This is an action for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. The answer is a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The cause is before us on the appeal of defendant from a judgment of twenty-five hundred dollars rendered for plaintiff on a verdict for that amount.
The injuries of plaintiff were inflicted about five' o’clock p. m. November 10, 1903, and were caused by the collision between the one-horse buggy in which she was driving and an electric car operated by defendant on the Westport line of its street railway system in Kansas City. The place of the collision was in Thirteenth street (which runs east and west) between Walnut street and Grand avenue. Plaintiff and her husband drove up Walnut street from the south and stopped at the northeast corner of the intersection of that street with Thirteenth street where Mr. Averitt alighted and went into a saloon on that comer to transact some business. The saloon faced west on Walnut street and had a back door opening on Thirteenth street. Concluding to drive to the back door where she could look into the saloon and hurry her husband, plaintiff turned around in Walnut street and drove into Thirteenth street from the west on the south side of the street, intending to cross to the north side audio stop in front of the back door of the saloon. At that time, outbound Westport cars ran south on Walnut street to Thirteenth where they crossed over to Grand avenue. Defendant had two tracks in Thirteenth street and cars running east used the south track. The street is narrow and the distance between the outside rail of the south track and the curb was only eight
The facts stated are taken from the evidence of plaintiff and are contradicted by the evidence of defendant which tends to show that the buggy was in the clear when the front end of the car passed; that it was not struck at all by the front beam end and the entire car would have passed safely had not the horse backed the buggy into the car. There is evidence to the effect that the backing of the horse was caused either by its own restiveness or by the act of plaintiff in pulling back on the lines in protest against the leading of the horse by a stranger.
Defendant attacks the sufficiency of the petition on the ground that it “does not charge generally or specially that any: act of defendant was done negligently and therefore fails to state a cause of action.” The rule is invoked that “an act which does not show for itself that it is a negligent act ought to be alleged to be negligent.” [Rawson v. Railroad, 129 Mo. App. l. c. 617.]
It will be observed that in the above quotation from the petition, several causal acts of defendant are al
The next contention of defendant is that the evidence discloses that the injury was. not caused by the negligence of defendant, but was due to the negligence of plaintiff herself. In the disposition of that argument, we shall regard the facts only from the viewpoint of plaintiff’s evidence, which we find to be substantial. Plaintiff was using a public street for purposes of travel, a thing she had a right to do, and while she would not have been justified in unreasonably obstructing the passage of the street car, defendant was without legal excuse in attempting to push her vehicle out of .the way with its more powerful vehicle. The mere fact that she drove onto a narrow street used by street cars affords not the slightest reason for pronouncing her conduct negligence, and we regard as unimportant the suggestion that she was actuated by mere curiosity in choosing a place in front of the back door of the saloon as a waiting place. The suggestion has no foundation in the evidence, but if it had, such mo
The principal injuries received by plaintiff were a retroversion of the womb and resultant nervous disorders. It is insisted by defendant that the trial court permitted the physician who treated plaintiff to invade the province of the jury in his testimony, but the point cannot be considered for the reason that it was not made the ground of objections at the trial. Appellate courts do not consider objections to. evidence to which the attention of the trial court was not properly called at the time the evidence was offered.
Objection is made to the ruling allowing the deposition of a witness to be read by plaintiff. At the time the deposition was taken — about three years before the trial — the witness, a young woman, was employed in Kansas City, but her home was in P’lattsburg, Clinton county, more than forty miles from Kansas City, and she testified that she was contemplating a visit to her mother at that place. Plaintiff had a subpoena issued for the witness but it was returned non est. It appears from the evidence introduced by plaintiff that her coun
Many other questions are discussed in the briefs of counsel but we do not find in any of them ground for disturbing the judgment. We do not think the evidence so preponderates on the side of defendant that we should apply the rule followed in Lehnick v. Railway, 118 Mo. App. l. c. 616. Indeed, we are of the opinion that the motorman acted negligently. By defendant’s own showing, he crowded in before the buggy was out of the way, and, while it was in a tight place where nervousness on the part of plaintiff or of the horse, might cause it to be backed into the car, he increased speed, apparently with little care for the