Sperry v. Tracy Dodge-Plymouth Company

344 S.W.2d 108, 1961 Mo. LEXIS 694
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 13, 1961
Docket48193
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 344 S.W.2d 108 (Sperry v. Tracy Dodge-Plymouth Company) 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
Sperry v. Tracy Dodge-Plymouth Company, 344 S.W.2d 108, 1961 Mo. LEXIS 694 (Mo. 1961).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

A jury awarded Peggy Sperry $25,000 as damages in her action against Tracy Dodge-Plymouth Corporation and Millard DeShon for alleged injuries she sustained as a .result of having been struck by an automobile owned by Tracy Dodge and ■operated by its salesman, DeShon. Both defendants appealed from the ensuing judgment and both contend that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case, that the court erred in giving instructions and in refusing to discharge the jury for improper argument by plaintiff’s counsel, and Tracy Dodge contends also that the evidence failed to show that DeShon was on its business at the time of the accident. Plaintiff’s case was submitted on these disjunc-tively stated assignments of negligence under the humanitarian doctrine, failure to stop or-slacken or warn.

In determining whether there was substantial evidence to support the three hypotheses that after plaintiff came into a position of imminent peril defendant De-Shon in the exercise of the highest degree of care could have stopped the car or slackened its speed o.r warned the plaintiff of its approach and thus and thereby have avoided striking' her, we review the evidence from a standpoint favorable to plaintiff, give her the benefit of any part of defendants’ evidence favorable to her and not contradicted by her own testimony or not contrary to her fundamental recovery theory, give her the benefit of the reasonable inferences from all the evidence, and disregard all of defendants’ evidence unfavorable to plaintiff. Smithers v. Barker, 341 Mo. 1017, 111 S.W.2d 47, 50 [1, 2]; Ukman v. Hoover Motor Express Co., Mo., 269 S.W.2d 35, 37 [2],

The evidence so reviewed justifies this statement. About 3:30 in the afternoon of May 1, 1957, plaintiff and another young lady were passengers in an automobile being operated by their friend, Donna War-ford, northeastwardly on Frederick Avenue in St. Joseph. The three were leaving the city after having attended the Apple Blossom Festival. Donna stopped her automobile at the curb, intending that plaintiff would cross the street and purchase some doughnuts. While crossing to the doughnut shop, plaintiff was struck by the Tracy automobile being driven by De-Shon southwest on Frederick.

Frederick Avenue is 42 feet wide from curb to curb. Automobiles are permitted to park in the respective curb lanes and, at the time of the casualty in question, those lanes were partially occupied by parked cars so that there were, regularly and at the time of the accident, one eastbound and one westbound lane for vehicular traffic. While, as indicated, Frederick ran northeast-southwest, for the purposes of this case we shall hereinafter refer to it as though it were an east-west street.

*110 When , th,e eastbound Warford car reached .the place, in the 18.00 block of Frederick opposite the doughnut shop, Donna pulled to the south curb and stopped with her car’s front end 114 feet west of the west curb of 19th Street, the first intersecting southbound street to the east. Plaintiff alighted, went to the rear of the automobile, and stood at the curb. The Warford car had been stopped so that it blocked a driveway and, apparently for that reason and while plaintiff .remained standing at the south curb, the car was driven forward in the south curb lane some 100 feet until it had reached a place where its front end was about IS feet west of the west- curb line of southbound 19th Street. While the Warford car was thus moving eastwardly and after it had moved about 45 feet, plaintiff started across the street under these circumstances. A line of traffic had been moving eastwardly. The driver of the automobile which had been the first car behind the Warford car, saw plaintiff standing at the south curb, stopped his automobile and motioned her to cross in front of his automobile. His stopped car, of-course, caused all eastbound cars behind his automobile to stop. The eastbound cars which had preceded the Warford car had, in the meantime, moved eastwardly and out of the vicinity in question.

Before plaintiff moved from the south curb, she looked to the east and saw no approaching traffic. She could see to the east as far as northbound 19th Street (there was a jog in 19th where it crossed Frederick so that northbound 19th was farther east than southbound 19th.) Northbound 19th was, according to the testimony and the pictorial evidence, a distance of at least 300 feet (undoubtedly more) east of the point of impact She then looked to the west and upon seeing the stopped car and the driver motion her on, started across the street at a fast walk (a “little above average”), not again looking to her right., She continued at the same pace and when she had reached a point about two feet north of the center of the street, she was struck on her right side by the left front of the Tracy Dodge automobile being operated by DeShon. (Hereinafter we shall refer to the defendant corporation’s automobile as DeShon’s.) DeShon had turned right onto Frederick from (northbound) 19th. He did not see plaintiff until an instant before impact.

The operator of an automobile proceeding west on Frederick under the conditions, as they were at the time in question could' have seen plaintiff continuously from the-time she left the curb until she was struck, from the, time he was 225 feet east of the-point of impact. DeShon’s speed was 25-miles per hour immediately before he braked prior to striking plaintiff. The day was bright and clear. The street was dry and level. DeShon’s rear tires left skid-marks extending eastwardly for 20 feet from the rear wheels after the automobile had been stopped. DeShon’s automobile was new and its brakes and tires were in good condition. DeShon stopped his car in a distance of 20-35 feet from the time he-applied the brakes.

We are of the opinion that the foregoing evidence was sufficient to present a jury-question as to each submitted hypothesis,, failure to stop, to slacken, or to warn.

Defendants contend that plaintiff was not in imminent peril until she reached a place-just short of the path of DeShon’s car. That contention is, of course, based upon the premise that there was no evidence-from which the jury reasonably could have found that plaintiff was oblivious or that DeShon had actual or constructive knowledge thereof at any time prior to the point where plaintiff could not thereafter stop-before stepping into the path of his car„ As we see it, however, there was substantial evidence from which the jury reasonably could have found that plaintiff’s zone-of imminent peril was widened by reasoru of her obliviousness which should have been-apparent to DeShon.

The evidence heretofore reviewed' showed that plaintiff actually was oblivi *111 ous of the approach of defendant’s automobile until the time she was struck thereby; that before plaintiff left her stationary position at the south curb she looked to the east, saw no traffic approaching, then looked to the west and saw a line of traffic stopped and saw the occupant of the first car in that line motion her across; that she proceeded across the street at a fast walk and did not again look to the east. Reasonable findings which the jury was entitled to make based on the foregoing are that from the time plaintiff left the south curb until she was struck she proceeded at a fast walk in a straight line at a steady gait, looking either directly forward or to the west.

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Bluebook (online)
344 S.W.2d 108, 1961 Mo. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sperry-v-tracy-dodge-plymouth-company-mo-1961.