164 Mo. App. 420 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiffs on account of the alleged negligence of defendants. The Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company and its locomotive engineer, John Kenna, are jointly sued as defendants. Plaintiffs are the minor children of Joseph D. Bush, and prosecute the suit under the statute by Arthur L. Bush, their guardian and curator, for the wrongful death of their father, which, it is alleged, was occasioned through the joint negligence of the two defendants. On a trial'of the issue, the jury awarded- plaintiffs a recovery of $2500 against defendant, Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, and gave a verdict for defendant, John Kenna, its locomotive engineer. On the motion of defendant, Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, the court set the verdict against it aside and granted a new trial, and from this order plaintiffs prosecute the appeal.
Plaintiffs’ father, Joseph D. Bush, was thrown from his buggy and fatally injured because of the al
Defendant John Kenna is a locomotive engineer in the employ of defendant railway company and engaged in the service of operating the locomotive which “draws” a local freight train. On the day in question, defendant’s local freight, with locomotive in charge of John Kenna attached, and headed to the east, was standing still on the tracks at the station when Joseph D. Bush, who was driving his team and buggy westward on Broadway, turned upon defendant’s right of way, oyer the usual and customarily traveled road, to within about thirty feet' of the locomotive. As Bush thus approached the standing locomotive, the
As before said, both the railway company and its engineer, Kenna, are pursued as defendants as for a joint tort, but the petition contains averments of negligence with respect to other agents and servants of defendant railway company as well. The theory of the petition is, that both defendant railway company and its locomotive engineer, Kenna, were negligent and omitted to exercise due care, with respect to the rights of Joseph D. Bush, when his position of peril was, or might have been, seen, by emitting the steam and sounding the two sharp blasts of the whistle, which occasioned the team to precipitate him to his fatal injury. Touching this matter, the evidence tended to prove, and, in fact, is all one way to the effect, that defendant Kenna was wholly unaware of the presence of Mr. Bush on the roadway near by and of his situation of peril brought about through the fright of the horses, occasioned from the escaping steam at the cylinder cocks. As before stated, Mr. Bush was driving to the westward and the locomotive engine was headed to the east. Defendant Kenna occupied .his place at the throttle on the right, or south, side of the
While the case in its present posture concedes, and the verdict affirms, that Kenna, the engineer, was personally free from negligence in failing to observe the presence of Bush in the street, for it seems his view was obstructed, and in so sharply sounding the whistle, there is evidence suggesting the fireman should have known the true state of affairs. Notwithstanding this, the court set the verdict aside on the motion of defendant railroad for two reasons revealed in the record as follows: Because if defendant Kenna was
The first ground assigned for setting aside the verdict implies that defendant could be negligent through the default of Kenna, the engineer, only. Because of this, it is argued the court erred and the verdict should be reinstated for the reason that, though the engineer was not negligent, defendant railway company was properly required by the verdict to answer for the fault of its fireman in omitting to observe the team and communicate the fright of the horses to the engineer in time to have prevented the sounding of the whistle. But it is urged on .the part of defendant that as the court assigned 'as one ground for setting aside the verdict that it was against the evidence and the weight of the evidence, its discretion touching this matter is not open to review here. There can be no doubt that numerous authorities declare the rule in a general way that where the court sets the verdict aside because in its judgment it is against the weight of the evidence, the discretion touching the matter will not be reviewed on appeal unless it appears that such discretion was abused or arbitrarily exercised. But the rule thus frequently stated in general terms is more or less qualified by the effect of other decisions which declare that the appellate court will not review the action of the trial court in granting one new trial on the weight of the evidence in those cases only where there is a conflict in the testimony and substantial evidence touching the issue appears in favor of the party to whom the new trial is awarded. [See Loftis v. Met. St. R. Co., 220 Mo. 470, 119 S. W. 942; Friestatt Milling Co. v. Boggess, 80 Mo. App. 296; Rigby v. St. Louis Transit Co., 153 Mo. App. 330, 133 S. W. 110.] In other words, if there is no conflict in the
Though the jury found defendant Kenna was not guilty of negligence because of the fact that his view was obstructed and that he was engaged in watching for signals from the conductor in the rear, there is enough in the case to entai-l liability against the railway company for the fault of the fireman. The order granting a new trial should, therefore, be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the trial court to reinstate the verdict and enter judgment thereon as of the date the verdict was returned. It is so ordered.