Reimers v. Frank B. Connet Lumber Co.

271 S.W.2d 46
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 12, 1954
Docket43410
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 271 S.W.2d 46 (Reimers v. Frank B. Connet Lumber Co.) 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
Reimers v. Frank B. Connet Lumber Co., 271 S.W.2d 46 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

Plaintiff-appellant’s verdict and judgment for $35,000 for alleged personal injuries were set aside and a new trial granted defendant-respondent on the ground that the trial court erred in giving instruction 1 on behalf of plaintiff. On plaintiff’s appeal, defendant contends that the trial court correctly ordered a new trial for error in giving instruction 1 and that plaintiff failed to make a case for the jury for the sole reason that “plaintiff’s evidence as to how the accident occurred is so contrary to physical facts and is so completely impossible as to rob such testimony of probative value.”

In determining whether plaintiff made a submissible case, evidence favorable to defendant is disregarded, and only the evidence favorable to plaintiff, and the reasonable inferences therefrom, will be considered. Of course, plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of any of defendant’s evidence favorable to plaintiff and not contrary to his fundamental theory. See v. Wabash R. Co., 362 Mo. 489, 492, 242 S.W.2d 15, 16[3].

So viewing the evidence, the instant jury reasonably could have found: that in August 1949, as plaintiff was driving his automobile east on Chelsea Trafficway in Kansas City, Kansas, defendant’s truck, loaded with lumber and being then operated by its employee, backed south from defendant’s private driveway on the north side of Chelsea, across the street, and that lumber protruding beyond the rear of the truck bed struck the left side of plaintiff’s automobile and then struck plaintiff; (Chelsea, 51 feet wide with east and westbound streetcar tracks near the center, runs northwest-southeast, but for purposes of this case we shall assume that Chelsea is an east-west street); that when plaintiff turned onto Chelsea some distance west of the collision point and after he had rounded a curve, and when about three fourths of a block west of defendant’s lumberyard, he began to pass to the right of an eastbound streetcar; that plaintiff reached a point where the front of his automobile was about even with the side or center door of the streetcar, traveled in this position at 12 or 15 m.p.h. for a time, and, when he saw two persons waiting at a streetcar stop to the east, decided not to pass; that he lessened the pressure on the accelerator at the same time the streetcar “picked up speed”, and plaintiff’s automobile thus fell behind the streetcar but remained in the portion of the street south of the south rail of the eastbound track; that plaintiff’s automobile was (after it had dropped back) traveling between 10 and 15 m.p.h. and was about 15 feet to the rear of the streetcar at collision time; that plaintiff saw the truck or the protruding lumber only an instant before the collision; that from the south street curb to the south rail of the eastbound track was 14 feet 6 inches; that the distance between the rails of each of the eastbound and westbound tracks was 4 feet 8 inches, and the distance between the two tracks (i.e., the south rail of the westbound track and the north rail of the eastbound track) was 5 feet; that plaintiff’s automobile was 4½ to 5 feet wide. Plaintiff at one time estimated that at the time of the collision, the left side of his automobile was about 7½ or 8 feet south of *48 the south rail of the eastbound track. At another time plaintiff said that after the collision his automobile was 4 or 5 feet from the south curb of Chelsea. There was evidence from which the jury reasonably could infer that the automobile was pushed some to the south by the collision.

Defendant’s argument to support its contention (that plaintiff’s testimony as to how the accident happened is so contrary to physical facts and so completely impossible as to rob it of probative value) is based upon mathematical computations by which defendant seeks to demonstrate that, by taking plaintiff’s testimony and defendant’s evidence as to speeds and distances and relative positions of the two vehicles and the streetcar, the casualty could not have occurred. The decisive fallacy in defendant’s argument is that it assumes that plaintiff was bound by defendant’s uncon-troverted evidence. •

Plaintiff offered no evidence as to the position or speed of defendant’s truck, other than that it was in the act of backing across Chelsea just prior to the collision. Defendant’s evidence was that its truck had been theretofore backed from its private drive across Chelsea to a place where it was in the path of the eastbound streetcar; that to allow the streetcar to pass it had been pulled forward so that its front was again in the private drive and the end of the protruding lumber was just north of the -south rail of the westbound track; and that after the streetcar passed, the truck then started to back at 3 or 4 m.p.h.

Defendant’s “no submissible case formula” is based upon the premise -that the truck had to move a certain number of feet at a certain speed while the plaintiff pro- ' ceeded not more than IS feet at a certain speed. From these hypotheses defendant concludes that the collision could not have occurred. But plaintiff was not bound by defendant’s testimony as to where the truck was when it began to back or at what speed it backed. No essential element of plaintiff’s case depended upon defendant’s evidence (except the fact that the truck was backed from defendant’s private drive) as to the exact starting position or speed of defendant’s truck. The jury could believe or not believe all or any part of defendant’s evidence. Thus, defendant’s calculations, while forming the basis for a jury argument do not affect the question of submissibility. The facts of the collision and that the protruding lumber and the left side of plaintiff’s automobile came into collision were not disputed. The only fact which may be said to relate to “physical law” or “impossibility” which the jury needed to find was that defendant’s truck backed at such a speed that it missed the streetcar and struck the left side of plaintiff’s automobile in a space between the automobile and streetcar of only IS feet. In other words, unless it is contrary to physical fact or law to say that a jury reasonably could find that the truck backed at such a speed that it missed the streetcar 15 feet ahead of plaintiff’s automobile and yet struck the automobile, there is no merit in defendant’s contention. We think it apparent that there is nothing unreasonable, impossible, or opposed to physical laws or fact inherent in such a finding. Certainly, for example, if the left front door post of plaintiff’s automobile and the farthest protruding lumber on defendant’s truck were each IS feet from the collision point and each vehicle proceeded to the collision point at 10 m.p.h., the collision would necessarily occur; and obviously the streetcar, IS feet ahead of the automobile, would not be struck by the protruding lumber.

Furthermore, even by employing mathematical calculations (upon the assumption that plaintiff in his brief adopted the defendant’s testimony that the speed of the backing truck was 5 m.p.h.), plaintiff made a submissible case. Defendant’s calculations are based on the assumption that the left side of plaintiff’s car was 7-½ or 8 feet south of the -south rail of the eastbound track. However, as pointed out, plaintiff, while so estimating at one place in his testimony, also testified that when his car came to rest following the accident it was about S feet from the south curb. We have also *49

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Reimers v. Frank B. Connet Lumber Company
273 S.W.2d 348 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W.2d 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reimers-v-frank-b-connet-lumber-co-mo-1954.