Scanlon v. Kansas City

28 S.W.2d 84, 325 Mo. 125, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 449
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 15, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 28 S.W.2d 84 (Scanlon v. Kansas City) 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
Scanlon v. Kansas City, 28 S.W.2d 84, 325 Mo. 125, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 449 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

The following opinion was written by Commissioner LINDSAY, except the latter portion thereof dealing solely with the instruction designated in the record as No. 2 P. With this explanation, quotation marks will be omitted.

This suit was brought by Edward Scanlon against Kansas City for the recovery of damages for the loss of the services of his son Cornelius, and for expenses incurred in the nursing and medical attendance of the son, during his minority. It is alleged that the son, when an infant of the age of two years and five months, fell on a defective sidewalk in the city, and thereby suffered injury to his spine and spinal cord, from which paralysis resulted, rendering him forever afterward an incurable cripple. The injury is alleged to have occurred on August 8, 1900. In December, 1900. Edward Scanlon, on behalf of himself, filed suit for the damages herein in issue. At the same time, as curator of his son, he filed suit for damages on behalf of the son. The suit last mentioned was tried in 1902 and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of Kansas City, from which no appeal was taken. The effect of that judgment upon the right of Edward Scanlon to prosecute this action constitutes an important issue in this case, and the nature of the issues litigated in the son's suit will require attention later, on the question whether, and to what extent, if any, Edward Scanlon's instant action is barred by the judgment rendered in the action prosecuted by him as curator. The instant suit, first filed in 1900, was not tried until December, 1923, and out of that fact and the attendant circumstances shown in the record, arises the question whether this action was barred by limitation under the statute, a subject also to be considered later. In this case Edward Scanlon had a verdict of $30,000, which the trial court, by remittitur, reduced to $17,500, and judgment in that sum went against the city, and the city has brought the case to this court by writ of error. *Page 132

The cause was heard and submitted here upon oral arguments and briefs filed by both parties. An opinion was adopted, calling for reversal of the judgment for errors of the trial court and a remanding of the cause. Defendant in error filed his motion for a rehearing, which was sustained. The cause was set down for rehearing. The city, in due time before the rehearing, filed its brief with assignments of errors, points and authorities and argument thereon. In response thereto defendant in error also filed a brief, accompanied by a motion asking that the brief of the city on rehearing, be stricken from the files, or, that in any event it be disregarded, to the extent, that it assigns errors upon grounds not assigned in the city's brief on the first hearing, or attempts to make points not included or pressed upon the first hearing. It is urged that the brief filed by the city upon rehearing was filed without leave obtained and "purports to be an entirely new and independent brief in this cause." This asserted substitution or change of theory on the part of the city is directed wholly to the positions taken by the city upon the two questions above mentioned — whether the judgment in the son's case operates as a bar to recovery in whole or in part in this action, and whether this action is barred by limitation under the statute. In addition to the foregoing the city assigns errors in several respects, to be hereafter stated and considered.

Before proceeding to consider the assignments of error and the points in the brief of defendant in error upon rehearing, upon the contention that the verdict and judgment in the son's case bars and estops the father in the instant case, or the contention that the city is not to be allowed to go beyond the assignments and points made in its original brief upon that question, it is necessary to make statement of the pertinent facts, and the allegations of the pleadings in the two cases. In the petition filed by the father as curator in the case tried in 1902, the disabilities of the son resulting from his fall and injury, were set out with much detail. In addition to mental and physical pain, anguish and incapacity, it was set out in the petition in that suit that his (the son's) "body is now completely paralyzed and void of sensation and incapable of action, and will soremain during the rest of his life; and he will during the restof his life be totally and wholly disabled from performing anywork or labor; and during the rest of his life will be obliged to be either carried, or wheeled around, and he has been and will remain permanently crippled and disabled in the lower half of his body, and his brain has become permanently diseased and impaired in the performance of its natural functions, and during the continuance of his life his brain will become more and more diseased and impaired, until the plaintiff will entirely lose the ability to voluntarily control the operation of his brain, andafter arriving at the age of majority will necessarily becompelled to expend large sums of money, to-wit: the sum of $10,000 in nursing, care and attendance." (The Italics are ours). *Page 133 Following that, the petition (in the son's case) alleged that "by reason of the matters and things aforesaid the plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $35,000."

In the petition filed by the father in the instant case, it was alleged that Joseph Scanlon's body, including the organs therein, "became, is now, and has been completely paralyzed and void of sensation and incapable of action, control or use, and will so remain during the rest of his life, and he has been, and will, during the rest of his life continue to be totally and wholly disabled from performing any work or labor, and during all the years of his minority plaintiff has either had to carry or wheel him about, and nurse, care and provide for him as a helpless invalid, and he has been and will remain permanently crippled and disabled in the lower half of his body, and his brain became permanently diseased and impaired in the performance of its natural functions, and he has required guidance, attention and care because of his mental condition up to and beyond his majority." Following that, it is alleged that by reason of said injury and consequent condition this plaintiff, the father, has been deprived of the services of his son during all the years of his minority, and had to care for, nurse and provide for him during said time, and during said time has expended for necessary medical and surgical treatment large sums of money. This allegation was followed by a statement of a large number of items of expense incurred for medical attendance.

The answer of the city to the petition in the instant case, set out at length the substance of the petition filed in the former action for the son's benefit, including the allegation in the son's petition that "he (the son) would during the rest of hislife be totally and wholly disabled from performing any work orlabor," and including the allegations as to the permanently diseased condition of the son, and that he would become more and more diseased and would entirely lose the ability to voluntarily control the operation of his brain, "and after arriving at theage of his majority he would necessarily be compelled to spendlarge sums of money, to-wit: the sum of $10,000 for nursing, careand attention."

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W.2d 84, 325 Mo. 125, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scanlon-v-kansas-city-mo-1930.