189 Mo. App. 555 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
Plaintiff jumped from a moving street car on which he was riding as a passenger and sustained injuries which he alleges were caused by negligence in the operation of the car. He sued the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, the owner, and . Ford F. Harvey and Robert J. Dunham, the receivers of that company. The petition alleges that the defendant company “at all times herein mentioned, operated and controlled ... a certain line of street railway in Kansas City known as the Twelfth street line; that the defendants Ford F. Harvey and Robert J. Dunham, are, and were at all the times herein mentioned, receivers of said Metropolitan Street Railway Company, having been appointed as said receivers by the Honorable William O. Hook, Judge of the United States
Further it is alleged that on account of the car being crowded with passengers, plaintiff was compelled-“to ride on said car by standing on the lower rear steps of said car and with his hands to hold to the iron rods attached to said car aclj acent to the rear entrance thereof ; that while the plaintiff was in that position oh said car and while in the exercise of due and proper care to avoid being hurt and injured, the defendant company carelessly, wrongfully and negligently caused its said car to be run at a high and dangerous rate of speed along and upon its said tracks and so close to a large ice wagon that the plaintiff became and was in imminent danger of being struck by coming in contact with said wagon, and that to avoid being so struck by said wagon, plaintiff was compelled to and did jump from said car, to the street, and in doing so was hurt, injured and damaged as follows,” etc.
No demurrer to the petition was filed by either defendant. The Railway Company’s answer is a general denial. In the separate answer of the receivers they admit “that on the 3rd day of June, 1911, they were duly and regularly appointed receivers of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company; and that they are now and ever since said date have been in charge of the property of said Metropolitan Street Railway Company,” and answer with a general denial. The jury return a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $1600, judgment was rendered against all of the defendants on the verdict and they appealed.
The pavement between the car track and curb was ten feet wide, the ice wagon was six feet, eight inches wide, and the overhang of the car was two feet; consequently, if the north wheels of the wagon were touching the curb, the space between the passing car and wagon was sixteen inches. A pedestrian who saw the
A passenger who was standing on the lower step testified: “It (the car) was running pretty fast and there was another fellow beside me, I don’t know who, he was, was standing kind of behind me, and. he says, ‘we better squeeze in here,’ he says, ‘we are going pretty fast,’ and I says ‘I guess somebody will get hurt,’ and about another block further, why, somebody who was standing right in front of me got off, or jumped off and was hit by a wagon, and I squeezed in, ■and just in time to get clear myself, and I got off at McGee street. There wasn’t very much space. I don’t l<now exactly how close it was, but there wasn’t very much space. I know I only had a little room when I went by.”
Plaintiff was the only passenger who jumped from the car and no one remaining on the step collided with the wagon.
The manager of the railway testified that the receivers were operating the line at the time of the injury, and had been operating it since June 3,1911. The motorman introduced as a witness by defendants stated that the car was running eight or ten miles per hour when it passed the wagon. Further he said that he was working for the defendant company and did not know the line was in the hands of receivers. Despite
In their argument that the demurrer to the evidence should have been given as to the receivers, on the ground that no cause of action is pleaded or proved against them, counsel for defendants lay stress on the testimony of the motorman and of the conductor that they were employed by the company, but in their subsequent argument on the question of the liability of the company, they call attention to the testimony of the manager that the receivers were operating the road at the time of the injury, and say “that being true and it was all of the evidence on that point, there is a failure of proof as to the defendant company of material allegations of the petition which are necessary to establish a liability upon this defendant company.” We are justified in treating the fact of the operation of the car by the receivers at the time of the injury as conceded by both parties and, so regarding it, hold that the court erred in not directing a verdict for the defendant company. Receivers of a railroad who are vested with the power to manage and operate it are liable as receivers for injuries resulting from negligence in its operation and the company cannot be held responsible for such negligence. [High on- Receivers (4 Ed.), sec. 396.]
As is pertinently observed in Turner v. Railroad, 74 Mo. 1. c. 604: “Upon what principle can a company be held liable for any injury inflicted upon any one by a train of cars of which the company had no control? Can the right to operate and manage its road and rolling stock he taken from the company and given to a receiver, under whose control and management it is operated, to the exclusion of the company, and yet
There is no merit in the argument that the receivers should be excused from liability in this action for the reason that the petition alleges that the operators of the car whose negligence caused the injury were servants of the company. There are allegations to which defendants call-our attention which appear to be inconsistent with the fact that the receivers were operating the car, but they were defects which were waived by answer to the merits. The allegations that -the receivers had and exercised exclusive management and control of the road and that plaintiff’s injury was caused by negligence in the operation of the car on which he was a passenger contained the elements of a good cause of action against the receivers. After verdict a petition may be attacked only on the grounds that it states no cause of action, or that the court had no jurisdiction over the subject-matter, and all other defects are treated as waived.
