57 Mo. App. 574 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
— This action is for personal injuries received by plaintiff, a boy thirteen years of age. The accident happened at a crossing (to all intents and purposes, a public crossing) in the city of St. Louis. The injury was inflicted by a train running backwards, one of the cars passing over plaintiff’s leg as he was attempting to-pass over the track at the crossing, — at least this was shown by plaintiff’s case.
Defendant asked and was refused an instruction at the close of plaintiff’s ease in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. Defendant then introduced evidence in its own behalf which had the effect of waiving the demurrer and leaves the case to stand on the sufficiency of the whole evidence taken together.
There was shown in evidence an ordinance of the city of St. Louis wherein it was provided that it should be unlawful for any one to move or run cars propelled by steam within the limits of the city, without constantly sounding the bell. And that it should be unlawful to run freight cars backwards in said limits, without having a man stationed on the top of the car farthest from the engine to give danger signals. The evidence tended to show that neither of these provisions of the ordinance was complied with in this case; the result of which must be to hold the defendant guilty of negligence. Backenstoe v. Railroad, 23 Mo. App. 148; Eswin v. Railroad, 96 Mo. 290. The court in this connection, properly submitted to the jury, by instructions 1 and 2 for plaintiff, whether the accident happened in consequence of this negligence.
The court by instruction number 3 for plaintiff directed the jury that although they should believe that plaintiff was guilty of having placed himself in a dangerous position and was negligent in failing to observe the
The greater part of defendant’s attack upon the judgment is spent on the contention that there is no evidence in the record to show that the negligence of defendant was the immediate cause of the accident; in other words, that if the negligence charged and proven had not occurred and defendant’s servants had rung the bell constantly and one of them had been stationed on top of the car farthest from the backing engine, still the accident would have happened. We are not of the opinion that the evidence shows this conclusively. That the jury have had the point put clearly before them is evidenced by the following instruction granted to defendant: “7. The court further instructs the jury, that it devolves upon'the plaintiff to prove, to the satisfaction of the jury, by a preponderance of the evidence, the following facts, viz.: First. That plain
Can we, under any rule governing appellate tribunals, say that if the bell had been constantly rung as required by the ordinance, it might not reasonably have attracted plaintiff’s attention and thereby prevented his going upon the track? As to that branch of the negligence in not haying a man stationed on top of the end car, is it not highly probable that if a diligent and careful man had been in that position he could and would have warned plaintiff away. Defendant’s first instruction puts this phase of the case too favorably for defendant by saying, inferentially and in effect, that such man must have been able, had he been in such position, to have signaled the engineer in time to have stopped the train. The question is properly submitted by defendant in the instruction which we have set out, wherein it is stated that plaintiff must prove that defendant did not have “a man or watchman" stationed on the end of the car, “to give notice of danger to plaintiff. ’’
There is much in the argument of counsel on the question of contributory negligence of plaintiff and