Witt v. Peterson

310 S.W.2d 857, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 774
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1958
Docket46251
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 310 S.W.2d 857 (Witt v. Peterson) 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
Witt v. Peterson, 310 S.W.2d 857, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 774 (Mo. 1958).

Opinion

ELMO B. HUNTER, Special Judge.

Louis Witt, plaintiff-appellant, and Ronald James Peterson, defendant-respondent, on February 11, 1956, shortly after midnight, had a collision with their automobiles in the intersection of Union and Lin-dell Boulevards in St. Louis, Missouri. Plaintiff brought suit against defendant for' $10,000 for his alleged resultant injuries. The jury returned a defendant’s verdict,, and this appeal resulted.

Plaintiff’s version of the accident is that he was in his Ford automobile going south on Union Avenue which is about 60 or 70 feet wide at the point where it intersects Lindell Boulevard, which runs east and west. The intersection of these two^ avenues is a wide oval shaped one. There are six traffic lanes on Union Avenue; three for northbound traffic and three for southbound traffic. There are syncronized electric traffic signals for both north and • southbound traffic on Union Avenue and for east and westbound traffic on Lindell Avenue. Plaintiff’s Ford was in the curb or west lane of traffic. -As he approached the intersection there were two cars occupying the two southbound lanes to his left. One was stopped right on the line, and the other was approximately half a car’s length behind the line. The traffic lights for southbound traffic were red. It was snowing and the streets were slippery. Plaintiff stopped his Ford about half a car’s length behind the front of the second car, so as to place the three cars in a staggered position. The lights changed to green. The southbound car in the lane nearest the center of the street remained stationary. The one in the middle lane pulled up to the line and stopped. Plaintiff started forward and as stated by him, “kept on going because the light was in my favor.” He heard the screeching of brakes, “so I just started to turn and look, and he [defendant] was right there; * * * right on top of me” * * * “I would say no more than a foot or two approximately” when plaintiff first turned to look. On being asked where the collision occurred, plaintiff said, “Well, in the lane on the north side of Lindell. It wasn’t in the center of Lindell. * * * Had you gotten almost to the center line? A. Well, yes.” Plaintiff also testified that *859 from the time he had started forward with the green light until he heard the screeching of brakes and saw defendant’s car a foot or two away he did not look to his left for traffic coming from his left side. We refer to his own statement of it when he was asked, “When the car to the left of you stopped, did that cause any curiosity on your part as to why he stopped — that something might be coming? A. It aroused my curiosity, but I was already past him when he stopped. * * * Actually, you went the width of two lanes and were in the lane just north of the center of Lindell when your car was struck. Is that right? A. That’s right.” “Q. And you never did look to your left until you heard something, and then the other car {defendant’s] was between one and two feet from you? Is that right? A. Yes, ■sir.” According to his judgment he was .going 10 to IS miles an hour when the front ■of his Ford car got even with the front of the car to his left. He had then gone 10 ■or 15 feet forward. At that point he could have made an emergency stop in, “I would •say two or three feet, it might have been more” — but that was his best judgment of it. At another point he was asked: “Q. What speed had you accelerated to from the moment you started up until the time ■of the impact? A. I wasn’t doing over 10 or 12 miles an hour.” The front of defendant’s Chrysler automobile hit plaintiff’s Ford on the left (driver’s) side at about the door.

Defendant’s version of the accident is that he was in his Chrysler automobile westbound on his way home on Lindell Boulevard in the traffic lane closest to the center of the street. His maximum speed as he was approaching the intersection was 25 miles per hour. There were three electric signals facing him. As he neared the intersection the electric signal at the cutoff for traffic to turn right on Union Avenue was green. He slowed down, watched the traffic light and proceeded on past it. As he approached the second light, before •entering the intersection of Lindell and Union Avenues, it also was green for westbound traffic, but it turned amber approximately as he passed it. And, as he passed the second traffic light that put him out into the intersection of the two boulevards. His first reaction was to slow down but then decided to try to get out of the intersection before the north-south traffic would start up. He accelerated his car but almost instantly became aware of plaintiff’s car coming rapidly south. He had about reached the center line of Union Avenue when he first saw plaintiff’s Ford car com-, ing forward from the west traffic lane. No other north or southbound cars were then moving. The mentioned two stopped automobiles were about a couple of car widths to the right of his car’s path. We refer to defendant’s statement as to what then occurred: “When I first saw his car, I slammed on my brakes, honked my horn and turned, veered to the left, toward the south.” “Q. Did you cross the center of the line? A. Yes.” And the vehicles collided. Defendant stated he did not see the light change from amber to red before the collision, but was not looking at the light then as he was watching plaintiff’s car come forward.

James Wrasmann, who with his wife was traveling in a car some 50 or 60 feet behind defendant’s car, witnessed the accident. He and his wife testified on plaintiff’s behalf. He testified that the traffic lights were amber just before defendant reached the intersection, and turned red “at the same time he [defendant] began to enter the intersection”; that defendant’s speed was then about 20 miles per hour, and that defendant slightly accelerated his speed after entering the intersection. His wife testified defendant entered the intersection with the red light against him.

On this appeal plaintiff has contented himself with a single contention of error. He asserts the trial court erred in giving Instruction No. 5 on behalf of the defendant “because it fails to require a finding that plaintiff had reason to believe that a collision would occur unless precautionary *860 measures were taken, and by so failing gave the jury a roving commission to find facts which establish no duty to act and predicate a finding of contributory negligence thereon.”

Instruction No.

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Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.2d 857, 1958 Mo. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witt-v-peterson-mo-1958.