166 Mo. App. 249 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
— Plaintiff, a girl six years old, was struck and run over by an automobile owned and operated by defendant and, by lier next friend, instituted this suit to recover damages for the injuries she-sustained. The answer in legal substance is a general denial. The cause is here on the appeal of defendant from a judgment of seven hundred and fifty dollars recovered by plaintiff in the circuit court. •
The injury occurred about six o’clock in the afternoon of April 26, 1910, on Gfrauman avenue in Kan
Witnesses for plaintiff testified that the car came into the intersection of Holmes street at a speed of twelve or fifteen miles per hour; that it slowed down at the crossing of the street car tracks, and continued on eastward through the crowd at a speed much faster than a fast walk. The crowd opened a way for the automobile and there is evidence tending to show that plaintiff was standing at the edge of the crowd in a place to which she had moved a moment before. Some part of the south side of the automobile struck her, probably the mud guard or fender over the front wheel, and threw her down. The rear wheel on that side of the car ran over her and broke one of her legs near the hip. It is alleged in the petition that the car “was recklessly, carelessly and negligently driven against, upon and over this plaintiff,” and the specific acts of negligence charged are, first, in running the car at a high and dangerous speed and, second, in failing to exercise reasonable care to avoid the injury after defendant discovered or should have discovered the dangerous position of plaintiff.
Defendant testified that when he turned into Grauman avenue he was running on the high gear but as he
“Q. To what extent did they part? A. There was no one in the street north of the car. They all spread to the south toward the injured car that was on the south side of the street. There was some peo*252 pie on the sidewalk at the north; bnt not in the street.
“Q. Then how fast do you say you were going when you were crossing Holmes street and went seventy or seventy-five feet east of Holmes street, at the time this child was struck? A. Just crawling along as slowly as possible, with my feet on the brakes..
“Q. What part of your machine first struck the child? A. I judge it was the fender. . . .
“Q. What part of this fender on the right side of your' machine struck the child first, the front part, or the center part ? A. The child struck the step, just about the center of the machine.
“Q. You mean to say that the child ran from the south and ran against your machine ? A. ' Ran against the machine; seemed to dive right against it.
“Q. Instead of the machine striking the child? A. That is the best of my recollection; yes, sir.”
At the request of plaintiff the court gave the following instruction: “It is the duty of the defendant, in running his automobile through the streets of a populous city, to use ordinary care to so regulate the speed of his automobile as not to injure any one, and failure to use such care is negligence, and the court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that, on April 26, 1910, at about 6 p. m., the plaintiff, while in the exercise of ordinary care herself (if you find she did use such care), as defined in another instruction, was standing or playing on Grauman avenue, and if you further find that the defendant, while running his automobile, mentioned in the' evidence, failed in the above defined duty, and negligently ran his automobile into, upon or over plaintiff (if he did so), and if you further find that, by reason of the above, the plaintiff was injured, then your verdict must he for the plaintiff. ’ ’
It is insisted by defendant that its request for an instruction peremptorily directing a verdict in its fa
But the burden of plaintiff does not compel her to prove the negligence or its causal relation to the injury by direct and positive evidence. The existence of such ultimate facts may be established by circumstantial evidence. No witness introduced by plaintiff saw the car strike her, but she was seen standing close to the south line of the way opened in the crowd for the car, was seen to fall, and the fact that the rear wheel ran over her, in effect, is conceded. Defendant says there was a collision between plaintiff and the mud guard or step but that the collision was caused by plaintiff -darting out from the crowd and running against the car. He is contradicted by the witnesses of plaintiff not on the fact that there was a collision but on the fact that it was caused by plaintiff running against the fender and not by the fender striking her. The evidence, as a whole, supports an inference that defendant brushed the side of the car against plaintiff while she was standing still and knocked her down;
To run an automobile at ten or twelve miles per hour on an open, unobstructed street might not be negligence, but to run one at half that speed through a large crowd of playful, noisy children, would be an act of gross negligence, since it would be almost certain to result in injury to some of the children. The evidence of plaintiff is to the effect that the car was run through the human lane opened for its passage at a speed faster than a fast walk — at five or six miles per hour — and we think defendant’s counsel is wrong in the view that this evidence is opposed to the plain and undisputed physical facts of the situation. The fact that defendant, who says he was in a position to make immediate use of the. appliances for stopping, could not stop in less than six feet, strongly negatives his assertion that the car was barely creeping and was not going to exceed one mile per hour. The jury were entitled to the belief that an automobile going at that speed and under such perfect control could be stopped at once, in less than a foot, and that since it ran as much as six feet after defendant put forth his utmost effort to stop, it must have been going at about the speed stated by plaintiff’s witnesses.' It is hard for us to believe that a child struck by the outer edge of the mud guard of a car running only a mile an hour would be thrown down and run over by the rear wheel with the autoist doing his best to stop. To our minds the version of the injury given by the witnesses for plaintiff is more consistent with the undisputed physical facts than that given by defendant. It was the duty of defendant in running his car to exercise care commensurate with the exigencies of the situation. [Hall v. Compton, 130 Mo. App. l. c. 681; Ladd v. Williams, 104 Mo. App. 390; McFern v. Gardner, 121 Mo. App.
We must rule against the contention of defendant that the instruction we have copied contains prejudicial error. The definition in the opening clause of the degree of care defendant was bound to exercise correctly expresses the true rule. It does not contain the suggestion that defendant was an insurer of the safety of plaintiff and as applied in the succeeding portions of the instruction the rule thus stated did not enlarge the scope of the pleaded negligence. There is no prejudicial error in the record and accordingly the judgment is affirmed.