231 Mo. 615 | Mo. | 1910
This case is certified to this court by the St. Louis Court of Appeals-. The principal opinion is written by Hon. Eugene C. Tittman, as a special judge, and concurred in by Bland, P. J. Plaintiff was the husband of Predentia DeMaet, and as such brought suit for the alleged negligent killing of his wife by the defendant. Upon a trial in the lower court the plaintiff recovered. Upon a hearing in the St. Louis Court of Appeals the judgment was reversed outright by the concurrence of the two judges aforesaid. Judge Goode, however, was of the opinion that the plaintiff had made a case for the jury and dissented, and in such dissent, asked that the cause be certified to this court on the grounds that the majority opinion was in conflict with the cases of Stafford v. Adams, 113 Mo. App. 717, and Rattan v. Railroad, 120 Mo. App. 270. Vide, DeMaet v. Fidelity Storage, Packing & Moving Co., 121 Mo. App. 92.
From the dissenting opinion of Goode, J., it appears that the case turns, upon the facts somewhat more than the law. His contention is that, under certain facts detailed in his opinion, the case was one for the jury, and under those facts the majority ruling was adverse to the two cases cited. This reduces the question here to the force and effect of the facts shown, and the further question as to whether or not the two cases mentioned go as far as Judge Goode was of the impression they did go; and it might be added that, if they did so go, whether or not the cases declared the law. The facts upon both sides are discussed and stated in the two opinions.* For brevity in this statement we
I. The principal opinion from the Court of Appeals plants itself upon the proposition that the trial court was in error in not sustaining a demurrer to the testimony. The petition charges that one of defendant’s employees, in charge of and driving one of defendant’s vehicles, negligently struck the wife of plaintiff, throwing her to the pavement, and inflicting such injuries as subsequently occasioned her death. Several disputed questions are suggested by the evidence, thus: (a) Was the driver upon that day in the actual service of defendant, or was he at the time using one of defendant’s rigs in his own private business? There is proof both ways upon this question, (b) Another question is whether the driver ran on to plaintiff ’s wife, or plaintiff’s wife ran into the vehicle. Upon this question the evidence is again conflicting, (c) Likewise the evidence tending to show negligence or no negligence upon the part of the driver is conflicting, (d) The same may be said of the evidence as to the alleged contributory negligence of deceased.
The principal opinion'does not question the propriety of the judgment nisi upon any of these questions, but says: “The most that can be said for the plaintiff is that the whole evidence taken together shows that death resulted either from the injury received from the buggy, or from one of three chronic diseases of long standing, but which of these conditions was the cause can only be a matter of conjecture. For the foregoing reasons, in my opinion, the j^idgment of the lower court should be reversed.”
It appears clearly from the evidence that this woman was walking the streets of St. Louis in apparent health. It appears that she had done'the household work for her family, and this, too, without serious illness. Be it granted that there were certain organic troubles which would have shortly terminated her life,
With evidence in the case to the effect that deceased, apparently strong and healthy before the accident, immediately thereafter took to her bed and there remained until her death, it will not do to say that the case is one falling within the rule of conjecture. The same question has been so recently gone over by this court that further elaboration is not required. [McDonald v. Railroad, 219 Mo. 468; Sharp v. Railroad, 213 Mo. 517.]
In the Sharp case the question was as to whether the death resulted from the injury or from pneumonia pure and simple. The medical testimony was much as it is in this case. Not only so, but the physical facts were much as they are ,in this case. The case is too recent to justify quotation therefrom, but the language of Lámm, J., therein, maybe read with interest in connection with the facts of the case at bar. Likewise strong is the later case of McDonald v. Railroad, supra. These cases to our minds determine this controversy. These eases were not before the Court of Appeals at the time the opinions were written herein. The doctrine of these two cases accords with the views of the two cases from the Kansas City Court of Appeals, cited by Goode, J., in his dissent.
The facts of the case at bar justified the submission of the case to the juay and the demurrer to the testimony was properly overruled by the trial court. On this question, and this is the only one passed upon by the Court of Appeals, the judgment of that court is wrong and the judgment of the circuit court is right. Other questions in the record we take up later.
II. The demurrer to the evidence was the only question considered by the Court of Appeals. The case being here it becomes necessary for us to consider the whole case. One or two other points made deserve
III. Complaint is made of the instructions given for the plaintiff, hut an examination of these instruc- ■ tions shows that they are as liberal to the defendant as the law of the case would permit. They are clearly drawn and along proper lines. To reproduce them here would but add surplusage to the opinion. The earnest opposition to the judgment is directed to the demurrer to the testimony and not to other matters.
• An examination of the whole record leaves us of the opinion that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed and it is so ordered.