200 Mo. 310 | Mo. | 1906
George Deschner, a minor, through his mother, as next friend, sued defendant, a street railway company, for damages' — counting on negligence. A special jury awarded him $5,000 and judgment went accordingly. Thereat defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which being sustained, defendant was eased of the judgment. Thereat plaintiff appealed from said order and seeks to retain his verdict.
The grounds upon which the court sustained the motion for a new trial are two, viz.: First, “that the court erred in refusing a peremptory instruction at the close of plaintiff’s case;” and, second, “in the first instruction given,” — the referred to “first instruction” is one given on the court’s own motion and will be set forth further along.
The case on the facts, in a nutshell, is this:
Manchester avenue runs east-and-west in St. Louis and is one hundred feet wide. Tamm avenue comes from the north, at an angle, into Manchester, and is forty feet wide. At the northeast corner of Tamm
An understanding of the locus is aided by the following diagram:
After school was out, about four o’clock in the afternoon of said date, he took a two-gallon can, as usual, containing on that day a gallon and two pints of milk, and started from his mother’s barn (shown on the diagram), crossing the south stile, the Missouri Pacific tracks and the north stile, as usual, into Manchester avenue and stopping on the walk connecting the north stile with said platform. It should be said that to the west of where he then stood and along the fence was a line (and maybe two) of telephone poles, 100 feet from pole to pole. The grade of defendant’s tracks to the west is a one per cent up grade. At this immediate time there was a red passenger car running very fast down this grade from the west to the east and approaching George. This car was in plain view from Dale avenue, a block west. It “cut in” on the track shortly west of Dale avenue ahead of a mail car also bound east, and at or about the crossing of Dale avenue and possibly a ways- east of Dale, there was testimony indicating the two cars were right close together.
We infer that the lad saw the passenger car, possibly when he was descending the steps of the stile. If not, he saw it when he reached the walk and it was then 160 feet away. But he was so situated with reference to this red passenger car that it hid the white mail car from his view — at least, he saw only the one. He put
As no question is made over the extent of his injuries, the details may be spared. His excuse for not looking to the west was that he did not expect one car to be so quickly following another on the same track, and he thought if there was no car coming out of the east on the north track, it would do to cross. ' There was a conductor, motorman and a postal clerk on this mail car, the postal clerk and the conductor being inside, and, as we understand it, the way to get in and out was by means of a side door. Whether there were windows in the car’s ends does not appear.
It will not be necessary to swell the opinion with the details of the testimony. Suffice it to say plaintiff introduced testimony from eye-witnesses tending to show the motorman was not looking ahead, but was looking to the north or northeast towards the mail box as he approached said platform; that the car gave indications of a stop; that the postal clerk jumped out of the side door of the going ear, west of the platform, and ran to the northeast towards the mail box, some of the evidence indicating he got very close to it, and
Plaintiff introduced other testimony tending to show the postal clerk, or some else, hallooed that some one was under the car; that at this halloo the car stopped, the motorman got'off and the postal clerk ran back and he and the motorman found plaintiff under the car. And plaintiff produced other testimony tending to show no gong was sounded at any time immediately before he was struck, though it was in proof on plaintiff’s side that a gong had been sounded back at the Dale avenue crossing as a signal for the passenger car to clear the way. It stands substantially conceded that neither the conductor nor the postal clerk saw the boy before he was seen under the car.
The evidence of the conductor and the motorman, testifying on behalf of defendant, tended to show the gong was sounded constantly as it approached and ran by the platform. The testimony of the postal clerk was to the effect that he did not remember to have heard a gong. The testimony of all three was to the effect that they did not intend to stop the car there for mail on that trip, and that while the postal clerk did get out of the car, yet he did not do so until the car was stopped by the motorman, that he did not go to the mail box, but got out because of the sudden stop and then the motorman informed him he had ‘ ‘ run over a kid. ’ ’ The motorman testified the boy was standing on the platform and not on the walk, that he had his eye on him for 100 feet, and that when he got.within three .or four feet of him the boy, who had been facing north, threw his head over his shoulder to the east and went on the track immediately in front of the ear. Whereat, the • motorman says, he stopped his car (then running at seven or eight miles an hour) as soon as his instant and full use of all the appliances at hand would permit.
