203 Mo. 475 | Mo. | 1907
In Division One.
This is an action by the mother to recover damages for the death of her minor child, a daughter, aged about eight years and seven months, who on the 15th of May, 1890, was killed by one of the defendant's engines at the crossing of defendant's tracks over Theresa avenue, in the city of St. Louis. The verdict was for the defendant. Motion for a new trial was sustained, and the defendant appealed. The ground specified by the court upon which the motion for a new trial was sustained is thus stated by the trial judge:
“One ground of negligence charged in the petition as a cause of the death of plaintiff’s, child, was the alleged failure to sound the bell upon the engine, as required by the statute. This charge was supported by the evidence, and was submitted to the jury in plaintiff’s instructions. To make out this charge, it was necessary to show that the failure to ring the bell occurred and that it caused the child’s death.
“In defendant’s first instruction, the jury were told that the plaintiff must prove ‘the facts in support of her case’ by a preponderance or greater weight of the evidence. This would require such proof of the alleged fact that the failure to ring the bell was the cause of the child’s death.
“The effect of the statute, section 1102, R. S. 1899, adopted in 1881, has been to change the law in this respect, so as to make a prima-facie case by proof of the failure to ring the bell accompanied by an injury at the crossing. There need be no proof that the failure caused the injury. The law supplies that proof, and*478 easts the burden upon the defendant to show that the failure to ring the bell was not the cause of the injury. [Huckshold v. Railroad, 90 Mo. 554, 555-56; Crumpley v. Railroad, 111 Mo. 152, 157; Lane v. Railroad, 132 Mo. 4, 28; Barr v. Railroad, 30 Mo. App. 248, 255-56.]
“It follows that defendant’s instruction was erroneous. For this reason the motion for a new trial is sustained.”
The instruction referred to in the statement is as follows:
‘ ‘ The court instructs the jury that before they can find for the plaintiff they must believe that the plaintiff has proven the facts in support of her case by a preponderance, that is, by a greater weight of the evidence, and unless she has done so then the verdict should be for the defendant.”
One act of negligence charged in the petition was failure to ring the bell, as required by the statute. The fact that the failure to ring the bell was the cause of the death of the deceased was a fact essential to the recovery by plaintiff for this act of negligence. By the statute (R. S. 1899, sec. 1102), the plaintiff was relieved of the burden of proving that fact and the burden of disproving it was cast upon the defendant. But, this instruction, in effect, not only imposed the burden of proving that fact upon the plaintiff but of proving it by a preponderance of the evidence. This was error, for which the new trial should have been granted. And the action of the court in so doing is abundantly supported by the authorities cited by the learned judge, as well as by a very recent case decided by this court at the October Term, 1905, Green v. Railroad, 192 Mo. 131-143, in which it was said by Valliant, J.:
“The statute requiring the signal by bell or whistle was the same prior to 1881 that it is now except in its last clause, which then was in these words: ‘and*479 said corporation shall also be liable for all damages which shall be sustained by any person by reason of such neglect.’ [Sec. 806, R. S. 1879.] But in 1881 the section was amended by striking out these words and inserting in lieu of them these words: ‘ and said corporation shall also be liable for all damages hereafter sustained at such crossing when such bell shall not be rung or such whistle sounded as required hy this section, provided, however, that nothing herein contained shall preclude the corporation sued from showing that the failure to ring such bell or sound such whistle was not the cause of such injury ’ (Laws 1881, p. 79), and in that form the statute appears in our present revision (R. S. 1899, sec. 1102). The purpose of that amendment was, as is rightly contended by the plaintiff’s counsel, to make the proof of the accident and the proof of failure to give the required signal, .sufficient for a prima-facie case and to throw the burden of proving that the accident was not the result of the failure to give the signal on the defendant. It was so decided in Huckshold v. Railroad, 90 Mo. 548.”
This disposes of the case.
In answer to the suggestion that defendant’s demurrer to the evidence ought to have been sustained, it is only necessary to say that there was evidence tending to prove that the bell was not rung, and that the argument in support of the suggestion goes to the weight of the evidence, with which we have nothing to do.
The order of the circuit court granting a new trial is affirmed, and the cause remanded to that court to be proceeded with accordingly.
In Bang.
Upon a rehearing of this cause by the Court in Banc, the opinion of Brace, P. J., in