79 Mo. App. 204 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
This suit originated in a justice’s court; the demand relied on in the circuit court for a recovery is in
There are no specific and formal assignments of error made by the appellant in his statement or brief, but we .gather from the brief the following complaints:
1. That the verdict is unintelligible and is too uncertain to authorize the judgment of the court.
2. That the court erred in giving instructions numbers 14 and 15 for the defendant.
3. That the plaintiff made a prima facie case, and as the defendant offered no testimony, the verdict should have been for the plaintiff. We shall notice these contentions in invei’se order.
1. At the close of plaintiff’s case the defendant moved the court to instruct the jury to find the issues for the defendant. The court overruled this motion, defendant offered no testimony, and the issues were submitted to the jury on instructions. Appellant insisted that in this state of the case the court should treat the case as though the demurrer to his evidence had be'en sustained, and should determine from all the evidence whether plaintiff made out a prima facie case, and if so, to reverse the judgment, citing Utassy v. Griedinghagen, 132 Mo. 53, in support of his contention. The Utassy case was an ejectment suit and the issues were submitted to the court; defendant demurred to plaintiff’s evidence, which the court overruled; defendant offered no testimony, and the court took the case under advisement, and
2. The testimony is that at one time Madge was a place of some importance to the defendant as a shipping point for lumber and stone, and that the defendant maintained a station house there in charge of an agentj but that the mills, which produced the lumber, had ceased to operate, the quarry was worked but little, and that defendant had removed its station house and had now remaining only a platform fifty feet long and six feet wide as evidence of a station, and that no trains were scheduled to stop at the village and did not stop except when flagged or on infrequent occasions when it had freight to discharge or receive. On this testimony the court instructed the jury as follows: No. 14. “The jury is instructed that the defendant had the right to remove its
“The court instructs the jury that the railroad company had the right to maintain a station at Madge and the necessary side tracks for the transaction of its business in receiving and discharging freight, and for the passing of its trains, and if in the transaction of such business the public or the railroad company necessarily required that the lands adjacent to the station or switch at Madge be unfenced' it becomes immaterial whether the town of Madge is incorporated or laid out in lots and blocks, or whether there are any road or highway crossings over the railroad tracks.”
The town of Madge seems to have “just grown up” without father, proprietor or projector; it had no streets, was not laid out in blocks and lots as towns usually are; it just struggled into existence without definite plans for future expansion or development, and at the time of the several killings mentioned in the complaint it seems to have been in the embrace of the “grim monster death,” having lost all of its members but one small store, a few stacks of lumber, some rock piles and one public road as a means of approach to her front. Erom the language of the instruction one would conjecture that defendant’s counsel and the court, apprehensive that the jury might conclude to administer a pecuniary punishment to defendant for the downfall of Madge, and make