162 Mo. App. 554 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
The facts and issues in the case, as set out by learned counsel for appellant, are that plaintiff’s husband, while driving a team and wagon across Easton avenue on to Leonard avenue, in the city of St. Louis, was struck by one of defendant’s eastbound cars and thrown from his wagon and killed. The evidence of plaintiff tended to show that the decedent drove upon the tracks at such a time that if the motorman in charge of the car had exercised ordinary care to have stopped the car after plaintiff had gotten into a position of peril on the tracks that the car could have been stopped. There was evidence on the part of defendant tending to show that decedent drove on to the tracks at the time and place in question without looking and listening for the approach of a car. Over the demurrer of defendant the cause was submitted to the jury and the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $5000: Counsel for appellant very frankly admit that as the points they desire to present do not involve a demurrer to the evidence, it is unnecessary to set it out any further than above. That is the evidence as so set out b3r them, except that the affidavit of the motorman who was operating the car at the time of the accident was in evidence and is abstracted, and that affidavit tended to sustain the claim of the defendant. Clearly it was a case for the jury, and they were correctly instucted.
The errors assigned are to admitting evidence of plaintiff as to the number of her children and their respective ages and to allowing counsel for plaintiff, in his closing argument to the jury, to refer to that
While these are the assigned errors, in the argument of the case before us counsel for appellant made no attempt to argue the assigned error as to the instructions, but practically abandoned 'that, basing his claim for a reversal on the error of the court in admitting evidence of the number and ages of the children of plaintiff and her deceased husband. It is unnecessary therefore to set out the instructions or comment upon the action of the court in respect thereto.
The Supreme Court in Tetherow v. St. Joseph & D. M. R. Co., 98 Mo. 74, 11 S. W. 310, held that it was not error to permit the plaintiff to state the number and ages of her minor children. Again, in Soeder v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co., 100 Mo. 673, l. c. 682, 13 S. W. 714, the Supreme Court, following the Tetherow ease, supra, held that the judgment would not be reversed because plaintiff was permitted to testify as to the number of her infant children, the husband be•ing bound for the support of his own children and his death casting this burden upon the mother, his widow. It is true that neither of these cases were under section 5425, Revised Statutes 1909, but both under wliat are now sections 5426 and 5427, where the measure of damage is such an amount as the jury might deem fair and just with reference to the necessary injury resulting from such death. Before amendment that was not to exceed $5000; now it is $10,000. But our Supreme Court, in the recent case of Boyd v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 236 Mo. 54, 139 S. W. 561, an action under section 5425, has distinctly held that in an action by the wife for the wrongful death of her husband, brought under that section, “it is proper to show in evidence the number and ages of plaintiff’s children,” for, says our Supreme Court, that statute is remedial as well as penal. In the Boyd case plaintiff was permitted to