Snyder v. Murray

17 S.W.2d 639, 223 Mo. App. 671, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 92
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 S.W.2d 639 (Snyder v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. Murray, 17 S.W.2d 639, 223 Mo. App. 671, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 92 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant, Greyhound Lines, Inc., in the sum of $800 and against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendants, Murray and Robinson. Defendant Greyhound Lines, Inc., has appealed.

The facts show that plaintiff and his wife were injured and his automobile damaged on December 30, 1927, when he ran into a service car belonging to the defendants Murray and Robinson and parked on the south side of Highway No. 40 a few miles east of Columbia and about three miles west of the Fulton “Y.” The road at the point of the collision runs east and west. Early in the afternoon of the day in question an eastbound bus of the defendant, Greyhound Lines, Inc., skidded off of the pavement at the place in ques *673 tion coming to a stop with its front end in the ditch and headed in a northwesterly direction on the north side of the pavement, which was eighteen feet wide, with its rear end about six feet, over the pavement. The driver of the bus, one Westrich, returned to Columbia for the purpose of getting help. He there engaged the services of the defendants, Robinson and Murray, who were partners engaged in the garage business in said city. The three of them arrived at the bus about four or four-thirty P. M. and Murray and Robinson continued in their efforts to move the bus back upon the pavement until about six or six-thirty P. M. At one time they had a cable across the road Avith one end attached to the bus and the other to a telephone post. A representative of the highAvay department came along and when it began to get dark he instructed the defendant Robinson not to block the roadway. Robinson and Murray discontinued the work and parked their service car across the road from the bus and off of the pavement on the shoulder and headed it toward the east Avith its headlights easting a brilliant reflection doAvn the road. Thereafter all efforts to remove the bus from the ditch ceased and Westrich, Murray and Robinson stood around talking for about an hour Avhen the collision occurred. The bus was thirty-two feet long and the service car eight or ten feet long. The rear end of the bus was about twenty feet west of the rear end of the service car. There were no lights upon the rear of the bus and no signal light or other warning placed upon the highAvay to warn persons approaching the bus.

Plaintiff resided in Kansas City and had been to St. Louis attending a convention. He and his wife left St. Louis in his automobile about two P. M. of the day in question intending to return to Kansas City During the morning of that dajr it rained. The rain ceased and the pavement in St. Louis had dried off at the time they left but the weather Avas cold. About an hour after their departure from St. Louis and when they were forty or fifty miles from that place it started to rain. Shortly afterward the rain turned to sleet and plaintiff’s automobile was covered with ice. The moisture on the concrete pavement froze and shortly after the sleet turned into snow, but before the snow began to come down the pavement was covered with ice. The snow was light at first but as it continued it got heavier until there was practically a blizzard at times. Finally the snow became an inch dr two in depth upon the highway and plaintiff was able to drive his car without slipping or sliding and he did not pass any slick places on the pavement before the collision. After it started to rain plaintiff reduced his speed to twenty-five miles per hour.

Beginning approximately four or five hundred feet from the point of the collision and to that point, plaintiff drove over what appeared *674 to him to be concrete clear of snow and ice, he being able to see the black line dividing the highway and running through the center thereof. His automobile was equipped with mechanic four-wheel brakes which were in first class condition. His tires were not slick but had good treads. Sometime prior to the collision he stopped and procured a preparation to be placed upon his windshield to keep the snow from adhering thereto. Thereafter the snow did not remain on the windshield to such an extent that he could not see. The ear was equipped with a standard windshield wiper. He ivas able to see by the aid of his headlights for a distance from one hundred to one hundred fifty feet after dark and under the conditions present.

Plaintiff testified that about a quarter of a mile from the service car he first noticed the lights upon that car, which appeared to be on a car approaching him from the west. He then pulled over to the right of the road to give this automobile room to pass. As he approached closer to the lights which he thought were coming toward him he was blinded by their glare. The roadway was straight and slightly rising toward the west at this place. There is no testimony as to exactly where plaintiff was at the time this blinding commenced. He testified that he was about one hundred feet from the service car when it blinded him “the worst;” that when the lights blinded him he took his foot off of the accelerator and his car slowed down to about eighteen or twenty miles per hour. "When he reached a place about fifty feet, more or less, east of the service ear he first saw the bus projecting over the concrete about seventy-eight or eighty feet from him. He saw the bus as soon as the lights on the service car ceased blinding him and his lights took effect. He could see that the bus had no light upon it. He made no effort to stop when he saw the bus but guided his car to the left to go around it. He testified that he did not think it was necessary to attempt to stop; that it appeared to him that there was room to go around the bus.

There were some men standing in the center of the pavement opposite the bus. As soon as plaintiff turned his car to go around the bus and when his car was headed slightly in a southwesterly direction and about astride the black line running down the center of the pavement he saw these men forty or fifty feet west of him. He then for the first time attempted to stop his car, thinking that if he did not stop he would run into the men. Contrary to its appearance the pavement ivas not dry and free from ice but was covered with ice and when plaintiff put on his brakes he skidded across the road, turning a little to the left and struck the service car which he thought was approaching him. The left front end of plaintiff’s car hit the left front end of the service car, From the *675 time lie removed his foot from the accelerator plaintiff’s ear continued to slow up to some extent ■ and when he struck the service car it was going at the rate of about eighteen miles per hour. Plaintiff “practically” lost control of his car Avhen he applied the brakes. When his ear hit the service car the former skidded around and went into the ditch on the south side of the road, front forward into the ditch about opposite the bus.

When plaintiff approached the scene of the collision he did not see any light or flag to indicate that the bus was there, although he was watching the road ahead of him carefully. Pie testified that he did not know until after the collision that there was ice on the highway at the scene of the collision and that the service car was not moving toward him.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W.2d 639, 223 Mo. App. 671, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-murray-moctapp-1929.