None of plaintiff’s eye-witnesses saw him get on the track or saw him hit. So, too, the case is barren of any evidence indicating it was possible to stop the car after George was in actual peril. Moreover, there was no evidence the mail car was running on any schedule time and there is not a particle tending to show it was usual for one car to follow another so quickly at that point.- Nor was there any evidence showing the number of people who frequented the platform and walk and who got on and off cars there, or whose presence might be expected with reasonable certainty. Nor was there any evidence of any ordinance regulation relating to sounding a gong at any designated place or under any designated circumstances — for instance, at the intersection of streets. There is, however, evidence abstracted falling from the lips of the motorman and tending to show that he always sounded his gong when approaching a “street” and that he considered the point of the accident filled that bill and sounded his gong there at that time in accordance with custom. The motorman testified he held the strap to the gong
So much for the facts.
The case was tried on paper issues that may be summarized as follows: the petition, among other averments of negligence, counted on the negligent violation of an ordinance known as the Vigilant Watch ordinance, the material portion of which is as follows: “The conductor, motorman, gripman, driver or any other person in charge of each car shall keep a vigilant watch for all vehicles and persons on foot, especially children, either on the track or moving towards it, and on the first appearance of danger to such persons or vehicles, the car shall be stopped in the shortest time and space possible.” The petition further proceeds on the theory that Tamm avenue “intersects” Manchester avenue at the point in question; and after setting forth the Vigilant Watch ordinance and alleging a negligent violation of the same in its requirement of a vigilant watch, as well as its requirement of stopping, it proceeds as follows: “And the said motorneer negligently failed to ring the gong or bell, or give the plaintiff any warning of his approach, and the said motorneer negligently failed to keep his car under control when approaching the intersection of a public crossing greatly frequented by foot passengers, and he negligently failed to observe the provisions of the ordinance heretofore mentioned, all of which directly contributed to cause the injuries hereinafter complained of. ’ ’
The answer was a general denial, and also pleaded new matter, in substance and effect constituting a plea of contributory negligence.
The reply was a general denial.
1. The issue of contributory negligence, under the foregoing facts, was for the jury and was not a question of law to be determined by the court. It may be conceded for the purpose of this case that an adult person, acting as plaintiff did, to-wit,. failing to again look to the west to see if another car was following the passenger car on the south track, would have been guilty of negligence deemed in law the proximate cause of his resulting injuries — though this concession is only made for the purposes of this case, since much may be said, and possibly soundly said, on the other side. See remarks of Bland, P. J., arguendo, in Moore v. Railroad, 95 Mo. App. l. c. 736-7.
2. But George Deschner was not an adult. He was a capable boy of more experience with tracks and cars and in taking care of himself than the average boy of his age, but nevertheless he was a child in judgment, in prudence, in forethought, as well as in years, and must be dealt with as such.
It ha» been held that a railroad track itself is a sign of danger. It has been held that the danger of going upon such track without looking at all is one so apparent as to be within the easy comprehension of a child of the age of plaintiff. A boy, raised in a city and living for years in proximity to steam and street railway tracks, knows as well that a car will Mil him or maim him if it strikes him as he does that he will get burned if he pokes his hand in the fire. So that, the law does not excuse a boy of his age in not using his eyes in so simple a matter as looMng for the approach of a car when he is about to enter upon a track laid for cars and on which they, to his knowledge, run with more or less frequency. [Payne v. Railroad, 136 Mo. 562;
But no two cases are as like as two peas. What is contributory negligence as a matter of law'in one case, where the problem is simple, may be less as a matter of law in another, where the problem is more confusing and complex. This boy did look. He looked for a car coming out of the west, and saw one. He looked for one coming out .of the east, but saw none. He covered both tracks with his eye. Not only so, but he waited until the. east-bound car passed. The question in this case is not whether as a matter of law he would have been guilty of contributory negligence if he had not looked once, but the question is whether this child as a matter of law should be held guilty of contributory negligence for not looking twice. This is a much more complex proposition than not looking at all; for whether a boy would look twice would depend upon the frequency with which cars, to his knowledge, followed each other upon the same track — the one closely behind the other. It would depend, too, on the boy’s quickness of thought* his mental grasp, his coolness and precision of judgment, and, more than all, on that absence of impulsive and bounding thoughtlessness and lack of disposition to be worried by cares and responsibilities, which, say what we will, is one of the charms of buoyant youth— the loss of which makes a child prematurely and sadly old.
As an abstract proposition, the need and likelihood of cars following each other so closely might not appeal to a small boy. Longer experience with and closer observation of the facts might teach such boy there is often a congestion of cars, that they are frequently off schedule time, and may naturally be expected to run at each other’s heels. But such condition of .things
The judgment of a boy must not be measured by the same yard-stick with which the law measures the judgment of a man. To make a man out of a boy seems to be the somewhat miraculous work of time and nature, but we consider it beyond the power (and should be beyond the disposition) of the law. So that, if a boy eleven and a half years old acts with the prudence of the ordinarily prudent boy of that age, under like circumstances, it is well enough; and in this case whether plaintiff did so act could be better determined by jurymen who see and hear him than by this court who did neither.
