161 Mo. App. 652 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
Plaintiff was a passenger of defendant Lott who operated an automobile for hire and was injured in a collision between that vehicle and an electric car operated by the defendant Street Railway Company on the Troost avenue .line of its street railway system in Kansas City. Both Lott and the Street Railway Company were made defendants on the theory that negligence of each concurred in causing the injury. The petition alleges that “said defendant Frank E. Lott . . . was a common carrier of passengers for hire, operating a line of automobiles and particularly the automobile hereinafter specifically mentioned . . . and while said automobile carrying plaintiff. and other passengers was moving north on Walnut street and approaching Tenth street, the employee of defendant operating said automobile carelessly and negligently permitted the
The averments of negligence on the part of the Street Railway Company appear in the following extract from the petition: “That the motorman in charge of said street car of defendant Metropolitan Street Railway Company was negligent in this; that he negligently failed and omitted to sound any signal or warning while approaching said Walnut street or while crossing the same. That he negligently started said street car after momentarily stopping the same at or about the time he entered upon said crossing without sounding any bell or other signal. That he negligently started said street car after momentarily stopping the same at or about the time he entered upon said crossing without giving reasonable or sufficient opportunity for vehicles or persons who might attempt to cross the track ahead of said car in safety. That he, negligently failed to keep a vigilant and reasonable lookout ahead of said car while starting to cross and while crossing said street. That he negligently failed to keep said street car under reasonable control while crossing said Walnut street so as to be able to stop said car and avoid colliding with vehicles which might be attempting to pass along said Walnut street and across said track ahead of said car. That he could have stopped said car or slacked its speed consistent with the safety of the passengers on said car, in time to avoid a collision with the said automobile, after he saw, or in the exercise of reasonable care, could have seen said automobile approaching and starting to cross the track on which said street car was moving, and after he realized, or in the exercise of reasonable care should have realized that a collision would result if he did not stop or slacken the speed of said street car, and that he negligently failed to do so.”
The injury occurred in the morning of September 2,1905, at the intersection of Tenth and Walnut streets in Kansas City. Defendant operates a double track street railway on Walnut street which runs east and west and a single track line on Tenth street. Plaintiff lived in Minneapolis, Minn., and, together with members of his family, visited Kansas City and, during
The street car which, in approachig Walnut street, had come up a steep grade was compelled to stop at the west line of Walnut street by the passage over the crossing of a heavy truck which was going south on the west side of Walnut street. A one horse laundry wagon, following in the wake of the truck, crowded in front of the street car, to the keen displeasure of the motorman who- engaged in a wordy altercation with the laundryman. After the wagon had crossed the track and the motorman had started forward he continued the quarrel and, instead of looking ahead, turned his face in the direction of the retreating laundryman and vigorously maintained his side of a pungent verbal controversy.
The street car traveled approximately forty feet before it reached the place of. the -collision and the motorman did not look ahead until it was about to .strike the automobile when, realizing the peril, he tried to stop by reversing the current. His ear was running only four or five miles per hour but it was too close to the automobile to be stopped in time to avoid a collision. The automobile which was twenty or twenty-five feet long and which was running slowly, though a little faster than the street car, almost cleared the. crossing but was struck on the rear wheel so lightly that, though overturned, it was only slightly damaged. There was a northbound Walnut street car standing’ near the south line of Tenth street and
Of the negligence of the chauffeur there can be no question. He owed his passengers the highest degree of care and plaintiff’s evidence tends to show he failed to measure to the standard of ordinary care. If he looked in the direction of the street car he must have observed the negligence of the motorman and a reasonably prudent person in his situation would have realized the danger of placing his passengers within striking range of a car that for all practical purposes was running wild.
The court did not err in overruling the demurrers to the evidence offered by the respective defendants.
The facts we have stated are drawn from the evidence most favorable to plaintiff. The evidence introduced by the defendants tended to convict each other of negligence and to exonerate the party offering the evidence. Taken. as a whole the evidence presents several credible hypotheses of fact, viz.: First, the one to which we have referred that the motorman and chauffeur were both remiss and that their negligent acts concurred in causing the injury; second, that while the motorman was proceeding over the crossing at two or three miles per hour the automobile came up at twenty-five miles per hour and unexpectedly ran in front of the ca,r, depriving the motorman of any opportunity of avoiding the collision; third, that the chauffeur gained the crossing without any indication on the part of the street car that his use of it would be contested, and, fourth, the further inference is deducible from the evidence that both street car and automobile were running at low speed and that the motorman had no reasonable cause to think,the
Plaintiff introduced as an expert witness a motorman formerly in the employment of the Street Railway Company who testified that the street car could have been stopped, at the speed given in the testimony of plaintiff, in from four to eight feet. The fact was elicited on cross-examination that the witness had been called as an expert in a number of other cases against the company and was asked if he had not made the statement with reference to another case that in the testimony he would give therein he “would burn up the company.” He denied making such statement and afterward the defendant called to the stand the person to whom the statement was alleged to have been made and asked him, “During the course of that conversation I will ask if he stated in effect that he was going to be a. witness against the Metropolitan and would ‘burn it up’?” The witness answered, “He did, yes, sir.” On motion of plaintiff this question and answer were stricken out and defendant company excepted. The ruling of the court was erroneous. The rule thus is stated in 1 Green-leaf on Evidence (16 Ed.), section 450:
“The partiality of a witness for one party or side, or his prejudice against the other side, is always regarded as bearing on the trustworthiness of his testimony. One way of showing the existence of such bias is his prior expression of such feelings. Thus, it is always allowable to inquire of the witness for the prosecution, in cross-examination, whether he has not expressed feelings of hostility towards the prisoner. The like inquiry may be made in a civil action; and if the witness denies the fact, he may be contradicted by other witnesses.”
Evidently the court overlooked the difference between evidence of statements of a witness tending to show bias or prejudice and evidence merely tending to disprove a statement of the witness relative to a collateral issue or fact. The only negligence of the defendant Railway Company submitted in plaintiff’s instructions was negligence under the last chance rule and considering the sharp' conflict in the evidence and the various inferences of fact offered by it to the jury the testimony of the witness attacked was highly important and the suppression of evidence tending to show his prejudice cannot be otherwise regarded than as highly prejudicial..
The objection of defendant Lott to plaintiff’s instruction No. 2, is sufficiently answered by the decisions of the Supreme Court in Logan v. Railway, 183 Mo. l. c. 582, and Furnish v. Railroad, 102 Mo. 438, and by this court in McRae v. Railway, 125 Mo. App. 562.
Instruction No. 7, given at the request of plaintiff was erroneous in failing to restrict a passenger’s right to recover against the carrier, for personal injuries, to negligence of the carrier which operated as a proximate cause of the injury. This instruction deals only with abstract propositions of law and should not have been given. Instruction “K” asked by defendant Lott was properly refused, since it assumed as proved a fact about which the evidence presented a substantial controversy.
The instruction on the measure of damages also is erroneous in allowing a larger assessment for medical expenses, etc., than the evidence warranted. This