86 Mo. 599 | Mo. | 1885
Lead Opinion
— This case has been once before in this •court, and is reported in 72 Mo. 50. It was then re
The main grounds relied upon for a reversal of the present judgment grew out of the admission of the plaintiff, Jno. A. Bell, as a witness in the cause; the contributory negligence of the boy and the action of the court in giving and refusing instructions in regard thereto, and especially its said action in giving for plaintiff the following instruction number six:
“6. The jury are instructed that if they believe from the evidence that the engineer in charge of the train saw that the boy did not notice the approaching train, nor hear the alarm whistle, it was his duty to use every means in his power, consistent with the safety of his train, to stop or slack up the speed of his train, so as to prevent injury to the boy, and if he failed to so stop, or slack up the train, when he could have done so, but ran upon and killed the boy, then the jury are bound to find the verdict in favor of the plaintiffs; even though they may believe that the boy may have been improperly on the track, and may have been negligent in standing there without keeping a lookout for an approaching train.”
I. As to the competency of John A. Bell as a witness, as he is a party jointly and equally interested with his wife (who is his co-plaintiff) in the judgment (R. S., 1879, sec. 2121), it is contended that he is disqualified from testifying by virtue of said marital relation, and
And in the present case, the husband and plaintiff, John A. Bell, testifies in his own behalf, and, at the .same time, testifies necessarily in his wife’s behalf. He is not a nominal or technical party to the record. He is, equally with his wife, the meritorious cause of action, .and had a like beneficial interest with her in the judgment, conferred upon them jointly by the statute. He was, we think, a competent witness under the law as it now stands, and this construction has been adopted acquiesced in, and recognized in numerous decisions by this court, and is the one which best accords, we think, with the obvious intent and purpose of our statutes. Fugate v. Pierce, supra; Steffen v. Bauer, 70 Mo. 404; Cooper v. Orr, 60 Mo. 420; Haerle v. Kreihn, 65 Mo. 202; Buck v. Ashbrook, 51 Mo. 539; Joice v. Branson, 73 Mo. 29; Wood v. Broadley, 76 Mo. 23. The statute may be said to be an expression, and there are many such in our law, civil and criminal, of a modern public policy, changing and abrogating the common law rules of evidence in many and important particulars, and advancing public justice and convenience by allowing and admitting relevant evidence heretofore incompetent, and leaving its credibility and value to be passed upon, and determined as a fact.
II. As to the court’s ruling upon instructions, it is conceded that those given for the plaintiff are, for the most part, the same as upon the former trial, and this is
The boy’s negligence does not, in that event, as counsel argues, “continue up to, commingle and cooperate with the defendant’s negligence in producing the result.” It has ceased to operate, whenever the engineer discovers his peril and has present ability to prevent the injury. These new elements of time, opportunity,' and ability to render the boy’s negligence harmless, create the duty to do so, and where the power to do this exists, and a -'failure to employ it occurs, then the injury is, in legal contemplation, to be attributed ' thereto, and although the boy’s negligence may have existed, and may have been present at the time, yet it is not then present as a cause of the injury, or as actively contributing thereto, for the injury could have then been avoided, notwithstanding such negligence. This failure to use the means possessed at the time, and adequate to prevent the injury, is, we think, what the books and authorities denominate, in that event, the direct and proximate cause of an injury, and the boy’s negligence is, under the state of facts supposed, an extinct and inactive and inoperative agency or condition in the transaction. If these views of the law are correct, and there was evidence to show the existence of the facts, as submitted, then it follows that the instruction was proper and the giving thereof was not erroneous.
Assuming that the engineer was at his post, and observant of the track, as it was his duty to be, when running his train at such a rate of speed through the station at the town of Meadville, and without intending to stop thereat, the evidence shows that the boy could have been seen by the engineer for the distance of two hundred yards, and perhaps farther. In the absence of his testimony, the exact time when he did, in fact, see the boy on the track, his distance from the engine, and
The jury did not have the benefit of the engineer’s evidence upon this'trial, as to whether or not he reversed the engine and applied the brakes, or as to how promptly he gave the signal, and used, if at all, the means and appliances under his control to prevent the injury, or of his explanation as to why he did not, if he failed to do so, but there was, we think, evidence by plaintiffs’ witnesses, who were bystanders at the station and passengers on the train, and facts and circumstances from which they could find or infer' that the engine was not reversed, or the speed slackened until the boy was struck, and that all the means of stopping the train and avoiding the injury were not used, as promptly, at least,
The action was brought under the second- section of the damage act, for the death of the son, caused by the negligence and carelessness of defendant’s agents and servants in running, conducting and managing the train and in failing to give signals of its approach. The ■second amended answer was a general denial of the ■allegations of the petition and charged contributory negligence on the part of Athen Bell, and alleges further as follows: “ That defendant, by its agents and employes, conducting, managing and running said engine and train, had the same under full control, and exercised reasonable care and diligence in the management thereof, ■before, and at the time of Athen Bell’s getting struck, ■as aforesaid, in order to prevent the same, and they •could not, by the exercise of reasonable care and. diligence, prevent striking and injuring him, as alleged in ■said petition.”
That question, then, was, we think, raised by these pleadings and was, we think, necessarily involved in the issues thus made, and, further, it is.evidentthat this was the theory of the defendant, in the trial below, as shown by instructions numbered two, three and four, given at his instance and in his behalf. The remaining criticisms ■of counsel upon the other instructions in this case, are, we think, without substance and merit. The instructions, four in number, given on the part of the defendant, with those given for the plaintiff, fairly presented the questions at issue to the jury. We see no error in
Rehearing
On re-hearing.
— This cause has been re-argued and upon a reconsideration of the whole case my associates are of opinion that the death of the boy was occasioned directly and solely by his gross carelessness in going and remaihing upon the railroad track without looking or listening for the approach of the train, and that there is-no evidence in the record that the servants or employes, of defendant in charge of the engine and train could have avoided the injury, after discovering the perilous-position of the boy; or that upon the discovery of his presence and peril upon the railroad track they failed or omitted to use any of the means in their power to avoid and prevent the accident. They, therefore, hold that the instruction, in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, asked by defendant at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence, should have been given. This conclusion leads to a reversal of the judgment of the circuit court, which is ordered accordingly. I am unable to concur in ■this view and estimate of the evidence and, therefore, dissent from the above result and disposition of the-case. I adhere to the views heretofore expressed in the original opinion in this cause.