116 Mo. App. 37 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
Plaintiff charges that he received personal injuries through the negligence of defendant’s servants employed to manage and run one of its street cars in Kansas City. He recovered judgment in the trial court. The plaintiff, who was shown to be seventy-seven years old, attempted to board a car at the in
The petition alleges that the car came to a stop when signaled by plaintiff. Defendant contends that the evidence fails to sustain the allegation, but, on the contrary, that it shows the car did not stop. The testimony given by plaintiff himself leaves it uncertain whether the car had come to what was called at the argument, an absolute dead stop, or whether it still had barely a perceptible motion. We think the difference would be unsubstantial. At any rate, it is held in Ridenhour v. Railway, 102 Mo. 283, 285, that an allegation of the car having stopped was matter of inducement; that the negligence charged was in the starting up. Aside from such consideration, the statements made by plaintiff in his examination in chief and cross-examination were of such nature that the jury should be left to interpret them and conclude what the witness really meant: Lehner v. Railroad, 110 Mo. App. 219. It is, of course, true that a party in testifying will be held to mean, as a statement of fact that which he clearly and finally states to be the fact and thus a party to a cause might conclude himself in such terms as to leave no question as to his statement and make it necessary for the court to so declare. But after considering all of the testimony given by plaintiff we conclude this is not such case.
Another suggestion for reversal is assigned by defendant on the ground that a physician was permitted
The only cause stated for reversal, that has given us any difficulty, is that urged to plaintiff’s instruction number two, on the subject of the exercise of ordinary care by the plaintiff. It is said that it assumes plaintiff’s right to recover unless prevented by his failing to exercise ordinary care. The instruction begins, that, “Before the plaintiff’s right to recover in this case can be defeated, the defendant must show by a preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff failed to exercise ordinary care,” etc. It should have read before plaintiff’s right to recover ca'n be defeated “on the ground of contributory negligence,” etc. But we are convinced the inaccuracy of the instruction was harmless. The assumption of plaintiff’s right to recover could not possibly have been taken by the jury as a statement of such right by the court in view of the explicit instructions in the case to the contrary. The jury were pointedly directed in instructions numbered 3, 6, 7 and 8 not to find for plaintiff if he was guilty of negligence. It is manifest from the entire instructions that no misunderstanding or confusion could have arisen in the mind of the jury on account of the omission noted. It was not an error, which, in any way, effected the merits of the ac
But defendant urges the further objection that it “incorrectly states the rule of law applicable to the doctrine of contributory negligence,” and the case of Payne v. Railroad, 129 Mo. 405, is cited to sustain the objection. We do not regard the instruction in that case as it arose there as at all like the instruction in this case. The instruction here informed the jury that it devolved on the defendant to show that plaintiff failed to exercise ordinary care to avoid the injury and that such failure was the cause of the injury, without which it would not have occurred. The Supreme Court says that “The burden is on the defendant to show that the deceased did not exercise care.” Crumpley v. Railroad, 111 Mo. 152, 158. And that “The burden of proving the defendant’s negligence and its consequence is on the plaintiff, and the burden of proving the plaintiff’s negligence and its contribution to the injury is on the defendant.” Schmidt v. Railroad 149 Mo. 269, 287. These citations are in accord with what has always been understood to be the law and we think the instructions for plaintiff do no more than they sanction. We are not unmindful of the argument advanced by defendant, in which the phraseology is questioned áhd a meaning suggested, which might attach to the instruction as given. But certainly no jury of ordinary understanding could interpret them at variance with what is well known law, which is easily applied to cases of personal injury in whatever way they may arise.
The instruction as to the measure of damages was not improper. If defendant wished it to be more specific and enter into a more detailed statement of the elements of damage, it should have asked it. [Browning v. Railroad, 124 Mo. 71.]
Much of the criticism of instruction numbered 1 for plaintiff finds its answer in what we have said concerning the evidence and pleading as to the stopping