223 S.W.2d 428 | Mo. | 1949
Lead Opinion
Houston Harvey was a fare paying passenger on a Kansas City Public Service Company bus when it was involved in a collision with an Alton Railroad engine on the tracks of the Kansas City Terminal Railway Company. Harvey instituted *736 this action against the Kansas City Public Service [430] Company, the Alton Railroad and the Kansas City Terminal Railway Company to recover damages for his personal injuries. He settled with the Kansas City Public Service Company for $850.00 and upon the trial of his cause against the railroad and the terminal company recovered a judgment of $8,000.00. The collision occurred at the intersection of Osage Avenue and the terminal tracks in Kansas City, Kansas, and the action is therefore governed by the laws of Kansas. Upon this appeal by the railroad and the terminal company it is urged that Harvey failed to establish a submissible case against either appellant, that the court erred in giving the seven instructions on behalf of the plaintiff and in refusing fourteen instructions offered by the railroad and that the verdict is excessive.
Harvey was seated on the third or fourth seat back from the bus driver on the south side. It was 6:15 A.M. "daylight savings time" September 28, 1945 and it was dark, and there was a drizzling rain. There are three sets of tracks at the crossing and the inexperienced bus driver did not stop the bus before starting across the tracks. He had stopped about eighty feet east of the crossing while some of his passengers alighted and then proceeded on at a speed of about seven miles an hour and the bus was struck by an engine on the second set of tracks.
[1] The bus driver and passengers on the bus, who were looking to the south, testified that the first time they saw the engine it was but twenty feet from the bus. They testified that there was no headlight on the engine. The train crew claimed that the headlight was turned off after the collision. In this situation the railroad's negligence in operating the engine without a headlight was for the jury's determination. Calvin v. Schaff,
[2] As to warning signals the plaintiff's evidence was negative but passengers on the bus testified that they heard no signals. The bus driver did hear a bell ringing when he first saw the engine twenty feet away. The train crew claimed that the bell was ringing and that signals were given. But again, in this situation, whether the railroad was negligent in failing to give timely and proper signals was for the jury's determination. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co. v. Johnson,
[3] The engineer admitted that the speed of the engine was ten miles an hour. Other witnesses said that its speed was fifteen miles an hour or more. There is an ordinance limiting the speed of locomotives at crossings in Kansas City, Kansas, to six miles an hour. The railroad says that the ordinance is unreasonable and void because it limits the speed of trains to six miles an hour in a city of 140,000 population irrespective of whether the train is moving over a crossing or a fenced right of way. In the first place, that is not this case. *737
The collision was at a much traveled street intersection. In the second place, the ordinance has been before the Supreme Court of Kansas and that court has held that it was passed for the purpose of regulating the railroad's relations to the public. Long v. Missouri Pac. R. Co.,
[4] Instruction three submitted, as to the railroad, failure to have a headlight burning and failure to keep a careful lookout ahead and laterally for approaching traffic on Osage Avenue. It also submitted whether the engineer could have seen the bus in time to have stopped or warned by signal after it became apparent that the bus intended to proceed on to the crossing. The railroad not only contends, that there is no evidence to support these specifications but also, as submitted, that it proceeds [431] on the theory of humanitarian negligence as applied in Missouri. On the other hand, the terminal company contends that the submission injects primary negligence into the last chance doctrine of Kansas. In the first place, the instruction submitting these matters is neither a humanitarian nor a last chance instruction or submission and the appellants do not point out how it is. In any event instruction three is a submission of several acts of primary negligence. It was doubtless based upon the following testimony of the railroad's engineer:
"Q. Well, you never saw the bus until it was within 20 feet of your track, did you? A. No, sir.
Q. And the only reason you didn't see the bus when it was all lit up was because you didn't look over there, wasn't it? A. I was looking right ahead.
Q. And I said the only reason you didn't see it —
A. (Interrupting) I am looking right down the track, there are little red lights you know, I have to look down there, and I don't have to be gawking down the street."
* * * *
*738"Q. . . . I said the only reason you didn't see him was because you didn't look to your right?
A. Well, I may have looked a little. I looked ahead to see where I was going.
Q. I said you didn't look farther than 20 feet?
A. No, sir.
Q. Nothing in the world to stop you from seeing it at 150 feet? A. No, sir."
* * * *
"Q. Now, then, when you saw this bus coming 20 or 25 miles an hour, all lit up, 20 or 25 feet back of your track, if you had applied your brakes then you would have stopped before this collision occurred?
