58 Kan. 62 | Kan. | 1897
I. This action was brought by John Carlson, as administrator of the estate of Victor Carlson, deceased, against the Consolidated City & Chelsea Park Railway Company, a corporation operating a street railway in Kansas City, Kansas, to recover damages for negligently causing the death of Victor Carlson. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $4,134. The place where the injury was inflicted was at the intersection of Shawnee and Fifth Streets. The defendant’s road was operated by electricity. The car which struck Victor Carlson was passing east on the south track of the line of road on Shawnee Street, which runs east and west. There was a large public-school building on the south side of Shawnee and west side of Fifth Street, which Victor Carlson, a boy lacking one day of being ten years of age, was attending. Soon after the close of school on the fifth of February, 1892, as the children were crossing the streets, going in various directions, a car on the defendant’s road, going at the rate of ten or twelve miles an hour, struck this' boy, and so injured him that he died in a few hours thereafter. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, a demurrer thereto was interposed by the defendant.
III. Complaint is made of various instructions. In the third, the jury were told, among other things, that they might consider ‘ ‘ the speed at which the car was running at the time ; what the person in charge of the car was engaged in doing at the time ; the age and discretion of the parties, and all other- facts disclosed by the evidence.” This is criticized by counsel, who ask,— “With no other evidence before them, how could the jury determine that any particular speed was negligence on the part of the defendant at the time of the accident? ” It was within the province of the jury to consider the speed at which the car was moving as one of the circumstances in the case bearing on the question of negligence. It was not necessary that any witness should have expressed an opinion that the speed was excessive, nor was it incumbent on the plaintiff to show any ordinance, rule, or regulation prescribing a less rate of speed. Whether it was proper under the circumstances to allow the car to run so fast, was a matter within the legitimate
“If the jury find by apreponderence of the evidence that the employee of said defendant in charge of the car in question saw, or by the exercise of reasonable care -would have seen, the said Victor Carlson upon the track in front of such car, or so near the track that it was apparent that said car could not pass without striking him, in sufficient time to have stopped said car and avoided a collision with said Victor Carlson, and that said person in charge of said car failed and neglected to exercise reasonable care and attention, either by running said car at a high rate and reckless rate of speed, or in attempting to stop said car, but ran the same against and upon said Victor-Carlson, and by reason of such negligence on the part of the person in charge of said car, the said Victor Garlson was injured, from the effects of which he died, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover herein all such damages as the evidence shows have been sustained by the said John Carlson and Hildah Carlson, as the next of kin of said deceased, by reason of the-death of said Victor Carlson, as hereinafter stated1.*68 The fact that the said Victor Carlson carelessly put himself in the place of danger would not excuse the defendant Company for recklessly or wantonly injuring him.”
In commenting on this instruction, it is said there was no evidence showing that Victor Carlson was so near the track that it was apparent the car could not pass without striking him. We think the instruction is subject to criticism, because it confines the inquiry to the question whether the' motorneer could have seen that hé was likely to strike this particular boy. The real culpability arises from the fact that there were many children in proximity to the track, and it was incumbent on the motorneer to look out for the safety of all of them. If Victor Carlson was hidden from the view of the motorneer by other children, his negligence in propelling the car at a dangerous rate of speed through the crowd was not less than if the boy had been in full view. The reasonableness of the conduct of the motorneer is to be determined, not alone from the liability to inflict injury on this particular boy, but from the liability to hurt others as well.- Had this boy been alone in an unfrequented part of the street, quite a different case would have been presented, to which the instruction given would have been more nearly applicable than to the case on trial. The defendant has no valid ground for complaining of this instruction ; the error embraced in it being in the defendant's favor. The ninth instruction, with reference to the measure of damages, appears to us unexceptionable ; and we cannot say, as a matter of law, that the verdict is excessive. The contention that it is a quotient verdict is not sustained by the record. While the jurors did set down separate sums, add them, and divide the amount by twelve, the quotient was not agreed on as the verdict, but a slightly larger
We find no material error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.