Wright v. Quattrochi.

49 S.W.2d 3, 330 Mo. 173, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 692
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 49 S.W.2d 3 (Wright v. Quattrochi.) 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
Wright v. Quattrochi., 49 S.W.2d 3, 330 Mo. 173, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 692 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

Plaintiff, a minor, suing by his next friend, brought this action in the Circuit Court of Randolph County for damages for personal injuries caused by a truck of defendants in Hannibal in Marion County. Defendants are copartners and are engaged in the produce business in Hannibal and also in Moberly, Randolph County. There was judgment for defendants, and plaintiff's motion for a new trial having been overruled, he appealed. The damages claimed fix our jurisdiction. Plaintiff's injuries are permanent and painful and his disability is all but total. The only question in the case was the liability of defendants.

I. Plaintiff assigns as error a given instruction to the effect that if the jurors believed from the evidence that the injuries sustained by the plaintiff were the result of an accident or misadventure and not the result of negligence on the part of the defendants as defined in other instructions, then the jurors should find for the defendants. The propriety of this instruction is to be judged by the facts in evidence.

Plaintiff was injured on October 4, 1928, at or shortly before five o'clock in the afternoon while it was yet daylight in an alley near Broadway in Hannibal. The alley runs from Church Street on the south to Broadway on the north. It is sixteen feet wide and paved. The Minor garage occupies the first floor of a building at the southwest corner of Broadway and the alley. It runs back southwardly along the west line of the alley, a distance of sixty-seven feet. The garage has an alley door very close to the rear of the building, that is to say nearly sixty-seven feet from Broadway. The door is nine and one-half feet wide and there is a runway from the garage down into the alley. Automobiles enter and leave the garage by this doorway. *Page 177 The Hannibal Milling Company has an office at the southeast corner of Broadway and the alley. This building runs southwardly along the east line of the alley about forty feet. The garage and the milling office face each other across the alley as far back from Broadway as the shorter building, the milling office, extends. There are windows on the alley side of the milling office. The property of the milling company across the alley from the back door of the garage is not improved. But about twenty feet south of the door of the garage, that is to say, that much further away from Broadway, the milling company has an oil house. These local facts will aid the understanding of the testimony.

Defendants' truck had a capacity of three and one-half tons, weighed over 9000 pounds and had a governor which restricted its speed limit to seventeen miles an hour. It was over twenty-three feet long and seven feet, eight inches wide. At the time of the accident the truck, driven by a colored chauffeur, was moving through the alley northwardly toward Broadway. At the junction of the alley with Broadway there was a stop signal which, witnesses for both sides testified, the police of Hannibal caused to be observed.

At the time of the accident, plaintiff was eight years old. He owned a scooter, and his young companion, Jack Hedges, owned a bicycle. The plaintiff, Richard Wright, was riding the bicycle about the floor of the garage while young Hedges was playing with the scooter somewhere on the mill property across the alley from the garage. Plaintiff decided to get his scooter from Hedges and he testified that he rode out of the door of the garage into the alley in search of Hedges. When he got into the alley, he saw the truck at the oil house about twenty feet south and approaching northwardly toward him. The driver of the truck was looking toward him or in his direction. He rode the bicycle northwardly in the same direction as the truck was going toward Broadway, but he went toward the east or mill-office side of the alley to get out of the way of the truck. The truck came on and hit him. He did not know how far he had gone toward the mill office and he did not remember whether he was on the bicycle or had gotten off, when he was hurt. He did not know what part of the truck hit him, nor what happened to him, nor whether the truck knocked the bicycle from under him, nor whether the whole truck passed over him nor whether any of the wheels of the truck rolled over his body. Everything was black, said he. Mr. Richards, an officer of the Hannibal Milling Company, was in his office overlooking the alley, when he was informed that plaintiff had been hurt. He ordered out his automobile and took plaintiff in the car to a hospital. Mr. Hedges, father of Jack Hedges, John Tuttle, chauffeur of the truck, and policeman Featherstone went along. Mr. Richards testified that, on the way to the hospital, *Page 178 plaintiff said that he ran "right under the side of the truck" and that the accident was not the fault of the truck driver. In rebuttal plaintiff denied that he made these statements.

John Tuttle, driver of the truck, testified that when he got to the garage building he was traveling five or six miles an hour and was looking ahead and did not see the boy. The first thing he felt was a jar and he heard the child scream, and he stopped and got out and picked the boy up. The boy was lying three or four feet from the back end of the truck and the bicycle was lying over about the middle of the truck, back of it. He had no notice or knowledge that the boy was in the alley. When he felt the jar the cab of the truck had passed the Minor garage. J.B. Featherstone, a Hannibal policeman, testified that, on the way to the hospital in Mr. Richards' car, Tuttle said: "I hit him, and I want to take him to the hospital." Tuttle denied that he made this statement. Plaintiff offered in evidence a written statement of Tuttle which differs but little from his testimony as narrated except for repetition of the phrase, "I hit him." At one point he said: "I heard some one scream. I looked out of the cab window and saw that I had hit a boy who was riding a bicycle." Again he said in the statement: "Now after I hit the boy my car stopped nine or ten feet from the north face of the door at the back end of the garage." Tuttle testified that the statement was wrong, that he signed it without reading it.

C.R. Mahan, also an officer of the Hannibal Milling Company was walking south in the alley toward the oil house when the truck passed him going north toward Broadway traveling eight or ten miles per hour. He heard the boy scream and turned and saw the truck stop about ten feet beyond the garage door. But he continued to the oil house. He did not see the accident nor observe where the boy was lying.

Mr. Wagner, a railroad representative, was in the office of the milling company, talking to Mr. Richards when he heard the boy scream. He saw the boy in a reclining position on the alley paving in the doorway of Minor's garage. The lad was nearer to the garage side than to the mill side of the alley, and about ten feet behind the truck which was standing. He did not see the accident.

T.B. Arnold, a bookkeeper in the office of the milling company, heard a boy cry out. He looked out of an office window on the alley side and saw defendants' truck stopped in the alley, with the cab opposite the window from which he was looking. He did not see the accident. Plaintiff argues from Mr. Arnold's testimony that the boy was struck sixteen and one-half feet north of the north side of the garage door. The foregoing is a summary of all of the testimony by which the accident instruction is to be judged.

Plaintiff in his petition alleged six specifications of negligence and he also pleaded the humanitarian doctrine. He submitted the case *Page 179 to the jury on the last theory alone.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W.2d 3, 330 Mo. 173, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-quattrochi-mo-1932.