132 Mo. App. 584 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Plaintiff’s action Avas brought to recover damages for personal injuries received by a collision between a wagon he Avas driving and one of defendant’s street cars. The judgment was for the plaintiff.
The petition alleges that plaintiff was seated in a
There was evidence tending to support the petition, and also that defendant was not guilty of negligence; and that plaintiff himself was guilty of contributory negligence.
Complaint is made of plaintiff’s instruction numbered T, in that it assumes that defendant was guilty •of negligence either in failing to keep the car in control, or by failure to check the speed or stop the car. We think the complaint, well founded. That portion •of the instruction reads: “and that said injuries to the plaintiff, if any, were caused by the carelessness and- negligence of the defendant either by the failure of the motorman in charge of said car to keep said -car under such control that it would not be run into and upon the said wag:on in which plaintiff was seated, or by the failure of the motorman in charge of said car to -check the speed of or stop said car and thereby avoid Tunning into the wagon in which plaintiff was seated,
Again, the instruction places the plaintiff, Avhen •struck, as “driving along on the west bound track of the defendant, near and about two hundred feet west -of Mulberry street.” There was no evidence of the •distance from Mulberry street, but plaintiff states that ■assuming the width of a lot to be twenty-five feet and taking the number of the house in front of which plaintiff was, it can be seen that the place was about two hundred feet Avest of Mulberry street. We cannot take judicial notice of the width of a lot and therefore must require proof. The only evidence concerning a distance ■of two hundred feet was, not as to the point of collision, but was in regard to where the wagon was found the next day.
Instruction numbered 2 for plaintiff seems to present a point blank • contradiction. The first sentence expressly directs a verdict for the defendant if the jury believed plaintiff was guilty of negligence in driving • along the defendant’s west-bound track. It states in • affirmative words that if he was negligent in so doing, “then he cannot recover herein and your verdict should be for the defendant.” Wholly ignoring this unqualified direction, it proceeds in the next sentence to direct “But if you further find and believe from the evidence That plaintiff was in a position of peril,” and that de
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.