DocketNumber: 41872
Judges: Leedy, Tipton, Ellison, Hyde, Conkling, Dalton, Hollingsworth
Filed Date: 11/13/1950
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
[ 552] Clara Rothweiler recovered judgment for $6,250 against St. Louis Public Service [553] Company (sometimes
The case was pleaded and submitted as to the carrier under the res ipsa loquitur theory, and as to Cordia upon specific negligence— permissible practice in collision cases (where warranted by. the pleadings and the evidence), even though one of the vehicles be not under the control of the carrier. Hill v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 359 Mo. 220, 221 S. W. 2d 130; Zichler v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 332 Mo. 902, 59 S. W. 2d 654; Gibson v. Wells, (Mo. App.) 258 S. W. 1; Cecil v. Wells, 214 Mo. App. 193, 259 S. W. 844.
The collision occurred on the afternoon of July 21, 1947, at the intersection of Eleventh and Shenandoah, in the City of St. Louis. Eleventh runs north and south; Shenandoah, east and west. Both streets are approximately the same width — 35 or 36 feet from curb to curb. The bus, proceeding westwardly on Shenandoah, was crossing the intersection. Cordia, southbound on Eleventh, drove his Oldsmobile into the right or north side of the bus at the rear door, or at a point 22 feet back from the front end and 11 feet forward from thé rear.
The carrier does not contend that plaintiff initially failed to make a submissible res ipsa case against it, but rather that the inference embodied in that doctrine became inapplicable in the light of the particularity with which her evidence developed the facts and circumstances surrounding the casualty." Her personal testimony in that connection went no further than to show that she was seated toward the rear and on the right or north side of the bus; that as it started across Eleventh Street she turned her head, and saw Cordia’s automobile approaching the intersection on the west side of Eleventh Street, 35 or 40 feet away, and “coming very fast.” It swerved, and she, knowing it was going to hit the bus, turned around in her seat to avoid any flying glass. The collision occurred, and she was thrown “across the aisle diagonally, up against the post.”
Res ipsa loquitur did not apply in favor of plaintiff against Cordia, the individual defendant, and so in order to hold him it became
Neither the reason for the bus driver’s failure to see the oncoming automobile until the bus was in the middle of the intersection, notwithstanding an unobstructed view up Eleventh Street, nor the reason for the inadequacy of the older type diesel and its slower than normal pickup with which the bus was equipped were shown by the evidence introduced in plaintiff’s behalf. These matters were left unexplained. Consequently, it cannot be said that the evidence conclusively repels any inference of negligence on the part of the carrier in the maintenance and operation of the bus. Cordia himself admits plaintiff made a submissive ease of certain of the specifications of negligence charged against him, but it does not appear, as a matter of law, that his negligence was the sole and exclusive cause of the collision, and hence the court committed no error in overruling the carrier’s motion for a directed verdict.
The carrier will nbt be heard to say plaintiff’s case was “devoid of evidence of specific negligence on the part of this defendant,” and then insist, as its brief does, that the ease should have been submitted as to it, if at all, as a specific negligence case. Consequently, we need not discuss the applicable principles had the evidence shown specific negligence on the part of the carrier.
The Court of Appeals treated the other assignments exhaustively, and, as above indicated, we are in accord with its views except as to the propriety of one instruction, No. 6. Both defendants vigorously assailed that instruction in the Court of Appeals, and in their supplemental briefs in this court. It reads as follows:
“With reference to the charges of negligence against both defendants in this ease, you are instructed that if from the evidence and the instructions of the Court you [555] find that the negligence, if any, of the defendant, St. Louis Public Service Company, no matter how great, and the negligence, if any, of the defendant, William Edward Cordia, no matter how great, directly concurred, combined and contributed to cause the plaintiff to sustain injury, then it would be your duty to return a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants, because if both defendants were negligent in any respect submitted to you in these instructions, and if their negligence directly contributed to cause injury to plaintiff, then neither defendant, even if less negligent than the other defendant, could make use of the*266 concurring negligence of such other defendant to defeat the claim of the plaintiff against both defendants.
“In other words, it is no defense to one defendant that the negligence of some other defendant concurred with his negligence to cause injury to plaintiff, and before you can render a verdict in favor of any one defendant, you must find and believe from the evidence that said defendant was not negligent or that his negligence, if any, did not contribute to cause plaintiff’s injury.”
Substantially the same instruction has been approved by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in two cases, Matthews v. Mound City Cab Co., (Mo. App.) 205 S. W.2d 243, and Hieken v. Eichhorn, (Mo. App.) 159 S. W. 2d 715.
We think the second paragraph is prejudicially erroneous because of the likelihood of certain of its language being taken literally by a jury of laymen. The paragraph seemingly undertakes to state conversely, and more briefly, the proposition submitted in the first paragraph, as witness the phrase, “In other words.” The first clause of the second paragraph is unobjectionable, but the remaining portion is mischievous. To say, as this portion does, that before a verdict can be rendered in favor of any one defendant, it must be found from the evidence that such defendant was not negligent, or that his negligence, if any, did 'not contribute to cause plaintiff’s injuries, is to misstate the law. The burden is the other way around. As a condition to a plaintiff’s verdict, it must be found from the evidence that defendant was negligent, and that such negligence contributed to cause the injury. It' is true that by other instructions the jury w^s told that the burden was upon plaintiff to prove her case by the preponderance or greater weight of the evidence, and that she was injured through defendants’ negligence. Even so, we think a jury would have difficulty in reconciling these declarations with the second paragraph of No. 6, and that the latter should not have been given. Moreover, we take occasion to say that no useful or fair purpose is served by the two references in the first paragraph to the negligence of defendants “no matter how great.” The proposition sought to be submitted is not affected in the least by relative degrees of care as between the defendants. The question is whether both were negligent, and whether the negligence of both concurred to cause the injury.
The judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded.
It is so ordered.