Zimmerman v. Young

280 S.W.2d 457, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 136
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1955
DocketNo. 28979
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 280 S.W.2d 457 (Zimmerman v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zimmerman v. Young, 280 S.W.2d 457, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 136 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

ROBERT L. ARONSON, Special Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered by direction of the trial court, at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, in an action for personal injuries, wherein the prayer was for $5,000, and thus within the jurisdiction of this court. Originally the suit was brought by Cora Estes, who died pending trial, and the cause was revived and subsequently prosecuted by the administrator of her estate. Since no issue is involved which relates to the revivor of the cause, we shall, for simplicity refer to Mrs. Estes as the plaintiff.

Plaintiff was the mother-in-law of defendant. On March 5, 1953, at the invitation of defendant and his wife she rode with them from her home in Cape Girar-deau to their home in St. Louis, arriving after dark. On attempting to alight from defendant’s Buick sedan automobile through the right rear door thereof,' .she' fell and fractured her hip.

[459]*459The parts of the petition pertinent to this appeal charged that defendant’s:

“Buick Sedan automobile was not reasonably safe for plaintiff to use and ride in, in that a floor mat therein was loose and wrinkled and uneven in surface and the doorsill thereof was raised above the level of the floor of said automobile.
“4. That after 7:00 p., m. on said date, when darkness had fallen, defendant parked said Buick Sedan automobile in an unlighted place and invited plaintiff to alight from said automobile without assistance and without lights, and failed to warn plaintiff of the condition of the floor, floormat and doorsill of said automobile.
“5. That as a direct and proximate result of the unsafe condition of said automobile and of defendant’s failure to warn plaintiff of, or provide lights for, plaintiff to see such condition, plaintiff was caused to stumble and fall in attempting to alight from said automobile and plaintiff did fall onto a hard surface, breaking her bones and tearing and lacerating her flesh.”

The parties stipulated the fact “that the automobile owned by defendant, Bradley Young, on March 5, 1953, was a 1951, four door Buick Sedan, super model, and that said automobile and the scuff-plate on the doorsill of the rear door on the right hand side of said automobile were of standard construction and in normal condition on March 5, 1953, and at all times pertinent to this case.”

Since Mrs. Estes had died shortly after suit was filed the only witnesses called for plaintiff were defendant, his wife and plaintiff administrator. Defendant testified that in March 1953 he had been a Trooper with the Missouri State Highway Patrol; his car was a 1951 Buick four door Super, standard in construction; he had bought a thin rubber mat which was placed over the rug in the back of the car; it was 15 to 20 inches wide and extended across the width of the car, and was not fastened in any way; that said mat has a tendency to bec'ome wrinkled or ruffled up in ordinary use; with his approval, his wife had made the suggestion, to plaintiff, her mother, age 76, who had been ill a short time before, that she come up to St. Louis; after leaving plaintiff’s home, they stopped at her son’s home, where all got out of the car for thirty minutes or more; then they drove to St. Louis, he and his wife in the fronf seat, plaintiff alone in the back; he parked his car at the curb, went to the trunk, picked up two suitcases" and carried them into the house, where he turned on the lights; at that time his wife was getting out of her door and picking up some things from the seat and plaintiff was still in the car; the place where he had parked was not lighted in any way; his car had a dome light that came on automatically when a front door was open, but was not affected by the back doors; he was inside the house when plaintiff was hurt; his wife called to him, he then found plaintiff lying on the sidewalk and he carried her in the house; he did not notice whether the rubber mat was smooth or wrinkled; the sill of the rear door of the car was a half-inch above the floor level. He further testified that plaintiff had often ridden in his car, back and front, had made a trip east with them three months before, and never had difficulty getting in or out of the car; he had not noticed the condition of the floor mat-when they left Cape Girardeau.

Mrs. Young, defendant’s wife and plaintiff’s daughter, testified that they arrived in front of her apartment thirty to forty-five minutes after dark; plaintiff was still in the car when defendant took the suitcases into the house; Mrs. Young also got out of the car and shut the right front door and opened the right rear door for plaintiff; no lights of the car were then lit; she stood far enough back to let her mother get out; plaintiff handed her some things and she held them in her arms, as plaintiff started to get out; “some way she stumbled on something about the car, and before I could get hold of her or anything she had fallen out on the sidewalk”; she did not see what plaintiff fell over; she [460]*460never checked to see whether the floor mat was wrinkled up; neither she nor defendant had said anything to plaintiff about the floor mat being wrinkled, nor had they warned her of anything, She gave further testimony as to plaintiff’s injuries.

Plaintiff administrator, son of the original plaintiff, became a witness for the purpose of giving evidence as to a telephone conversation with defendant’s wife on the night of the occurrence. Objection that this was hearsay was sustained, and an offer of proof was then made that defendant’s wife, in his presence had stated that her mother had stumbled over the wrinkled ■floor mat in the car and that caused her to fall. This offer also was rejected as hearsay. ' Thereupon, when plaintiff’s attorney declared that he had no more evidence as to liability and plaintiff rested, the court sustained defendant’s' motion for a directed verdict.

With respect to the claim of error in excluding the offer to prove the alleged statement of defendant’s wife in his presence in a telephone conversation,, we must agree with the ruling of the learned trial court. No statement of the wife could be binding on the husband, as his admission against interest, without a showing that she was acting as his agent at the time of making the statement; and there was no showing of agency. The mere fact of his presence in the room when she made the telephone call to her brother is insufficient to show agency. Admissions against interest are limited to statements by parties, and do not include- statements of members of their families, absent agency; and Mr. Young is the sole party defendant here.

Since Mrs. Young is not a party litigant, her assertions made prior to her testimony come within the hearsay rule and are not admissible in evidence. Recognizing that prior assertions are some times provable in contradiction and impeachment of a witness’ trial testimony, yet such impeaching evidence is limited to the purpose of affecting credibility, and is not to be regarded as substantive evidence of the facts described in the impeaching evidence. See Hammond v. Schuermann Building & Realty Co., 352 Mo. 418, loc. cit. 424, 177 S.W.2d 618, loc. cit. 622, wherein it was said:

“As we read the authorities and the observations therein the probative value of impeaching evidence ceases to function when it exhausts its force against the witness impeached. Its scope and its function is restricted to the credibility of said witness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 S.W.2d 457, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerman-v-young-moctapp-1955.