5 Mo. App. 7 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action against defendant, a common carrier, to' recover damages for injuries suffered by plaintiff in consequence of defendant’s breach of the terms of the contract to carry plaintiff, in one of defendant’s omnibuses, from a railroad depot in East St. Louis to plaintiff’s residence in St. Lo uis. It appears from the evidence that plaintiff, at the time of the injuries complained of, was an unmarried woman,, residing with her parents on Collins Street, St. Louis, about a mile north of the court-house. She was a milliner by trade,. twenty-three years old at the time of the trial, and had resided in St. Louis about six years at the date of the occurrence which is the foundation of this action. For three years she worked at the millinery business, walking daily, winter and summer, from her home to the shop and back, the distance between the points being about a mile. Her health during this time was fairly good, though she was not robust. In the summer of 1872 she began to suffer from headache and pain in the side, had to give up work, and change of air was recommended by her physician. Accordingly, in July, 1872, she went to visit a relative in Davenport, Iowa. Whilst there she improved steadily in health, and was in the habit of taking exercise on foot. In December she returned home by rail, apparently quite well. She was warmly clad when she arrived at the depot in East St. Louis, on December 15, 1872. The person in charge of’ the omnibus of defendant at the depot told her that she would be taken home. With this understanding she got into the omnibus, and again, on the ferry-boat, she asked the agent of defendant whether the omnibus would take-
For the purposes of this opinion, the facts are set out according to the statements of the witnesses for plaintiff. If there is evidence to support the verdict, we have nothing to do -with its weight; but if, on the facts in evidence, plaintiff is not entitled to recover, as a matter of law the verdict must be set aside. The rule is that carriers are responsible for the natural, ordinary, and proximate consequences of their acts, but not for such as are remote and extraordinary; and if the injury complained of be the direct consequence of the negligence, want of reasonable care and foresight of plaintiff, and only remotely the consequence of the acts or omission of defendant, plaintiff cannot recover.
How can it be said that an excruciatingly painful and protracted illness, resulting in permanent injury to the health of the passenger, is the natural, ordinary, and proximate consequence of setting down on the sidewalk of the most frequented street of a populous city, in broad daylight, on a dry, cold, winter day, a young woman, not in bad health, well and warmly clad, no stranger to, but a resident of, the town, in company with an intimate friend, in immediate proximity to a respectable hotel, and on the line of a street railway which passes close to her home? It may be said the young woman was of a delicate constitution. If her constitution was too delicate to admit of her walking-home without danger, ordinary prudence required that she should take the street cars. It appears that she had no-money ; but it also appears, from her own evidence, that she did not ask her companion to lend her the price of her car-tickets, and that she would have had no hesitation in doing so, had she really desired to avoid the danger of a walk home in the cold. It is quite clear, from the testimony, either that plaintiff thought she was running no risk in walking home, or else that she was willing, without any necessity, to take the risk. In either case, we do not think the plaintiff can recover. It was for plaintiff to act with ordinary prudence, and proper regard for her health. Her companions stopped on the way, in a warm store ; plaintiff might have done the same thing, and have waited for the street car, which, the evidence shows, was running at the
The defendant was liable only for such actual damage as was the natural and proximate consequence of its breach of contract. Had plaintiff hired a carriage to take her home, defendant would have been liable, perhaps, to pay the cost; but if plaintiff chose to walk, and this was a dangerous exposure, this was the imprudence of plaintiff, and defendant is not liable for it.
It is not necessary to examine, with particularity, the instructions given or refused. They are quite long. For the reasons given, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.