174 Mo. App. 664 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Plaintiff, a minor nine years of age, sues by her next friend to recover damages for personal injuries she alleges were caused by negligence of defendant. The answer is a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. A trial in the circuit court resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $7500, but on the hearing of a motion for a new trial the court set aside this verdict and granted a new trial on the ground of error “in refusing to give instructions offered by defendant and in refusing to sustain defendant’s demurrer to the evidence offered at the close of all the evidence.” Plaintiff appealed from this judgment and contends that the cause was properly submitted to the jury.
The injury occurred in the afternoon of November 25, 1910, on a tract of land owned by a lumber company in Kansas City on the south side of defendant’s railroad tracks. The tract extended south from Twelfth street to Fifteenth street and was a block
The only real questions in the ease for our determination are those presented by defendant’s demurrer to the evidence and in the consideration of those questions we shall assume that the train was backed into the standing cars intentionally and without the observance by the train crew of defendant’s usual custom of giving warning of such movement.
There is a controversy in the evidence over the issue of whether these warnings were given also to children at play about the track. The trainmen say, in effect, that the custom was self-imposed, and not for the benefit of anyone except those working in and about the cars, but admit that when the advance brakeman observed children on and about the track, he ordered them away and generally “was rocked” by the children for his pains. The evidence as a whole presents the inference that the custom of giving warning was intended to be used and was used for the benefit of all persons found in the way of the advancing train and the controlling question in the case is whether or
“Where one is injured as the result of a plain and manifest duty for the protection of human life or safety, the party thus causing the injury will not be heard to say in justification, that he was dealing with his own property and that the person injured was technically a trespasser.”
It makes no difference whether, technically, plaintiff was a trespasser, a licensee or an invitee, her evidence shows she was. at a place where defendant’s servants had every reason to expect her, or some other child, to be. Such knowledge was enough, of itself, to impose a duty on them to give her warning and a negligent breach of such duty resulting in injury would be actionable negligence. To hold that defendant’s servants, knowing that little children, in all reasonable probability, would be in and about the stationary cars,. Still owed them no duty of reasonable care, would be to declare a rule of conduct abhorrent to the most common instinct of humanity. The court did right in overruling the demurrer to the evidence and erred in granting a new trial.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for plaintiff in accordance with the verdict.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING-.
We are asked by defendant to grant a rehearing and if this is not done to certify the cause to the Supreme Court on the ground that the foregoing opinion is in conflict with the following cases decided by the Supreme Court: Rushenberg v. Railroad, 109 Mo. 112; Burney v. Railroad, 126 Mo. 372; Ostertag v. Railroad, 64 Mo. 421; Kelly v. Benas, 217 Mo. 1.
The motions for rehearing and to certify are overruled.