121 Mo. App. 605 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
Plaintiff was injured by the collison of a trolley car operated by defendant on one of its street railway lines in Kansas City with a wagon in which plaintiff was riding and this suit is for the recovery of the damages sustained. The cause of action pleaded is founded on the negligence of defendant in operating the car. The answer, in addition to a general denial, contains a plea' of contributory negligence. Plaintiff recovered judgment in the sum of $400 and defendant appealed.
Defendant insists that its instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence should have been given and our first consideration will be the questions arising under that contention.
The injury occurred on the 26th day of February, 1904, in the daytime at the crossing of Main and Fourteenth streets. Both of these thoroughfares are public streets and their intersection is in the business district of Kansas City. Main street runs north and south and is seventy feet wide. Along' the midway of its pavement for vehicles which is forty-six feet wide defendant operates a double track street railway. The tracks are five feet apart and each is five feet wide. The east track is used for northbound cars and the other for cars going in the opposite direction. The team and wagon were owned by plaintiff but an employee of plaintiff was driving. The wagon carried a load of coal weighing about 9,000 pounds. It approached the crossing from the east on Fourteenth street and when the seat on which plaintiff
A team and Avagon eastbound on Fourteenth street had stopped on the opposite side of the tracks for the car to pass after which it proceeded over the crossing. About the time plaintiff’s Avagon started he looked to the north and saw a southbound car which had stopped at the Thirteenth street crossing in the act of starting forward. That car had about 450 feet to travel to reach the crossing while plaintiff’s wagon could cross and pass beyond danger of collision in a distance of from forty to forty-five feet. Plaintiff admits he took no further notice of the car and accounts for his conduct by saying he had no reason to think it would travel so fast and would overtake the wagon on the crossing or that the motorman, whose vision was unobstructed, would deliberately run into the wagon. The two wagons traveled towards the crossing at a speed of about two miles per hour and the car advanced at about twenty miles per hour. No bell was rung nor was any effort made to check the speed of the car and plaintiff did not know it was upon him until the moment of the collision. First the rear end of the other wagon was struck and thrown against plaintiff’s wagon, then the car crushed into the middle of plaintiff’s wagon and the injury resulted.
The foregoing statement embodies the facts detailed by plaintiff and his witnesses. On the part of defendant the evidence tends to show that the southbound car was in the middle of the block and was running at a speed not exceeding ten miles per hour when the two
Adopting the facts most favorable to the cause of action asserted by plaintiff which we must do in reviewing the action of the trial court in overruling the demurrer to the evidence, the negligence of defendant is indisputable. The public streets of a city are for the use of all classes of people and no individual or class of individuals possesses any superior right of way over that which others may exercise. The fact that a person may be strong enough to overcome all others in a physical contest gives him no right to1 force them to keep out of his way and when he uses the strong hand he becomes liable for the injurious consequences to others. In running its car at a dangerously high rate of speed along a busy thoroughfare without giving any warning and without attempting to put it under reasonable control as it neared the crossing where people were rightfully using the street, defendant’s conduct may be likened to that of a strong man who forces his way by physical violence and its culpability is so apparent that further discussion of this branch of the case would be superfluous.
But plaintiff’s actions as stated by himself likewise are censurable in law. In approaching the crossing of street car tracks it was his duty to look and listen for approaching cars. There was nothing to obstruct his view and had he deigned to cast one glance northward immediately before the horses entered the sphere of danger he would have seen the car not over two hundred feet away coming at the. rate of twenty miles an hour and being recklessly operated and could have
The motorman admits he saw the wagons when the car Avas in the middle of the block, a distance of over two hundred feet from the crossing. The evidence of plaintiff tends to show that the rails were dry; that the car could have been stopped in a distance of from seventy-five to one hundred feet and that when the car was in the middle of the block plaintiff’s team had just reached the danger line, the other team was on the cross
The paramount duty of a motorman who runs over the streets of a city at comparatively high speed a vehicle so heavy and powerful as the modern street car is to be on the constant lookout for persons whose safety may be endangered. He owes this duty not only to the: careful and prudent but to tbe careless, the incompetent and the helpless for all of these classes throng the public streets and a humane man would and should be as reluctant to injure one as the other. Eor a, motorman to be inatt&niJaaa-to tbe wa.v a bear! of him is SO ualmbLv ne<dl2^nHjm-tiNpai:ta,kes of the natuze-Qf-a -reekleas and wanton act. Therefore a defendant in an action of this character will not be heard to say that its motorman
In some of the decisions of the Supreme Court the idea appears to be expressed that in order to find a defendant guilty of a breach of the humanitarian rule the elements of wantonness and willfulness must appear in its conduct, but as we have attempted to show the mere failure to observe ordinary care in situations of this character is of itself a wanton act since it is ab
It must not be inferred from what we have said that the humanitarian doctrine compels a motorman, if he would act within the bounds of reasonable care, to stop his car every time he sees a person on or near the track ahead of him. He has the right to assume until the contrary appears- that others will act with ordinary care and it is only when there is something in the appearance of the person on the track or approaching it to indicate to the observing eye that unaware of the presence of the car he is negligently placing himself in a position of danger and is giving no- attention to warning signals that the motorman should reduce speed or stop entirely if necessary to avoid injury. The facts in evidence raised an issue of negligence under the humanitarian doctrine and no error was committed in overruling the demurrer to the evidence.
The judgment however must be reversed and the cause remanded on account of error in the instructions given. Notwithstanding negligence under the humanitarian rule was made an issue by the- facts alleged in the petition and their denial in the answer and as we have shown the evidence clearly presented that issue, the instructions entirely ignored it and submitted the case on the issues of defendant’s negligence that aided in placing plaintiff in a position of danger and plaintiff’s contributory negligence. As we before said plaintiff’s own admissions removed his negligence from debatable ground and the' court should have treated it as an established fact and as defendant could not be held liable on account of negligence that merely co-operated with
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.