But it is argued that plaintiff should not be allowed to recover for the reason that his evidence fails to disclose a good cause of action and does show that his injury was caused by his own negligence in jumping from the car. Plaintiff was impelled by fear of a collision with the wagon to save himself by jumping from the car and the question of greatest importance
A carrier is liable to a passenger for negligence in suddenly confronting him with a real or apparent danger of imminent injury and thereby terrifying him into yielding to injurious impulses of the instinct of self-preservation. The test of the carrier’s liability in such cases is not whether there was actual peril but whether there was an appearance of imminent danger that reasonably should have been anticipated as too terrifying for an ordinary passenger to face without danger of being seized by uncontrollable and injurious alarm. [Agnew v. Railway, 178 Mo. App. 119.]
The Supreme Court in Kleiber v. Railway, 107 Mo. 1. c. 249, have stated the pertinent rules as follows: “First, the peril or alarm must have been caused by the negligence of the one against whom indemnity is sought; second, the apprehension of peril, from the standpoint of the injured person, must have been reasonable, and, third, the appearance of danger must have been imminent, leaving no time for deliberation. On the other hand the danger must be judged by the circumstances as they appear, and not by the result.” [See also Bischoff v. Railway, 121 Mo. 216; Debolt v. Railway, 123 Mo. 496; McPeak v. Railway, 128 Mo. 617; Ephland v. Railway, 57 Mo. App. 147; Hall v. Trans. Co., 135 Mo. App. 119; Harshaw v. Railroad, 173 Mo. App. 1. c. 467; Butts v. Gaar-Scott, 164 Mo. App. 1. c. 332; Blyston-Spencer v. Railroad, 152 Mo. App. 1. c. 139.]
The issues of defendant’s negligence in the operation of the car and of plaintiff’s contributory negligence would not be concluded in law by the facts that plaintiff might have passed the wagon in safety if he had remained on the step and that no other passen
The evidence abundantly supports the inference that it was negligence for the motorman to run the car, with its projecting cluster of humanity, at high speed, with such narrow space between the car and wagon that it could not be known in advance with reasonable certainty that the wagon could be passed in safety. Other passengers on the step were alarmed at the appearance of danger and succeeded in crowding- themselves into a narrower space than they had been occupying.' Plaintiff, who was standing with only one foot on the extreme west end of the step was in a more exposed position than any of the others and could not move closer to the car. The circumstances of his situation will support a reasonable conclusion that he would have collided with the wagon if he had not jumped, but whether or not this is so, the appearance of danger was of such nature that the jury were entitled to find that his overmastering fear was excusable and a natural consequence of the negligence in approaching and passing the wagon at high speed. The demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled as to the defendant receivers.
The complaint that error was committed by the court permitting a witness for plaintiff to state, over the objection of defendants, that the car “was running awfully fast” would be well grounded if the error had
The objection to the testimony relating to measurements showing the position of the car track in the street that were made by a witness on the day of the trial is not well taken. The court ruled that the witness might “testify about the measurements and show later whether there has been any change there or not.” There was no claim or suggestion at the trial and there is none now, of any change in the location of the car track and the trial court’s attention was not called to the omission of plaintiff which, no doubt, was inadvertent, to show affirmatively that the condition of the street had not been altered between the dates of the injury and of the trial. It devolves on the party claiming error to show that he was prejudiced in some substantial right by such error. We have no right to reverse a judgment on account of non-prejudicial errors, such as the one under consideration appears to have been.
Opinion evidence elicited from physicians, introduced by plaintiff, is attacked by defendant on the ground that it failed to observe the- proper distinction between opinion and conclusion' as defined by the Supreme Court in Taylor v. Railroad, 185 Mo. 239; Roscoe v. Railway, 202 Mo. 577, and State v. Hyde, 234 Mo.
“Q. Assuming . . . that he had ... a violent blow upon the head and about the face on the 19th day of September, 1912, that he has recovered sufficiently to be on his feet and about his duties, he still suffers from headache's and lapse of memory, a condition which did not exist prior to that accident on the 19th of September, 1912, what would you say was the probable cause — the thing which probably produced these headaches and this loss of memory!..... State to the jury whether or not these headaches, this loss of memory, might or could result from a blow on the head on the 19th of September, 1912! A. Yes, sir. ’ ’
The witness was not asked to state a conclusion that the collision of plaintiff with the wagon did cause the headaches and loss of memory but. to state his opinion as an expert, upon the subject of whether or not the described condition '“might or could result from a blow on the head” received on the date of the collision. The question and answer were within the strict letter as well as the spirit of the rule as defined and applied in the cited cases.
In our discussion of the demurrer to -the evidence we have answered the objections urged against rulings on instructions. There is no merit in the point of an excessive verdict.
The judgment is reversed as to the Metropolitan Street Railway Company and affirmed as to the receivers.