Wilson Ex Rel. Wilson v. Shumate

296 S.W.2d 72, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 706
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1956
Docket45337
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 296 S.W.2d 72 (Wilson Ex Rel. Wilson v. Shumate) 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
Wilson Ex Rel. Wilson v. Shumate, 296 S.W.2d 72, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 706 (Mo. 1956).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

Patricia Wilson, by her next friend, recovered a verdict and judgment for $15,000 in her damage action for personal injuries allegedly resulting from defendant’s negligence. The trial court sustained defendant’s after-trial motion to set aside plaintiffs judgment and enter judgment for defendant on the grounds that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case and that plaintiff was contributorily negligent as a matter of law; and alternatively sustained defendant’s motion for new trial for the stated reason or reasons that “the verdict is excessive and against the weight of the evidence.” Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in sustaining both motions.

To determine the submissibility of plaintiff’s case and to determine whether plaintiff was, as a matter of law, contrib-utorily negligent, we review the evidence from a standpoint favorable to plaintiff, giving her the benefit of any part of defendant’s evidence favorable to her and not contrary to her fundamental recovery theory, giving her the benefit of all reasonable inferences from all the evidence, and disregarding defendant’s evidence not favorable to plaintiff.

Patricia, 17 or 18 at the time of the accident, and two other high school girls rode in defendant’s automobile as his guests from Poplár Bluff to Bolivar for the purpose of possible enrollment at Southwest Baptist College. On the return trip defendant drove, his wife was a front-seat passenger, and the three girls occupied the rear seat. When the automobile reached a place on Highway 21 north of its intersection with Highway 160, defendant suggested that he was extremely tired and that one of the girls drive. It developed that Patricia was the only one with a driver’s license and consequently she became the driver, with the two other girls in the front seat and defendant and his wife occupying the rear seat. At the stop for the change in drivers, defendant had applied the emergency brake; Patricia released that brake and, after defendant’s statement that the car was ready to go, proceeded southwardly on Highway 21. She had never before traveled that road and, while there were hills and curves, it was unnecessary for her to use, and she did not use or attempt to use, the foot brake until the' time hereinafter noted.

Highway 21 joined Highway 160 in a T-junction, i. e., one had to turn either left or right off 21 onto 160. Patricia intended to turn left. The left turn into 160 was a “sharp curve,” while the right turn was a “sweeping curve.” When Patricia reached a sign north of 160 indicating the proximity of the T-junction, she was traveling about 30-35 miles per hour. She there reduced her foot pressure on the accelerator. That junction sign was SCO-688 feet north of the north edge of Highway 160. At some point after she passed that sign (she did not know where), she pressed on the foot-brake pedal. The pedal went clear to the floor and had no slowing or stopping action. She tried to stop or slow “again and again” by working the pedal up and down, “screamed” that the brakes wouldn’t hold, and thereupon ran into the embankment on the south side of Highway 160. She did not use or attempt to use the emergency brake. She did not turn or attempt to turn either left or right *75 on Highway 160 because she was going too fast. Her estimated speed at that time was some, but not much, less than 30-35 m.p.h. The other passengers were awakened by Patricia’s screams concerning the brakes, and defendant leaned over from the back seat in an unsuccessful attempt to assist Patricia in avoiding an imminent collision with the embankment.

Patricia testified that defendant did not tell her anything about the condition of tne brakes; she did not know that the foot brake was not in good working order; and she did. not know that the emergency brake could be used as a hand brake to stop.the automobile.

Defendant’s automobile was a 1950 “used car” which he had owned for a month prior to the accident and which had traveled 50,000 miles' at the time of purchase. It had-4-wheel hydraulic brakes. Defendant had had no work done on it, had never checked the brake fluid or added any, and had never had the brakes adjusted.

Section 304.560(3) .RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., provides that “All motor -vehicles, except motorcycles, shall be provided at all times with two sets of adequate brakes, kept in good, working order, * If plaintiff’s pleading sufficiently alleged, and her trial theory and’ submission of the case were on the theory, that defendant had violated that statute, then there can be no question but what plaintiff made a submissible case. Plaintiff’s testimony, heretofore noted, that the brake pedal went clear to the floor as she “again and again” used it in an attempt to stop the automobile, that it failed to slow or stop but ran into the embankment, was sufficient evidence from which a jury reasonably could find that defendant’s automobile was not equipped with two sets of brakes in good working order during the time plaintiff was driving and that the defective foot brake contributed to Cause the collision. Defendant’s failure to observe the duty or standard of care prescribed by the statute constituted negligence. In recognition, however, of the principle that the statute must be reasonably construed and. applied, defendant could offer proof of legal excuse or avoidance of his failure to have obi-served the duty created by the' statute, i. e., proof that an occurrence wholly withr out his fault made compliance -¡with the statute impossible at the- mptnent complained of and which, proper canelón -his part’ would not have, avoided.’ ;:Upon ad’-ducing substantial evidence tending to so prove, it’ was then a jury question as to whether defendant was negligent for .failure to have provided a foot braka.-in good working order. Lochmoeller v. Kiel, Mo. App., 137 S.W.2d 625, 630; and .see, 65 C.J.S., Negligence, § 19 h, p. 426;

We have said above that, the.-Tpregping is true if plaintiff proceeded on the theory that defendant violated' the''statute' mentioned above. We have so said because it is not entirely clear either from -plaintiff’s petition, the evidence adduced,-;or her instruction, that she did so proceed. The petition, evidence, and instruction are such that they are subject to the >'construction that plaintiff tried and' subrriitted her- case on the ■ theory that defendant was guilty of common-law negligence -■ in ■ permitting plaintiff to1’ drive his automobile when he knew or should have ' knowil that "the brakes were defective and in failing'- to have warned plaintiff of their defective condition'. That is because plaintiff’s-pefi-tioh-'embraced that theory,’.she'--adduced some evidence at the trial-for'the purpose of attempting to prové defendant’s prior knowledge of the defective brakes’, 'and submitted in her main instruction -a finding by the jury of defendant’s prior knowledge, actual or constructive, of- defective-brakes. The petition, however, did contain the allegation that the brakes were defective; and the evidence offered by plaintiff as: to defendant’s prior knowledge 'thereof ánd the submission of that issue in plaintiff’s instruction did not necessarily negative ■ the proposition that plaintiff was relying on violation of the statute. That is because that evidence and that jury' submission *76 would properly negative in plaintiff’s instruction any legal excuse or avoidance of violation of the statute which defendant’s evidence might support or which defendant might, but did not, submit.

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Bluebook (online)
296 S.W.2d 72, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-ex-rel-wilson-v-shumate-mo-1956.