Wallendorf v. Rensing

329 S.W.2d 779, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 638
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 14, 1959
Docket47213
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 329 S.W.2d 779 (Wallendorf v. Rensing) 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
Wallendorf v. Rensing, 329 S.W.2d 779, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 638 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

DALTON, Judge.

Action for $25,000 damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in a *780 collision between defendants’ 19S0 Buick automobile and a 1951 Ford % ton pickup truck operated by plaintiff’s son-in-law, Olen Kennon. Verdict and judgment were for defendants and plaintiff has appealed. Error is assigned on the admission of certain evidence and the giving of Instruction No. 6.

The collision occurred about 4 p.m., January 9, 1954, near the south edge of U.S. Highway 40, .4 of a mile east of the 71 By-Pass (Noland Road) and 224 feet east of Chapin Road. The four-lane paved highway is straight and nearly level with a slight slope to the east. It was a cloudy day, but visibility was good, the pavement -dry and the highway clear of other traffic. Defendant Frances Reusing was driving the Buick automobile (owned by her and her husband) east in the south lane of the highway and collided with the right side of the Ford truck, which had been proceeding west on the highway, but had made a left turn to the south to enter a private drive on the south side of the pavement. According to plaintiff, the collision occurred when the front wheels and about half of the truck were off of the pavement.

Plaintiff’s testimony further tended to show that the truck was being driven west in the north traffic lane of the highway at about 35 m. p. h. and, as it approached the drive in question, it slowed to 20 m. p. h. near two mail boxes (100 feet from the turn). The truck driver rolled down the left window, put out his hand and turned' in to the westbound lane next to the center, “hugged the center line” and, when 10 feet east of the lane, with his hand still out, he turned left to cross the two eastbound lanes and enter the private drive. When the truck was 35 feet back of where the truck made its turn, plaintiff saw the Buick approaching, “just crossing Chapin Road.” It didn’t seem to be coming fast. The truck then “traveled 35 feet and made a left turn.” About 10 feet back of the turn, the driver "pulled his hand back to make his left turn” and “turned in on the eastbound lane at about 10 miles [sic] trying to hit” the lip or raised edge of the slab. The Buick was 210 feet away and had just crossed Chapin Road, when the truck started its turn and entered the eastbound lane. The truck had two ten foot lanes to cross and then the length of the truck to get the truck off the concrete and in the clear. The truck traveled 70 feet after plaintiff first saw the Buick before the collision. Plaintiff did not see the Buick after he saw it 210 feet away. He didn’t warn the truck driver or look again. “I didn’t think it necessary, it looked like an awful safe place to turn, a good safe distance.” Plaintiff was severely injured and unconscious for 5 or 6 days.

The driver of the truck saw the Buick approaching in the south lane at or just east of Chapin Road and, later, about 150 feet away but he did not see the Buick after he began his left turn across the center line of the highway. He had slowed to about 15 m. p. h. and crossed the center line at 10 m. p. h. Fie thought he was safe and paid no further attention to the Buick. “I didn’t have no reason to, I thought I had a safe turn.” He heard no warning from the Buick or from plaintiff.

After the collision, the truck and the automobile came to a stop 20 feet apart, just off the pavement on the south side of the highway. Both plaintiff and the truck driver were thrown out and lay unconscious on the gravel shoulder.

As admissions against interest, the plaintiff offered parts of a deposition of the defendant driver of the Buick, towit, that she was driving at 40 m. p. h., and that she first noticed danger from the truck when she was about 150 feet away. The car had 4-wheel hydraulic brakes and was in good mechanical condition. She thought she could stop the car in 100 feet or less.

There was evidence that, under the circumstances shown, at 40 m. p. h. the Buick *781 could be stopped in approximately 1 IS feet, including reaction time. It would perhaps take a little longer on the slight slope, or downgrade.

Defendants offered evidence tending to show that no hand or other signal for a left turn was given by the truck driver; that the truck made an abrupt turn to the left when it got nearly opposite the driveway; that the pickup truck began its left turn when the Buick was SS feet away from it; that the front bumper of the truck had just reached the south edge of the pavement when the collision occurred; and that the defendant driver tried to turn to the right and applied her brakes but the left front fender of the Buick struck the right front fender of the truck. The defendant driver of the Buick had not noticed the private drive in question before the collision. She also tried to explain her prior deposition testimony as to distances saying that she didn’t know distances, but only land marks. Defendants’ expert witness fixed the stopping distance for the Buick at 40 m. p. h., and traveling down the east slope, at 128 feet.

The cause was submitted to the jury on defendants’ alleged humanitarian negligence in failing to stop, slacken speed or change the course of the. Buick and avoid the collision and plaintiff’s injuries after imminent peril arose.

Appellant assigns error on the court’s action in “permitting Sergeant Smith of the highway patrol (1) to give his conclusions about 'any evidence of drinking’, and (2) to relate what he had written on his report, and (3) tell what the truck driver said to him about how the accident happened, and (4) give questions and answers he had written down on his report which was in effect reading his report to the jury, all over the objection of the plaintiff and all of which was prejudicial to plaintiff, and in violation of the rules of evidence, of conclusions, hearsay and self serving.”

Sergeant Samuel Smith of the State Highway Patrol came to the scene of the mentioned collision and made an immediate investigation. He was called as a witness by defendants and was asked whether he found “any evidence of drinking on the part of either party.” Over an objection that the question gave “a roving commission of what might be hearsay” he answered that, “in talking to Mr. Kennon at the Independence Sanitarium I detected the odor of intoxicating liquor on his breath.” A further objection that the time fixed was after the collision and after medication was overruled. Mr. Kennon was lying on a bed in the emergency room of the hospital when he had been interviewed. No prejudicial error appears in view of the answer given. Both plaintiff and witness Kennon had previously testified that about 11 a. m. of the day in question they had helped another person finish off a part of a pint bottle of whiskey. Each had been cross-examined at length about the matter before Sergeant Smith testified.

Later, Sergeant Smith was cross-examined about “smelling the odor of alcohol on Mr. Kennon’s breath” and was asked if the witness was “certain about that fact.” The witness replied, “I noted it on my report at that time.” On objection that the witness had “no right to read what he has on his report,” the court ruled that the witness could “refresh his recollection” and the witness was then told that he could refer to his report to refresh his memory. He answered: “I had written down on my report on my notes the odor of beer.” No further objection or motion to strike the answer was made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
329 S.W.2d 779, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallendorf-v-rensing-mo-1959.