Terminal Warehouses of St. Joseph, Inc. v. Reiners

371 S.W.2d 311, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 9, 1963
Docket49636
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 371 S.W.2d 311 (Terminal Warehouses of St. Joseph, Inc. v. Reiners) 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
Terminal Warehouses of St. Joseph, Inc. v. Reiners, 371 S.W.2d 311, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 678 (Mo. 1963).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

Terminal Warehouses of St. Joseph, Inc., hereinafter sometimes called Terminal, brought an action against Mrs. Amelia Reiners for $2,500 for alleged damage to its truck. Mrs. Reiners (then Miss Phillips) counterclaimed against Terminal and Walter Bollman as an additional counterclaim defendant for $250,000 as damages for personal injuries she received on July 28, 1956, when the automobile she was driving came into collision with Terminal’s truck being driven by Bollman. The jury found against Terminal on its claim and for Mrs. Reiners on her counterclaim against both counterclaim defendants and fixed her damages at $110,000. Terminal and Bollman have appealed. Both claim, inter alia, that respondent failed to make a submissible case.

Respondent submitted her case on Bollman’s alleged humanitarian negligence in failing to swerve. In determining whether there was evidence to support the submitted hypothesis that after respondent came into a position of imminent peril Bollman, in the exercise of the highest degree of care, could have swerved and thereby have avoided the collision, we review the evidence from a standpoint favorable to respondent, give her the benefit of any part of appellants’ evidence favorable to her, give her the benefit of all reasonable inferences from all the evidence and disregard appellants’ evidence unfavorable to her. Fenneren v. Smith, Mo., 316 S.W.2d 602, 606 [3], So stating the evidence, a jury reasonably could have found the facts to be as stated herein.

Terminal operated a cold storage warehouse and a rendering plant. The truck Bollman was driving was owned by Terminal; it weighed 8,800 pounds, was seven feet wide, and had been specially constructed for the hauling of dead animals. Just prior to the accident in question Boll-man had picked up a dead cow and was proceeding to obtain another animal at the time of the collision. He was traveling generally south on Highway C in Clinton County and at the time of the collision was negotiating a curve traveling downhill southeastwardly. The left front of his truck came into collision with the left front of a Cadillac being driven by respondent in the opposite direction, i. e., around the curve traveling uphill north-westwardly. (For clarity we shall refer to Bollman’s right-hand side of the road as west and Mrs. Reiner’s right-hand side of *313 the road as east, as though the road at the place in question ran north-south.) The asphalt highway was 22 feet wide and had no center line painted thereon. The west •shoulder was two feet wide. The day was clear, the highway and its shoulders were •dry, and there was no other traffic in the 'vicinity.

Respondent remembered nothing of the accident other than that as she was proceeding northwardly (she thought on her side of the road) toward the top of the hill she saw a flash.

Bollman was driving 35 miles per hour at the time he saw respondent’s car approaching at 35-40 m. p. h. Although Bollman claimed that the vehicles were then 100 feet apart, there was testimony to the effect that Bollman’s right rear outside dual tire left a continuous mark near the west edge of the road beginning at a place 48 feet north of the point of impact. At that place the tire mark went onto the shoulder and led to the rear of the truck which had come to a stop in a ditch some 24 feet south of the rear of the Cadillac which remained on the highway. The Cadillac did not move substantially from the point of impact and after the accident its left side was eight feet from the west edge of the road and 10 feet from the edge of the west shoulder. There was a 10 to 12-inch ditch immediately west of the shoulder.

The evidence supported a reasonable inference that the Cadillac was traveling in the middle of the road, probably straddling an imaginary center line, but traveling in a relatively straight line and not, as appellants contend is an established fact, at an angle toward the left front of the truck. That inference is supported by the testimony of both Bollman and a highway patrolman, who testified to the distance from the east and west edges of the road to the left side of the Cadillac. Their testimony was so stated that the jury could have found from it that the Cadillac’s left front was no closer to the west or east edge of the road than its left rear, indicating a relatively straight line of travel; and certain of the photographic exhibits picturing the automobile at the scene of the accident, while not conclusive, support the same conclusion. The main damage to the automobile was to the left front corner and along its left side which was damaged as far back as the rear wheel.

Assuming that Bollman’s reaction time was three fourths of a second, his truck at 35 m. p. h. traveled 38½ feet while he reacted. Thus he saw respondent and, the jury reasonably could have found from his actions, recognized her position of imminent peril when he was more than 86 feet from the point of impact. But be that as it may, and whatever his reaction time, the important thing as to submissibility is that the tire mark made by Bollman’s outside rear dual tire began 48 feet north of the point of impact, clearly indicating that he had more than a second (speed of 35 m. p. h. and sufficient braking to leave a tire mark for 48 feet) in which to have swerved or driven to his right. Indeed, Bollman contends that he did swerve and drive to his right as far as possible and, in fact, swerved so far that he went into the 10 to 12-inch ditch in an attempt to avoid the collision, but that he could not avoid it because respondent’s car kept coming toward him. Physical facts, however, to which the highway patrolman testified demonstrate that Bollman’s testimony was inaccurate in that respect because at the time of the impact apparently the truck was on the surface of the road and did not go onto the shoulder or into the ditch until after the collision. Consequently, it seems to us and we have no doubt that the jury was justified in finding that Bollman recognized respondent’s position of imminent peril in ample time to have swerved to or driven upon the west shoulder with safety to himself.

The close question as to submissibility as we see it is whether, even if Bollman had swerved or driven to his right as far as reasonably possible, the left front of his truck or its widest part (7 feet) would have avoided contact with the Cadillac. *314 That question is made difficult by the facts that there is no positive evidence as to how close to the west edge of the road the right rear tire of the truck was as it approached and reached the impact point and there is no definite evidence of the extent to which the left front of the truck and car overlapped at the time of collision.

The highway patrolman said that the 48-foot tire mark up to the impact point was at the “very edge” of the roadway, but he said he did not measure the distance from the west edge of the roadway to the west side of the tire mark and that he did not know exactly how far the tire mark was west of the west side of the Cadillac. Some of Bollman’s testimony indicated that his right rear tire was about six inches from the west side of the road until he left the pavement and went into the ditch.

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Bluebook (online)
371 S.W.2d 311, 1963 Mo. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terminal-warehouses-of-st-joseph-inc-v-reiners-mo-1963.