A. I didn't apply the brakes.
Q. I said if you had you would have stopped before the collision?
A. I had the right of way, it wasn't my business to stop.
Q. So you are saying you had the right of way and that is why you didn't stop? A. That's right.
Q. But if you had tried to find a way you could have stopped? A. I could stop any time I wanted to.
Q. Sure, you can keep on bulling on any time you want to, too.
A. I wasn't bulling on, just running 10 miles an hour, a safe speed.
Q. We won't dispute it — if you were back here 15 feet and put the brakes on, you would have stopped before the collision occurred? A. I could have stopped, yes.
Q. But you didn't do it? A. Correct.
Q. And you waited there until this bus was within three or four feet of the track?
A. I waited until I could see if he was going to stop or not.
Q. You waited until he got up within three or four feet of the track toward you? A. That is right.
Q. And you didn't do a blessed thing about stopping until you got up there within three or four feet?
A. Until I saw he was not going to stop.
Q. You didn't do one thing under the sun until he was within three or four feet of the track, did you?
A. That's right."
So there was evidence to support these primary specifications of negligence and it was not error to give instruction three. A., T. S.F. Ry. Co. v. Baker,
[5] As to the Terminal Railroad, the negligence specified and submitted was failure to have a flagman at the crossing. The terminal *739
company admitted that it had maintained a flagman at the crossing from 5:45 A.M. to 8 A.M. for over twenty-five years. Its excuse for the flagman's absence at the time of this collision was that the regular flagman had been injured or was ill. The terminal company, relying on [432] certain Missouri cases (Hamilton v. City Light Tr. Co.,
[6] Nevertheless, the railroad and the terminal company contend that under the law of Kansas their negligence was not the proximate cause of the collision and the plaintiff's injuries and, therefore, the court erred in submitting their liability and in giving instructions 1, 2, 5, 6 and 7 and in refusing the railroad's instructions 15, 16, 17, 19, 20 and 22. The basis of their argument is that the proximate cause of the collision was the negligence of the bus operator in failing to stop before proceeding over the crossing. The railroad says "The most outstanding negligence pleaded by plaintiff and conclusively disclosed by the evidence is the failure of the operator of the bus to bring the bus to a complete stop before attempting to cross over the railroad tracks on the crossing as required by the statutory law of Kansas, and the instructions of his employer . . ." It is in this connection that the appellants contend that the plaintiff is conclusively bound by the allegations of his petition with respect to the negligence of the bus driver. Weil v. Posten,
[7] There can be no doubt of the bus driver's negligence and undoubtedly his negligence contributed to cause the collision and plaintiff's injuries but it does not necessarily follow that the appellants are thereby relieved of responsibility for their negligence. There have been many instances in which the railroad's negligence was not the proximate cause of the accident and injuries complained of within the meaning of the law of Kansas. Richards v. C., R.I. P. Ry. Co.,
[8] Also in Kansas there are several instances of guests in automobiles being guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. Buchhein v. A., T. S.F. Ry. Co.,
[9] Instruction 1 with reference to concurrent negligence and joint liability was taken from Timmons v. St. L.-S.F. Ry. Co.,
[10] The plaintiff was fifty-seven at the time of his injury and had been employed by the Wilson Packing Company as a paunch trimmer for years. He was at home in bed for two weeks and off work for another two weeks. For about a month after he returned to his employment he was given lighter work. Since then he has resumed his regular job and earns seventy-five cents an hour. When the engine hit the bus the plaintiff was thrown from his seat to the floor. He has a doctor bill of $150.00. His doctor described his injuries as a large bruised area over the right kidney "and he had other bruises, more or less, over his entire body, but they, more or less, were superficial, but the one over the right kidney was large and indicated a very deep and severe bruise." The doctor found some blood in his urine. His back was taped when he received emergency treatment and the doctor again re-taped it after the third or fourth visit. He was given diathermy treatments for "a deep, severe sprain and bruise, muscular injuries." The doctor saw him at his office twenty-eight times. He has no objective symptoms and the doctor gave as his opinion that he had a "lumbar sacro sprain," which the doctor thought was permanent. Another doctor who examined the plaintiff was of the opinion that he had an injured muscle "and that, along with the condition down the thigh, I believe there is a thinning out of the disc that goes between the second and third lumbar vertebrae." [434] He complains of pain in his back and of headaches and says that he does not feel as well as he did before the accident and that he cannot work as well as he did formerly. But, considering the *742 present value of money, it is our view that the verdict of $8,000.00 is nevertheless excessive by $3,000.00. The plaintiff's injuries are fairly comparable to the injuries in Harding v. Kansas City Public Ser. Co., (Mo. A.) 188 S.W.2d 60. Therefore, if the plaintiff enters a remittitur in the sum of $3,000.00, within fifteen days, the judgment is affirmed in the sum of $5,000.00 as of the date of the original verdict, otherwise the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.Westhues and Bohling, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.