197 Mo. 196 | Mo. | 1906
Plaintiff’s husband was struck and killed by a car on defendant’s street railroad and she brings this suit under section 2864, Revised Stat
The negligence charged, as independent of the ordinance, was failure to use care to watch for persons on the crossing or moving towards it in danger of the car, failure to use care to stop the car and failure to give signal of its approach. The negligence charged as under the ordinance was in failing to keep the watch and failing to stop the car on the first appearance of danger in the shortest time and space possible. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.
The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $5,000, from which defendant appeals.
The testimony in behalf of the plaintiff tended to show as follows:
Defendant operates a double-track street railroad in J efferson avenue; the cars are propelled by electricity. The general course of Jefferson avenue at the place of the accident is north and south. University street, running east and west, crosses Jefferson avenue at right angles. Plaintiff’s husband was a barber, fifty-three years old, a stout, heavy man, weighing about 250 pounds, and rather short of stature. He lived in the vicinity of this crossing.
At the time of the accident he was aiming to cross from the west to the east side of Jefferson avenue along the south line of University street. When he was yet on the west side of Jefferson avenue, between the sidewalk and defendant’s west track, plaintiff’s witness, who stood at the northwest corner of Jefferson avenue and University street, saw a car of defendant south of the crossing coming north on the east track at a distance estimated by the witness to be seventy-five or one hundred feet from the south crossing, the wit
At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence which the court refused and defendant excepted.
The evidence in behalf of the defendant tended to show as follows:
The car turned into Jefferson avenue one block south of University street and stopped there to discharge a passenger, then started on towards University street, gaining a speed of about ten miles an hour, the motorman saw the procession of wagons and rang his gong vigorously and continuously to warn the drivers of the wagons, he received a signal from the con
Plaintiff had but one witness to the accident and he stood at the northwest corner of the intersecting streets. This procession of wagons was between him and the car, yet he said that he saw the motorman’s hands on the gate, not on the controller or brakes where they should have been, and saw that he was flirting with girls on the sidewalk. Let us take that for what it is worth, and take also his statement that the car was running twelve or fifteen miles an hour and yet that it stopped in one car’s length or thirty or thirty-five feet after striking the man. It taxes one’s credibility to believe that the motorman who stopped his car going at that high rate of speed within thirty-five feet was giving his attention to girls on the sidewalk and neglecting his duty, yet that, with the statement of this same witness that the motorman did not ring his gong, is all that there is tending to show that the motorman was negligent. But conceding that an inference of negligence could be fairly drawn from that testimony, and' leaving for the present the defendant’s testimony as to the wagon loaded with boxes out of the case, and conceding that the motorman, if he had been looking over and across the top of the sand wagon, would have seen the plaintiff’s husband, where will that evidence lead
It makes no differencé, therefore, whether we take the evidence of the plaintiff or that of the defendant, that is, whether it was only á sand wagon over the top of which the motorman could see the head of the man, or a wagon loaded with boxes that concealed him entirely from view, if it was a sand wagon and the motorman saw him, the motorman had a right to presume that he was looking and would see the car and would stop; if it was a box wagon the motorman could not see him and he could not see the car; if it was negligence for the motorman not to have anticipated that a man might emerge from behind the wagon it was negligence also for the man not to anticipate that a car might be coming on a track which he knew was there and on which he knew a car was liable to come and of which he saw that his view was for the moment obstructed by the wagon. If there was negligence in the one there was at least equal negligence in the other contributing to the result.
It is negligence for a motorman to run his car át a high rate of speed to a crossing where pedestrians are liable to be when his view of the crossing is so obstructed by a passing wagon that he cannot see whether or not the crossing is clear, hut it is also negligence in a full-grown man to approach a railroad track behind a wagon which so obstructs his view that he cannot see whether or not a car that he knows is liable to
As to the alleged failure to stop the car on the first appearance of danger in the shortest time and space possible as the ordinance requires, there was no evidence to sustain the allegation. According to the plaintiff’s testimony when the motorman saw her husband, or would have seen him if he had looked, he was behind the sand wagon and in a place of safety, and the motorman had no right to presume that he would shut his eyes and walk into a place of unsafety.
According to defendant’s testimony there was a wagon loaded with boxes which prevented the motorman from seeing the plaintiff’s husband and prevented him from seeing the car, and “the first appearance of danger” was when the man emerged from behind the car and stepped on the track immediately in front of the car, and there is no evidence that the motorman did not then do everything in his power to prevent the accident.
The instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence should have been given. The judgment is reversed.