91 Kan. 605 | Kan. | 1914
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Thomas Harbert was killed while riding upon a car of the Kansas City Elevated Railway Company. His widow recovered a judgment against the company, from which it appeals.
At about 5:45 in the afternoon of October 7 Harbert was waiting with a large number of other persons at the State Line station. It was carnival week in Kansas City, Mo., and the traffic was very heavy. A westbound car stopped at the station, but it was filled practically to its capacity. It had a closed vestibule, the doors, the upper part of which were of glass, opening inward. One or more persons got off the car, but the door was immediately closed, and not reopened. Harbert made an attempt to board the -car, but succeeded only in getting upon the step. An employee of the company who was at the station, one of his duties being to see that persons should not attempt to ride on the outside of the cars, tried to persuade- Harbert to get off, but without success. He.then attempted to remove him by force, but Harbert resisted his efforts, and after a
The principal question involved is whether the established facts preclude a recovery by the plaintiff. Obviously Harbert was guilty of such misconduct that no liability could attach to the company upon the basis of any mere negligence on its part. The court instructed that if Harbert rode upon the outside of the car in spite of the objections of the company’s employees (which the jury found to be the case) he was a trespasser, and the defendant owed him no duty except not to injure him wantonly. Therefore, in order to justify the verdict rendered, the evidence must have warranted a finding of wantonness. Whether it did so is the exact question to be determined. We think an affirmative answer must be returned, on the ground that the jury may reasonably have concluded that the following were the essential facts of the tragedy: The conductor knew that Harbert was riding on the step outside of the car. He knew that the pillars of the bridge were so near the track that if Harbert remained in that position the swaying of the car was certain to cause him to be struck and probably killed. Harbert did not know that the pillars were close enough to strike him, and at all events, after the James stree't station had been passed, could have done nothing to extricate himself from his predicament. After passing James street the conductor knew that Harbert was utterly unable to help himself, and knew that if the car proceeded at its usual speed, without stopping to allow Harbert to get off, or
In Holwerson v. St. Louis & S. Ry. Co., 157 Mo. 216, 57 S. W. 770, cited by the appellant, this language is used, suggesting that what might be called “contributory wantonness” should constitute a defense analogous to contributory negligence:
“But will it be said that human imagination can not conceive a case of wantonness on the part of both .parties? The answer is plain. Wantonness by both parties is just as conceivable as negligence by both parties. But a single illustration will suffice to point the rule. A man determines to commit suicide. He has no property and no life insurance. He will leave his family destitute. To provide for his family, he lies down on a railroad track. The track is straight, •and the engineer can easily see the man on the track in time to stop the train before killing him. Instead of doing so, he intentionally and wantonly increases the speed of the train and runs over the man. The widow or children sue the railroad company for damages, and upon proof that the railroad employees wantonly inflicted the injury they recover a verdict, and thus the deceased has provided for his family at the • same time he has carried into effect his intentional or-wanton purpose to destroy himself. The wantonness ■of the defendant is made the sole determining factor in the solution of the problem of liability, and the wantonness of the deceased is not considered or taken into account, when, if it had been, the result would necessarily have been the same as in a case of negligence and contributory negligence.” (p. 242.)
The original petition referred to the conduct of the company as constituting “negligence,” not using the term “willful” or “wanton.” After the evidence was in (and after the time had elapsed within which an original action could have been begun), she was allowed to amend her pleading by the insertion of both these adjectives, qualifying the term “negligence” wherever it was used. The allowance of this amendment is complained of. The petition charged the defendant with the commission of acts which, as we have already determined, amounted to wantonness. The original omission to characterize them in so many words as such was not material, and the subsequent addition of such characterization was not prejudicial. (Way v. Bronston, ante, p. 446.)
Complaint is made of the instruction given regarding the measure of damages. The jury were told that they might take into consideration “the station in life of the deceased and the plaintiff,” and the sentence of which this was a part was open to the construction that the jury might consider the “age, health, occupation and character” of the plaintiff as well as of the decedent. The criticism is rather verbal than sub
“Standing alone, the statement might be taken as authorizing solace money as an independent item of damages. It was preceded and followed, however, by other statements which expressly limited recovery to pecuniary damages only, and consequently it is not likely that it was misconstrued.”
The judgment is affirmed.