Stegall v. Wilson

416 S.W.2d 658, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 675
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1967
Docket24642
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 416 S.W.2d 658 (Stegall v. Wilson) 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
Stegall v. Wilson, 416 S.W.2d 658, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 675 (Mo. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

BLAIR, Judge.

The plaintiff, Eugene Stegall, sued the ■defendant. Stephen L. Wilson, for $10,-000.00 for personal injuries he claimed he received as a result of a collision between his motor scooter and attached sidecar and defendant Wilson’s automobile. The verdict and judgment were for Wilson, the defendant, and Stegall, the plaintiff, appeals.

Stegall was employed as a delivery man by the Colgan Engraving Company in Kansas City. Colgan is located on the north side of Tenth Street between Central and Broadway Streets. Tenth Street runs east and west. It has two north lanes for westbound traffic and two south lanes for eastbound traffic. It also has one lane for parking on both the north and south sides of these traffic lanes. There is a parking lot adjacent to the Colgan building. There Stegall parked his motor scooter and attached sidecar when it was not in use for deliveries.

Stegall testified as follows: On the day of the collision he was ordered to deliver some packages. He placed them in the sidecar, started the scooter’s motor and proceeded south on the parking lot driveway to the north edge of Tenth Street and then stopped. He waited for traffic to clear. When it cleared, he proceeded south across the parking lane and the two traffic lanes, all on the north side of the street, and to the street’s center. As he crossed these lanes, he was traveling in a southeasterly direction, but at an angle so “slight” that he described his course from the parking lot to the center of the street as “almost point blank”. When he reached the center of the street he was traveling 4 or 5 miles an hour. Then he increased his speed to 8 or 9 miles an hour and drove into the eastbound right hand lane of the street and turned east. At that time he saw defendant Wilson’s automobile in the eastbound left lane adjacent to his own right lane standing still and headed east at a distance of 30 or 35 feet ahead of him. He testified “Q Then you did proceed into that — or on that right hand lane all the way up to where the collision occurred? A Yes, I did. Q And was the lane that you were in — or describe to the jury what there was in the lane that you were in on up to the corner ahead of you ? A There wasn’t anything in the lane I was in. His car — it’s a two lane going each way — his car was in the center (eastbound) lane next to the dividing line (of the street). I was in the far right (adjacent eastbound) lane and I continued on up the street in the far right lane and there was no cars in the lane "at all. Q Was there any cars in the lane ahead of Mr. Wilson? A No, there wasn’t. Q Was there any cars behind him? A No, *661 there wasn’t. Q Could you see anything in the street that might obstruct or block the vision to either you or him? A No.” (Parentheses ours) As he proceeded directly east in his own lane to a point within 10 or IS feet of Wilson’s automobile, it was continuing to stand still in its own lane. On the instant, Wilson, without giving any sort of signal, began backing his automobile from his own left hand lane into Stegall’s right hand lane. At that moment Stegall’s speed was 10 or 12 miles an hour. The vehicles collided.

Wilson admitted he gave no signal of any sort before he began backing his automobile into Stegall’s lane. He admitted that he was wholly unaware of the presence of Stegall’s motor scooter on the street until immediately after the collision. He admitted that the right rear end of his automobile was 1 to 2 feet inside Stegall’s lane and that his vehicle was still moving backward at the time the vehicles collided. He stated the purpose of his backing maneuver was to cross Stegall’s lane and to enter the parking lane just beyond and park his automobile. Stegall testified that when Wilson started backing into his lane it was too late for him to take any precautionary measure to avoid the collision. There was no evidence concerning the distance in which the motor scooter moving 10 to 12 miles an hour could be stopped. There was no evidence concerning its maneuverability, except Stegall’s testimony that he could not swerve sharply to the right and away from Wilson’s backing automobile without danger of his scooter turning over and likely throwing him into Wilson’s path.

The trial court instructed the jury that it should find for Wilson, whether or not he was negligent, if it believed: First, that Stegall failed to keep a careful lookout; and second, that Stegall’s conduct, in failing to keep such lookout, was negligence; and third, that such negligence directly caused or contributed to cause any damage Stegall might have sustained. M.A.I. 28.01. Stegall asserts that there is no evidence in this record that he failed to keep a careful lookout and that this instruction was reversible error.

The burden rests on Wilson to point to substantial evidence in this record that Stegall was contributorily negligent by failing to keep such a lookout. Clark v. Howard, Mo.App., 273 S.W.2d 771, 774; 22 Mo.Digest, Negligence,. While sometimes contributory negligence may be inferred “from the attending surroundings and circumstances,” regardless of oral evidence to the contrary, See v. Kelly, Mo.App., 363 S.W.2d 213, 216, there are no such “attending surroundings and circumstances” in this record, standing alone, to justify a finding that Stegall was guilty of contributory negligence. Consequently resort can be had only to the oral evidence to determine this controversy. Concerning the collision only Stegall and Wilson testified. Wilson could shed no light on this question because he was wholly unaware of the presence of Stegall’s motor scooter on the street until immediately after the collision. Inevitably it results that Wilson’s only recourse is to place his reliance on Stegall’s testimony in his effort to convict Stegall of failing to keep a careful lookout. Chandler v. Mueller, Mo., 377 S.W.2d 288.

We have recited Stegall’s testimony fairly and it is all contrary to Wilson’s contentions. Summing .up his testimony, and viewing it objectively, it was in essence that he was assessing the whole area, including his lane, Wilson’s adjacent lane and the standstill position of Wilson’s automobile in that lane, from the time he entered his own lane and began proceeding east until the time Wilson suddenly began backing his automobile from his lane into Stegall’s lane. What we have said is not weighing the evidence but merely reciting the only relevant evidence bearing on the question before us. The only reasonable conclusion from this evidence is that Stegall was keeping a careful lookout ahead and laterally from the time he observed Wilson’s *662 automobile standing in the adjacent lane at a distance of 30 or 35 feet ahead of him until the vehicles collided in Stegall’s lane.

Even though a motorist negligently fails to keep a careful lookout and to see another motorist and to realize that a collision will likely occur if he does not take some precautionary measure, this alone does not warrant a lookout instruction, unless in addition there is substantial evidence that he “had the means and ability to have so acted that a collision would have been avoided” if he had kept such a lookout. Boehm v. St. Louis Public Service Co., Mo., 368 S.W.2d 361, 367; Moore v.

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Bluebook (online)
416 S.W.2d 658, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stegall-v-wilson-moctapp-1967.