On September 6, 1916, plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s north bound ears, it being an open car with the running board running lengthwise on the outside of the seats. Plaintiff in the act of alighting from the car was standing on the outside running board facing in the direction the car was going. The car had stopped for the purpose of taking on and letting off passengers.
Prom plaintiff’s testimony we gather that he was injured as follows: He was standing on the running; board of . the stationary car, but not holding to the car with his hands, with his right foot suspended over the street preparatory to his getting off. Just as his right foot was about to touch the ground, but prior to its so doing, the car jerked forward, unbalancing him so that his right foot immediately struck the pavement, his left foot remaining on the running board. His right foot on the ground acting as a pivot, the forward motion of the car tending to carry his body forward, turned him around in' a semi-circle and caused him to fall backward with his head in the direction the car was going, striking the pavement on his back and right side. The court sustained a demurrer to thev evidence on the ground that the way in which plaintiff claimed he was injured was contrary to physical or natural laws.
In asking that the judgment of the lower court be affirmed respondent cites the cases of Scroggins v. Railway,
In the Scroggins case a negro woman was proceeding down the step of a stationary car and was in the act of stepping from the last step to the street but not holding to the car., when the car started forward sud
We do not believe the facts in-this case are similar to the ones in the Scroggins and Daniels cases. We see nothing contrary to physical or natural laws in plaintiff’s story to the effect that his right foot was suspended over the street and the jerk of the car caused it to hit the street and unbalance him while the car carried him forward, causing his right foot to act as a pivot upon which he was turned around, falling on his right side and back toward the direction of the forward movement of the car.
There were a number of counteracting or interacting forces playing on plaintiff’s body aside from the forward movement of the car toward the north. There was the force of the motion toward the east given to his body in his attempt to alight; there was the -tendency .of his entire body to go forward; there was
We do not believe an expert in physics could ordinarily tell in what direction an inanimate mass might be projected as the result of a number of interacting forces being applied to it, much less as to what direction a live human, body might be so projected. It is a known fact that a human being impelled by the strongest instinct known, “that of self-preservation” will involuntarily, through processes of reflex action, before he has time even for thought, attempt to counteract a force which if permitted to take its course would result in bodily harm to him.
Common experience has shown that it .is not practicable to apply the laws of physics, in reference to inanimate objects, to a live, human being. For instance, one may be walking down an icy street and his feet slip; quite often he is able to regain his equilibrium although the center of gravity of his body may get without its base, that is, not within the space between his feet, while if an inanimate object be so placee in the same position and the same thing would happen to it, its equilibrium would not be regained, but it would fall on account of the fact that muscular action would not be applied to it. On a foot-, ball field a player is observed standing or running when one of his antagonists applies a- great amount of force to the player’s body, intending to upset the player, but the latter retains his feet; one often marvels that
In an ordinary trial there is no evidence as to the intensity of the jerk of the car or the amount of resistance the passenger is able to involuntarily give to counteract the force of the jerk. In most any case that we might imagine there might be a number of interacting forces aplied to the body of a passenger and no one could well know the entire quality of - such forces. Force is a peculiar thing, as is said by a good authority, “force is ordinarily defined by its intensity or amount, its direction, its power of application and the time at which it exists.” [Vol. III, p. 2318, Cent. Dict. and Cyc.] Consequently it is hard to imagine any ease where we can lay down as an arbitrary proposition that a human body may be projected in any given direction when we are not in a position to know of the intensity or suddenness of the jerk of the car, or of the quality of the other forces that were brought into play at the time.,
In the case at bar the evidence was that the car gave “a sudden jerk forward.” But even from this .testimony we are unable to judge as to the exact intensity of such forward jerk of the car, nor are we able to tell what powers of resistance were offered by plaintiff against the force of the sudden jerk of the car forward; nor are we able to tell what effect
The appellate court that will indulge in dogmatic conclusions and pronounce that to be impossible which not only might be possible but is well within the scope of reasonable result when forces are brought into play, and attempts in all cases to apply natural laws as applied to inanimate objects to live human beings, is deciding a case arbitrarily and without intelligent consideration. These cases ordinarily present problems of physics beyond the pale of judicial cognizance. As was stated in a recent case by this court:
“Strange things sometimes happen and apparently inconsistent with natural laws, . but we should be slow to conclude that because of their apparent impossibility, they did not occur.” Holland v. Railway, 157 Mo. App. l. c. 481.
We are not unmindful that this class of cases is bottomed on the negligent sudden jerJc of the car and for this reason where - it clearly appears that no counteracting or interacting force (including the force of muscular action) were, or could have been brought into play, then natural laws as applied to inanimate objects may be invoked as a matter of law. But that the doctrine of the Scroggins and Daniels cases is not to be extended is held in Allen v. Railway, 188 Mo. App. l. c. 200, where it is said: “but we have carefully refrained from extending this rule.”
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
