), very recently decided. Good faith, however, generally imposes a duty on the obligor to use reasonable diligence — the diligence that an honest man of ordinary prudence is accustomed to exercise. 18 Words & Phrases (Perm. Ed.) “good faith” p. 485. The defendant in the litigation also has some rights, and is entitled to complain of an unreasonable and unjust abuse of the process of the courts. Hence the Wente and Krueger cases, supra, both recognize that the negligent bringing of a void action will not toll the statute of limitations if the plaintiff’s negligence be great enough. This is conceded, also, in Smith v. McNeal, 109 U. S. 426, 430, 431, 3 S. Ct. 319, 321, 27 L. Ed. 986, 987; but it is there indicated the negligence must be gross.'

The trial court’s findings of fact, in addition to those already stated, were as follows. The respondent Whittom had lived in Kirksville, the county seat of Adair county, at 502 Elizabeth Street in a property which he owned and which was assessed in his name, for most of the time between September, 1940 and February, 1943.. *969 On the date last named he moved to a farm in Adair county [the evidence indicates this farm was dose to the Putnam county line] and thence to a farm about four miles northeast of Kirksville where he lived from September, 1943 to March, 1944. For six months before the casualty he had been employed by the respondent United Biscuit Company driving a delivery truck, whereon was prominently displayed the name “Sawyer Biscuit Company,” in Adair and Scotland counties and several others. He made regular trips to Memphis, the county seat of Scotland county.

In the automobile collision respondent "Whittom suffered a broken arm and a severely cut face. The coroner visited the scene and gave him first aid, then taking him back to Memphis where he remained for several hours and received further treatment. Whittom gave the coroner his name and residence as Kirksville, Missouri. An account of the collision and of the death of Audra Phillips was published in both newspapers at Memphis on that same day, each of the newspaper articles stating that the driver of the respondent Biscuit Company’s truck was “Howard Whittom of Kirksville, Missouri.” [This finding is partially erroneous. Only one newspaper gave the name as Howard Whittom; the other paper said Harve.']

The court further found that appellant’s counsel were employed in February or March, 1943, to.bring the suit; that counsel had seen one of the local newspaper accounts of the collision, which gave the name and address of respondent Whittom; that counsel knew before filing the first suit that the Sawyer Biscuit Company [whose name was on the truck] was a division of the respondent United Biscuit Company; that plaintiff’s counsel never did make or cause to be made any inquiry by letter or otherwise to either of these companies concerning the name and address of the driver of the truck which figured in the collision, nor did they make inquiry as to the address of either of the companies.

The court further found that appellant’s counsel did make inquiry of the manager of “Mackie’s Market” in Memphis, and of the proprietor of a garage to which the wrecked truck was taken after the collision. Counsel also went to the office of one of the two local newspapers which had printed an account of the collision. As a result of his inquiries in Memphis he found no one who knew where respondent Whittom resided, and thereupon went to Kirksville and inquired of the manager of a store, who was a former resident of Memphis. Learning nothing, he made inquiry of trooper Kanan of the State Highway Patrol, who' was stationed at Kirksville and was an acquaintance. Kanan did not know Whittom and counsel requested him to make an investigation.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W.2d 856, 354 Mo. 964, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-whittom-mo-1946.