The rule is that, taking a boy as a boy and a man as a man, where there can be, not one view, but two views fairly entertained by reasonable men of a given line of conduct, the issue is for the jury and not for the court. [Holmes v. Railroad, supra; Campbell v. Railroad, 175 Mo. 161; Walker v. Railroad, 193 Mo. l. c. 482, 483; Young v. Waters-Pierce Oil Co., 185 Mo. l. c. 667; Erickson v. Railroad, 171 Mo. l. c. 659, 660.]
The jury were properly instructed on the question of contributory negligence. They found that issue in favor of plaintiff and we see nothing in the record upon
II. Assuming, under the finding of the jury, there was no contributory negligence in this case, the next question is, was the jury properly instructed on the negligence, if any, of defendant? Defendant’s main contention on this score is that the court erred in giving instruction numbered 1 and, ergo, did right when it corrected its own error.
In developing this contention, it is argued by defendant that the court erroneously assumed it was negligent not to sound a bell so as to give timely warning of the approach of the car. Defendant contends the fact of negligence should have been submitted to the jury and not assumed by the court.
Instruction numbered 1 reads thus:
“If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff used ordinary care (that is, such care as an ordinary careful boy of his age and intelligence would use under similar circumstances), in stepping upon the track in front of the mail car without first looking west to see if a car was coming, and if you further find from the evidence that the motomeer did not sound his bell or gong so as to give timely warning of his approach, and that if he had done so the boy would have been warned in time to have kept out of danger, then plaintiff is entitled to a.verdict.”
(a) It will be seen at a glance that the instruction assumes it was the duty of the motorman under the circumstances of this case to sound the gong at the point in hand, and if he did not do so it was negligence. Did the court do right in that assumption under the peculiar facts here?
It will be better in considering this contention to go back a little. It seems, after plaintiff introduced the Vigilant Watch ordinance, the effect of that ordinance
But that was not all there was of heart and substance in the Vigilant Watch ordinance. That ordinance provided that “the conductor, motorman, grip-man, driver or any other person in charge of each car shall keep: a vigilant watch for all vehicles and persons on foot, especially children, either on the track or moving, towards it” — the other provision, relating to stopping on the first appearance of danger, is an added duty. While the whole of this ordinance has been sustained on the theory that it is enacted under the police power of a city, yet in substance and logical effect both duties, the duty of a vigilant watch, especially for children, and the duty to stop as soon as possible on the appearance of danger, may be well sustained as simply declarative of the common law.
To hold that a motorman, driving a killing machine on iron rails in the people’s highway, should keep a vigilant watch for everyone moving towards the track, especially children, is as much as (and no more than) to say that humanity and common sense dictate such course; and to hold such to be a duty, even in the absence of an ordinance, would not strain, let alone break, the common law applicable to crowded cities and the use of a highway, common not only to street railways under their easement but, primarily, to all travelers. Indeed, if an elder equity is held to be a better equity, why may not an elder, a primary and a necessary use (a use that is the prime condition precedent— the raison d’ etre — to any street) be held to be some
We think the court erred in not submitting to the jury a rule of law embodying the duty of the defendant to keep vigilant watch, especially for children approaching a track, as plaintiff prayed it to do.
But the foregoing determination is not decisive. The question still remains, was the instruction, as given, a correct one? Let us see. On plaintiff’s theory the motorman neither saw the child nor rang the gong; on defendant’s theory the motorman did both. . On plaintiff’s theory it was the duty of the motorman to see the child and to ring the gong; and on defendant’s theory, below, as shown by its course at the trial, it was the duty of the motorman to do both. Why then waste time with a discussion on the existence of a duty, assumed to be a duty by both litigants and assumed to be a duty by the court, and by defendant in its instructions? It is true the evidence does not show the extent of the presence of people at and about this platform, but yet people had the right to be there. Not only so, but they were invited there by defendant itself. That it owed a duty to look out for them and, by warning, protect them from danger, is too plain for argument. So that, whether that duty arose as a general duty on account of its being a street, or on account of its being an intersection of two streets, or on account of its being a place provided by defendant for travelers to con
If defendant was causing the gong to be sounded as it approached and passed the platform, it escapes liability under the fact here. So the court instructed the jury. If, however, the gong was not sounded, as some .of the evidence indicates, and if there was an appreciable time and distance in which it might have been sounded by the use of ordinary care after the lad resumed his journey or showed an indication of doing so by picking up his can of milk, and before he got into peril, then the defendant may be liable if its failure to sound the gong was the proximate cause of the injury. The case proceeds upon the theory on both sides that a very few steps and a very short time took the boy into peril. On this account, while the matter becomes close and narrow, yet we think the evidence on all hands shows the boy out of danger at one time and shows that it took an appreciable time for him to get into danger after his stop, and, therefore, during that appreciable time, in which by his movements in picking up the can and directing his steps towards the track he showed he was about to cross, he was entitled, as a matter of law, to a warning that this car proposed to occupy the very spot he was entering upon. It is true the car could not stop, but inability to stop does not measure the full duty of defendant in such case. The car was equipped with a bell, the strap to that bell under this evidence was in the motorman’s hand, and in case of a car going as this one was, twice as fast as a man could walk, there was time enough and space enough while the boy picked up his can and took those
Not only so, but as the instructions on both sides proceed on the theory that it was the duty of the motorman to see the boy and warn him, and the case was • tried on that theory below, the contention now under consideration is controlled by the wise and stiff rule of appellate practice that a case should be heard here upon the same theory it was heard below. [Walker v. Railroad, 193 Mo. l. c. 483, et seq.]
