137 Mo. App. 47 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
— Plaintiff sued to recover damages for personal injuries which he alleges were caused by the negligence of defendant. The cause was here on a former appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff, but the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded
The injury occurred late in the afternoon of January 21,1905, on West Ninth street in Kansas City, at a point about two hundred feet west of Mulberry street. Ninth street runs east and west, crosses the West Bottoms and is much used for travel between Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kan. One of defendant’s lines of street railway turns into Ninth street from Mulberry street and thence runs along Ninth street westward. It consists of two tracks, the north track being used by west-bound cars and the other for east-bound cars. The tracks are laid in the middle of the street and are between two lines of iron pillars (fifty feet apart) which support an elevated street railway. The pavement at Ninth street on either side of the car tracks was in bad ■ repair and vehicles using the street generally used the tracks and the space between them as the paving there was in good condition. The plaintiff was driving eastward on Ninth street. He had a big strong horse and a heavy wagon, but no load, and he was seated on a high spring seat at the front end of the wagon. There was a wagon just in front of him and another just behind. This string of wagons was driving on the south car track until it was overtaken by an east-bound car when the wagons were turned on to the .north track to permit the car to pass. When plaintiff was perhaps two hundred and fifty feet from Mulberry street, a west
Witnesses for plaintiff say that after the collision the car ran from one to three car-lengths before it stopped. The other wagons in the string were driven off the track in time to clear the car and this was accomplished without the necessity of undue effort on the part of their drivers. There were no obstructions in the street at this place to prevent plaintiff from following their example and he was driven in his testimony to the expedient of attempting to excuse his palpable negligence by saying that he could not begin to turn from the north track until the wagon ahead of him had turned off. His testimony presents this excuse very lamely as will appear from the following excerpts from it:
“By the Court: Q. What was there on the eastbound track immediately before you began to turn over? A. On the track, I don’t think there was anything on the track.
“Q. Well, at the time the car came around the corner of Mulberry street was the right-hand track, that is, the east-bound track, free, could you have turned on it?
A. Well, it was, except one wagon was ahead of me.
“Q. There was no wagon to your right, was there?
A. No, there was no wagon to the right.
*51 “Q. Why didn’t yon turn off immediately? A. Well, I don’t know. ...
“Q. Well, why didn’t you immediately try to get off? A. Well, some way or other I couldn’t get off. I don’t know how it was now. I couldn’t get off. I just thought the other wagon behind — he got off, and as soon as he got off, I tried to pull out of the way. I tried as fast as I could, and just had time enough to get the horse out of the way and then the wheel was cramped around. Then, of course, the car came and this front end hit the wheel and throwed me off the seat.
“Q. Well, was there anything to have prevented your turning that horse sharply towards the right, or to the south, as soon as you saw that car coming around the corner? A. As soon as I seen it I did try it, yes.
“Q. You told me awhile ago that you didn’t do that until the car was within twenty-five feet of you? A. Well, just as quick as this other wagon was out of my road, I tried to just follow him right up and put my horse over.
“Q. Which other wagon were you waiting for, the wagon in front of you? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Why did you have to wait for him? A. Well, I don’t know, I don’t know any more if it was something on the other side. I couldn’t tell positively. I know I got off as soon as I could. I didn’t stay there to get hit. I guess nobody else would.”
The evidence of defendant is to the effect that plaintiff was not turning off the track when the car struck his wagQn but had passed entirely off and was driving alongside the track. Defendant’s theory is that the collision occurred because plaintiff was driving just on the danger line but not quite far enough away to avoid a collision between the end of the car bumper and the end of the hub of the front wagon wheel. The injuries to the wagon indisputably support this conclusion. The only points of contact between the car and the wagon were at the extreme ends of the single tree and the hub
What we have said demonstrates beyond peradventure that the plaintiff’s injury was the direct result of a peril created solely by his own negligence. With knowledge of all the facts of the situation and with ample time and opportunity to avoid the danger, he carelessly drove along the danger line when the slightest deviation would have placed him beyond the reach of danger. Plaintiff argues that despite his own negligence, he has made out a case for the jury under the humanitarian doctrine, but we do not agree with him. Had there been anything in the situation to suggest to an ordinarily careful and
It follows that as the judgment clearly is for the right party, it should be affirmed. It is so ordered.