89 Mo. App. 534 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
On the third day of November, 1899, a repair car running eastward on the defendant’s track collided with the plaintiff’s horse and wagon at the intersection of the track and Whittier street. That street runs north and south and the right of way east and west. The track is straight for several blocks west of Whittier, and the view unobstructed. The accident occurred near six o’clock in the evening. The day was gloomy and at that hour it was growing dusk. The driver of the wagon, who was a youth seventeen or eighteen years of age, was proceeding southward on Whittier street as the car which collided with him approached from the west.
The evidence tends to show that just as the horse got on tire south-bound track, the car struck him and the fore part of the wagon, smashing the latter in pieces, damaging the harness and crippling the horse so badly that he had to be killed. The boy fell under the front wheels of the car, which pushed him along to a point behind the east side of the second lot east of Whittier street. There was some slight discrepancy in the testimony as to the width of these lots, which must be, we gather, about thirty feet each. The plaintiff’s vice-president or manager so testified. When the car stopped, the front wheels were over the boy’s body and he was dead. The evidence is conflicting as to whether the gong was sounded as
The petition pleads the ordinance requiring operatives on street cars to keep a vigilant watch for vehicles and persons in front, who may be on the track or moving towards it, and stop the car in the shortest time and space possible on the first appearance of danger to them. The allegations may be analyzed into these specifications of negligence; that the motorman and conductor on the car which struck the plaintiff’s horse and wagon failed to keep a vigilant watch for vehicles and did not stop the car in the shortest time and space possible on the first appearance of danger to the plaintiff’s horse and vehicle; but instead of doing so, after they knew or could have known, had they exercised reasonable diligence, that the wagon and horse were on the public street, about to cross the track and in danger of being struck by the car unless it was slackened or stopped, carelessly and recklessly propelled the car forward with great and unusual speed, without giving the driver any warning or a reasonable opportunity to avoid a collision.
The present action is to recover damages for the loss of the horse, wagon and harness. The answer was a general denial followed by a plea of contributory negligence, which alleged that the driver negligently drove towards and on the defendant’s track without looking and listening to see if a car was approaching — drove immediately in front of one which was approaching, thereby causing the collision.
Several errors are assigned which we will not take up, because, in our opinion, a direction should have been given
The witnesses introduced by plaintiff conclusively establish the fact that the driver must have both seen and heard the car if he had endeavored to do so, before driving on the track. He was an experienced hand, having been employed in that service by the plaintiff for a year or two, during which time he drove every day about the city delivering orders. Annie-Pearson, who was one of the witnesses for plaintiff, testified 'that she was at the rear of the second residence lot east of "Whittier, which fronted on West Belle Place, and outside the fence, on defendant’s right of way: she was emptying slops. She saw this car at Pendleton avenue, which is a block west of Whittier street, and was four or five hundred feet from her. She kept her eye on the car continuously until it reached "Whittier street and could see it plainly all the time. She testified, likewise, that she could have.seen it had she been on the crossing at the intersection of Whittier street and the right of way. She did not see the horse and wagon until the car struck them. This witness said she did not see the motorman at all and could not tell whether he tried to stop the car in time or not.
Mary E. Cunningham testified that she was in a second-story rear room of the house in which'Annie Pearson was employed. She heard the noise of the" approaching car, she supposed, about three hundred feet or more west of Whittier street, and that the rear end of the lot was about fifty feet from the room she was in. She said further, that one standing at Whittier street could see and hear the cars a block or more off.
William Woodell was driving south to Whittier street and when the collision occurred, was crossing Belle. He saw the wagon just as it went down. He was able to see the collision from where he was. He thought the car was stopped about one hundred feet east of the crossing; it was getting dusk.
Charles H. Burton, also called for plaintiff, swore that he lived on the south side of West Belle, the second house west of Whittier. He was standing on his front porch at the time and heard the rumbling of the car.
The foregoing is the substance of the testimony for the plaintiff, aside from the proof about the value of the property which was destroyed. The motorman testified they were running at a speed of ten or twelve miles an hour; that he sounded the gong all the way to Whittier street from about half way to that and Pendleton. He first saw the horse when it came within the rays of the headlight, the car being then ten or fifteen feet west of Whittier street. He at once threw off the power, took up the slack in the brake and did all he could to stop. He further swore that the car could not have been stopped within less than one hundred feet, and that he stopped about sixty feet east of WTiittier. H. O. Bockwell, an electrical engineer in the defendant’s employ, testified the car could not be stopped under one hundred or one hundred and ten feet at the speed it was running.
A careful sifting of the evidence has yielded nothing from which the inference of culpable negligence on the part of the defendant’s employees can be deduced. The deplorable casualty seems to have been unquestionably due to the act of the unfortunate boy in driving incautiously on the track without taking care to look and listen to ascertain whether a
This goes far towards rebutting the other negligent act charged; that he did not stop the car in the shortest possible time. It may be remarked in passing that we think the objection made to that requirement of the ordinance is unfounded. Fath v. Tower Grove & L. Ry. Co., 105 Mo. 537; Schmidt v. Ry. Co., 149 Mo. 284. As has been said, the
There was conflicting testimony concerning the speed at which the car was running, but neither allegation nor proof that the speed was unlawful. It was alleged merely to be great 'and unusual. So there was much controversy over the question whether a headlight was on the front, but the petition does not count on negligence in that respect and while testimony about it may have been properly admitted in the progress of the inquiry, a recovery could only be permitted on the grounds specified. Waldhier v. Ry. Co., 71 Mo. 514; Bunyan v. Citizen’s Ry. Co., 112 Mo. 12: McManamee v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 135 Mo. 440.
The humane rule is invoked by the respondent. That rule is upheld by us to the full extent it has been declared by the Supreme Court. Hutchinson v. St. Louis & Meramec Ry. Co., 161 Mo. 246. But it is wholly inapplicable to the facts
The judgment is reversed.