Where the facts are undisputed, an issue may be dealt with as a question of law. A court, in a given instance, may say certain acts constitute negligence. In another instance, it may say certain acts constitute contributory negligence. In yet another instance, it may say that given acts constitute neither negligence nor contributory negligence. Now, in this case, the question of warning was a disputed fact, and, therefore, the court submitted that issue of fact to the jury by instruction numbered 1. But the evidence is substantially one way that there was time and space in which to warn this boy by a gong after he started to this track and, as said, we are not willing to say the court might not assume it is negligence not to do so.
Accordingly, we hold in this case that the instruction under review, which assumes it was the defendant’s duty to warn the boy and assumes it had time and space to perform that duty by the use of the gong, was not a vicious instruction. The learned trial judge had a first impression of his right to make those assumptions, and that first impression was the best, as first impressions not infrequently are.
(b) Defendant’s learned counsel assail instruction numbered 1 from another side. They argue the instruction is erroneous in not submitting to the jury the issue of the proximate cause of the injury. Is there substance in this argument?
“Before the plaintiff can have a verdict in this case, the law requires him to prove to your satisfaction, by a preponderance or greater weight of evidence, negligence (of the kind submitted to you) on the part of defendant, and also that such negligence (if any is proved) was a proximate cause of the accident and hurt received by plaintiff; and if the plaintiff has not so proved negligence of the kind submitted to you, on the part of defendant, or its motorman in charge of the mail car, and that such negligence was a proximate cause of the accident, then your verdict must be for the defendant.”
In the light of this instruction of defendant, all darkness in the court’s instruction numbered 1 faded away, even as the morning sun dispels the fog. The issue of proximate cause was flatly put to the jury and under the doctrine of aider, the point in hand is also rtded against defendant. [Lee v. Railroad, 195 Mo. l. c. 426, et seg.]
One of these unassigned reasons, deemed by defendant’s counsel sufficient, is that the petition did' not state a cause of action. The argument hinges on the fact that the petition alleged several pretermitted duties and averred several acts of negligence and follows these allegations with this averment: “All of which directly contributed to cause the injuries hereinafter complained of.” Defendant’s counsel argue that by that allegation plaintiff should be held to have pleaded his own contributory negligence and thus stated himself out of court. That is, if defendant’s complained-of acts merely contributed” to cause the injuries, then the petition (ex vi termini) proceeds upon the assumption that acts of plaintiff caused the injury with defendant’s acts merely contributing thereto. Which theory is ingenious and happy as a fanciful conceit and does credit to the acumen and versatility of learned counsel. But, however much the judicial mind may be diverted, it is not convinced thereby. It might be if defendants, in cases of personal injuries, by a long and exclusive use of the words “contributed,” contributing, ’ ’ and contributory, ’ ’ in connection with negligence, would be held to have filed a caveat, as it were, or taken out a copyright on that use, that then a plaintiff would be precluded from safely using the same for any purpose, and the argument would have force. Indeed, contributory negligence may well have come to be looked on as a valuable asset of all defendants in such pickle. But, reading the allegation with its context, it is plain that plaintiff was entitled to use the
Other reasons for sustaining the lower court are suggested and have been examined, but we deem them without persuasive merit.
Our conclusion is that the court erred in its order granting a new trial. That order is, therefore, reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to set aside the order granting a new .trial and reinstate the verdict and the judgment of plaintiff as of the date originally entered, so the judgment may bear interest from that date — the latter to avoid the trouble referred to in Scullin v. Railroad, 192 Mo. 1.