Sullivan v. Chauvenet.

222 S.W. 759, 282 Mo. 649, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 759 (Sullivan v. Chauvenet.) 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
Sullivan v. Chauvenet., 222 S.W. 759, 282 Mo. 649, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 140 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

•GOODE, J.

Between seven-thirty and eight o-clock in the evening of October 2,1912, James J. Sullivan, then a boy thirteen years old, was collided with and seriously hurt by an automobile owned by defendant and driven by a chauffeur employed by her. The injured boy began this action, but as he has died since it was tried. Patrick Sullivan, the administrator of his estate, has been substituted as the plaintiff. For convenience we will speak of the boy as still the plaintiff.

As related by the boy and corroborated in important particulars bv other testimony, the facts are these: Th plaintiff bad been playing a game with some boys at Garfield and Union Avenues, two intersecting streets in St. Louis, the former running east and west and the latter north and south. Boys of another group were teasing the proprietor of a hardware store nearby and finally the proprietor chased them. Plaintiff was afraid he might be caught and charged with the mischievous acts done in front of the hardware store, though he said he had nothing to do with them; so he ran, too, and southwards along the east side of Union Avenue toward another east-and-west street which intersected it; that is, Cot« Brilliante Avenue,. Cote Brilliante does not -run across *653 Union in a straight course, but has a jog in it at Union, which it enters at the east side about forty feet south of where it enters at the west. Plaintiff ran along the east sidewalk of Union Avenue until he reached a point opposite the mouth of Cote Brilliante on the west side of Union, which was a common crossing place, and there he started across Union, still running to join a boy friend on the southwest corner of Union and Cote Brilliante;. He was looking south, but saw no automobile coming, Double street car tracks run along the center of Union Avenue, with roadways on either side, and when plaintiff was within three feet of the east street-car track and seventeen feet from the east curb of Union, he was run into by defendant’s automobile, knocked down, got up, walked to the sidewall?, fell there, was taken up, and conveyed in the automobile that hurt him to a hospital. The machino was stopped about thirty-five feet north of the point where it knocked plaintiff down. No warning of its approach had been given by horn or other noise, and he had not observed it, but its headlights were burning and he could see several blocks to the southward. The chauffeur went to the plaintiff while plaintiff was lying on the ground, and was asked why he didn’t sound a horn, and the chauffeur replied he didn’t have time. The automobile was a heavy one and the fenders on it were heavy. The left front fender was the part that struck plaintn and it was bent slightly by the blow. A witness testified he noticed the automobile just before it hit the boy; that it was running “at full speed” — fifteen or twenty miles an hour. An expert said it could have been stopped, considering the condition of the street and the speed, in fifteen or twenty feet. Traffic ordinances of the City of St. Louis regulating the driving of automobiles are in proof.

The driver of the automobile testified as follows: He had stopped just south of East Cote Brilliante Avenue to adjust his rear light, and after starting again was running about six miles an hour; plaintiff ran into the automobile, having started southwest across the drive *654 way of Union Avenne, when the automobile was within three feet of him; he was looking back in the direction of the proprietor of the hardware store who was chasing some boys; when he saw plaintiff the clutch was thrown out and the brake applied, which were the acts to do 1c stop the car; also the car was turned toward the east curb of Union Avenue and hit plaintiff only a foot from the curb; ran three feet after the collision; didn’t blow his horn because he hadn’t time to do so after he saw plaintiff.

The injured boy was given attention by a physician at the hospital, where he complained of pain in the region of his left kidney; showed no bruise or swelling, but was pale and weak; was taken home that evening; suffered much through the night, and the next day, or the day after, commenced to bleed from the left kidney, and the hemorrhage continue^ until he came near dying; was taken again to the hospital and an operation performed. The left kidney had been tom in two — the upper third was torn off. The kidney was removed and after several weeks the plaintiff was able to leave the hospital, and in two months he returned to school, but remained weak for a long time.

The specifications of negligence counted on in the petition are these: first, that by the exercise.of ordinary care, the driver could have seen plaintiff crossing the street in time to avoid injuring him; second, in violation of the duty imposed by law and ordinance on persons operating automobiles on a public street, the driver of the car ran it at a high and dangerous speed and in excess of ten miles an hour'; third, the driver sounded no warning; fourth, did not reduce speed as he approached the intersection of Cote Brilliante and Union Avenues.

The answer was a general denial and an averment that plaintiff caused or contributed to his injury by running backward into the street from the curb on Union Avenue at a point not customarily used by pedestrians as a crossing, without looking to see whether a vehicle was *655 approaching, and in so doing ran into and collided with the automobile, when, by using reasonable care to look for approaching vehicles, he could have avoided the collision.

The jury returned a verdict against defendant for $12,500, and judgment having been entered on the verdict, the defendant appealed.

The court instructed for a verdict for the plaintiff James Joseph Sullivan, if the jury found defendant’s chauffeur negligently ran the automobile against plaintiff at a high and dangerous speed, or without sounding a warning or giving any signal of its approach, or without slowing down as the automobile approached the intersection of Cote Brilliante and Union Avenues, provided the plaintiff was found to have .been exercising ordinary care for his own safety. The instruction omitted to submit the question of whether the driver of the car could have seen the boy, had ordinary care been used, in time to avoid running.against hipa, though an allegation to that effect was made in the petition. The defendant asked a. separate instruction concerning each of the three acts of negligence submitted to the jury, and charging that plaintiff was not entitled to a verdict for the particular act of negligence mentioned in the instruction; the total effect of these three instructions being that the plaintiff was not entitled to a verdict at all. We learn from the opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals that at the first trial the only issue of negligence left to the jury related to the omission of the chauffeur to sound a warning. We presume additional evidence was introduced at the second ■ trial, as a different view of the case was taken by the court in instructing the'jury, and rightly.-

The limit of speed allowed by municipal ordinance in the district of.St. Louis where the accident occurred, was ten miles an hour. There was testimony that the speed defendant’s automobile was- under when it hit *656 the hoy was from fifteen to twenty miles an hour.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 759, 282 Mo. 649, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-chauvenet-mo-1920.