Stover v. Patrick

459 S.W.2d 393, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 820
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 9, 1970
Docket54147
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 459 S.W.2d 393 (Stover v. Patrick) 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
Stover v. Patrick, 459 S.W.2d 393, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 820 (Mo. 1970).

Opinion

FINCH, Judge.

Plaintiffs (husband and wife) brought suit in separate counts to recover for personal injuries arising from a collision between the Stover automobile and a car driven by defendant. Mrs. Stover sought $75,000 and Mr. Stover asked for $15,000 to cover his injuries plus loss of consortium and expenses caused by injuries to his wife. After the jury returned a verdict for defendant on both counts, the trial court sustained plaintiffs’ motion for new trial on the basis that certain instructions given at defendant’s request were erroneous. Defendant has appealed from that order. We affirm the order for a new trial for Ruby Stover but reverse and remand with directions as to the claim of Lewis Francis Stover.

The issues presented on appeal do not require an extended recital of the evidence and we set out only so much as is necessary to an understanding of our decision.

The collision occurred in midafternoon on Highway 60 at a point which at that time was a paved two-lane highway. The Stovers, with Mr. Stover driving, were going west enroute to Springfield to “stand up” at a wedding and then spend the night with the friends who were being married. Mrs. Patrick was traveling east enroute to her home in Rogersville.

There had been a very heavy snowstorm the night before and, according to evidence offered by the defendant, the highway at that point was covered with ice and snow and was very slick. However, the Stovers testified that at that point the highway had been cleared and was not slick. They stated that there was only loose, blowing snow on the highway and at times the center line could be seen. The Stovers fixed their speed at 20 to 30 miles per hour, and Mrs. Patrick fixed her speed at 20 to 25 miles per hour.

According to the Stover evidence, they came over a rise and started down into a dip in the highway, at which time they observed cars approaching from the opposite direction come over another rise in the highway and start down into the dip. The Patrick car was described as the second of the automobiles, traveling about a car’s length behind the first automobile. When plaintiffs and defendant were about 700 feet apart, the Patrick car pulled out as though to pass, getting out far enough for plaintiffs to see the left headlight. It then pulled back in behind car No. 1. When the Patrick car was 200 to 300 feet away, it pulled out a second time. About the same amount of the front of the automobile could be seen as before. Again, it went back into its own lane of travel, but this time it was observed to go to the right onto the lip on the concrete pavement and perhaps the shoulder, after which, according to plaintiffs, it whipped back to its left and across the highway in front of the Stover automobile. The Stovers testified that they observed the wheels of the Patrick automobile turning and that it was not skidding on any of these occasions.

Mr. Stover testified that when the Patrick car came out the third time, he put his car in low gear, shut the engine off, started to apply his brakes, and to turn to the right. He did not fix the distance between the cars when this occurred other' than to say that it was the distance between the witness stand and some wall in the room, but that distance was not more specifically stated. The collision occurred in the westbound lane of the pavement (possibly partially on the north shoulder), the front end of the Stover car colliding with the right side of the Patrick automobile.

The evidence on behalf of Mrs. Patrick was that as she came over the rise and *395 started down into the lower area of the highway, there was no car in front of her, and that she did not pull out to pass another automobile. She stated that her car began to slide gradually to the opposite side of the road without any act on her part, such as turning the wheels or accelerating or applying the brakes. She testified that when her car began to skid, she tried cutting her wheels against the skid and then tried to steer back to her own side of the road. When the car wouldn’t respond, she tried to steer it into the ditch on her left-hand side in order to try to avoid colliding with the plaintiffs’ oncoming car, but the two cars collided.

Both plaintiffs submitted solely on the basis that defendant drove on the wrong side of the road. Instruction No. 4, tendered by Ruby Stover, was as follows:

“Your verdict must be for plaintiff, Ruby Stover, on Count I of the petition if you believe:
“First, defendant drove on the wrong side of the road, and
“Second, defendant was thereby negligent, and
“Third, as a direct result of such negligence the plaintiff, Ruby Stover, sustained damage.”

Instruction No. 6, given on behalf of Mr. Stover, was similar.

Defendant offered and the court gave Instruction No. 8, as follows:

“Your verdict must be for defendant on plaintiffs’ claims for damages if you believe that defendant’s motor vehicle skidded from its proper lane of travel onto the wrong side of the road.”

In sustaining plaintiffs’ motion for new trial, the first reason given by the trial court was that Instruction No. 8 was improperly given because it “did not hypothesize the finding that the skid of defendant’s automobile was not negligent.” We conclude, for the reasons which follow, that the giving of said instruction was reversible error.

Defendant seeks to justify Instruction No. 8 as a proper converse of Instructions 4 and 6 given by plaintiffs. No contention is made that No. 8 is a true converse, and obviously it is not. Rather, it is defendant’s contention that it was a permissible affirmative converse under the Third Method of conversing provided in MAI 33.01, Second Edition. 1

MAI does permit affirmative converse instructions. Such an instruction was approved in Wilson v. Checker Cab Co., Mo. 431 S.W.2d 122. There plaintiff’s verdict directing instruction sought recovery on the basis that a taxicab driver “either: allowed the taxicab to move forward while plaintiff was alighting, or failed to provide plaintiff with a reasonably safe place to alight from the taxicab.” Defendant submitted an affirmative converse instruction as follows: “Your verdict must be for the defendant if you believe plaintiff fell after she had alighted from defendant’s taxicab and traveled approximately twenty feet from said taxicab.” Plaintiff argued that said instruction was erroneous because it did not precisely converse any element of plaintiff’s verdict directing instruction, and was not in substantially the same language as the verdict directing instruction. This court held that in a proper affirmative converse it is not necessary to precisely converse plaintiff’s theory. In approving the converse instruction given, this court said, 431 S.W.2d 1. c. 123: “In Instruction 6 the defendant hypothesized the ultimate issue of whether plaintiff had alighted from the taxicab and traveled approximately twenty feet before she fell. The testimony of the police officer constituted independent evidence to support this submission. If the jury found the submitted issue to be true it defeated plaintiff’s submitted claim.

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Bluebook (online)
459 S.W.2d 393, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stover-v-patrick-mo-1970.