149 Mo. App. 413 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This was an action for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff. The suit was brought originally against the appellant herein, together with the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and the Manufacturers’ Railroad Association of St. Louis, but, as will be shown, the court at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence sustained a demurrer to the evidence so far as the two last named defendants were concerned.
The petition charges that the Manufacturers’ Railroad Association of St. Louis, the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and the St. Louis Dressed Beef and Provision Company are the owners or jointly interested as lessees, licensees and operators of certain railroad tracks in the city of St. Louis, east of Broadway, commonly known as the Anheuser-Busch switches. That plaintiff on or about the 29th day of September, 1905, was in the employ of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company in the capacity of a switch-man. That defendant, the St. Louis Dressed Beef and Provision Company, has a place of business just south of one of said switches known as the Anheused-Busch switches and facing Broadway in said city, and that a railroad track owned or operated by the defendants is adjacent to the establishment of the St. Louis Dressed which is adjacent to the establishment of the St. Louis Dressed Beef and Provision Company intersects another railroad track owned and operated by the defendants.
The separate answer of the St. Louis Dressed Beef and Provision Company was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The reply was a general denial.
The evidence at the trial showed that plaintiff was forty-six years of age and had been a switchman fifteen or twenty years. That on the morning of the accident, he was standing upon the footboard on the front end of an engine which was proceeding in a westwardly direction on an upgrade, pushing in front of it a freight car loaded with meat along the main track of the Iron Mountain railroad, and had reached a point some six feet east of the switch which, with other switches, connected with the appellant’s switch track, when a car filled with ice came in violent contact with the west end of the car which was being pushed by the engine on which plaintiff was riding, and he received the injuries complained of. That the appellant’s switch leads in a westwardly direction from the point where the accident occurred to its siding and storehouse on the east side of Broadway, and that this switch track runs on a very steep grade to defendant’s warehouse on the east side of Broadway. That the defendant maintained a warehouse on the east side of Broadway in the city of St. Louis and had switch.
Plaintiff obtained judgment for five thousand dollars from which the defendant, St. Louis Dressed Beef and Provision Company, has appealed.
I. It is first assigned as error that the deposition of Dr. Joseph B. Hardy was improperly admitted in evidence. This deposition was taken on the 3d day of October, 1906, in the city of St. Louis. The deposition, itself stated that the witness was about to leave the city with the intention of changing his domicile; that he expected to leave the following afternoon and that he would not be in St. Louis on October 8, 1906.
At the time of offering the deposition in evidence, one of plaintiff’s attorneys as a witness stated that he knew Dr. Hardy very well and had known him for eight or ten years. “Q. Do you know where Dr. Joseph B. Hardy’s present residence is? A. Staunton, Neb. Q. Do you know when he went there to reside? A. I think the 5th of October last. Q. Have you heard from him since he left the city of St. Louis? A. I have, from Staunton, Neb.” Cross-examination: “Q. Upon what do you base your opinion that he resides in Nebraska? A. Prom his declarations. Q. Do you know where in Staunton, Neb., he lived? A. In a hospital; he has charge of it. Q. Do you know that he has charge of it? A. I never saw him in possession, but that is his place of residence; that is where he declares it to be.”
Under our present statute concerning depositions, section 2904, Revised Statutes 1899, it is provided that facts authorizing the reading of the deposition may be established by the deposing witness. In this case the deposition was taken on October 3, 1906, and the trial occurred November 12,1906. Under the law it has been held that the statement of the deposing witness in his
II. It is assigned as error that the court refused to give appellant’s instruction numbered six. But while the court refused to give this instruction, it gave an instruction covering substantially the same question. Appellant’s instruction asked the court to direct the jury that the agents and employees of the appellant company at the time of moving the car which caused the injury had a right to presume that such car was properly equipped with a brake, unless the jury should believe that the appellant actually knew to the contrary, and that by “brake” is meant such a brake as is usually and customarily supplied ás a part of the equipment of an ordinary freight car of the kind and character which was disclosed by the evidence. The instruction given by the court was to the effect that the appellant had the right to presume that the car which caused the injury was properly equipped with a brake, unless the jury should believe that the appellant actually knew to the contrary, or by the exercise of ordinary care on its part would have known to the contrary, and that by “brake” is meant such a brake as is usually and customarily supplied as a part of the equipment of an ordinary freight car of the kind and character disclosed by the evidence.
It is to be noted in this case that there was no relation of master and servant existing between the plaintiff and the appellant, and hence no duty could be invoked on the part of the master to furnish the servant
After the appellant’s servant had gone onto the car to take charge of the brake, the brake was not set, the couplings of the car were not examined, and those in charge knew that the accident was inevitable from the steepness of the grade unless the brake was in good condition so that the car could be stopped on the grade. An opportunity was had by the man on top of the car for five minutes before it started to have made an examination of it. He had been purposely sent on top of the car to take charge of the brake, and when asked before the car started whether everything was all right answered that it was. When Smith, the man in charge of the moving of the car, was asked whether everything was all right, he answered that it was. The evidence is uncontradicted that the brake was not in working order so as to check the movement of the car; that when the
III. It is claimed that plaintiff could not recover in this case because of an entire failure of proof; that the accident resulted from the absence of á properly located derailing switch.
At the trial of the case, the liability of the appellant was not made to depend upon the construction or maintenance of a' derailing switch, and no instruction was given by the, court authorizing a recovery by plaintiff on that theory. The plaintiff, it is true, charged three specific acts of negligence, one of which was that of the derailing switch was built so near the point of intersection of the switch track and the main track that by reason of such proximity the derailing switch was unable to prevent the collision. At the trial, the plaintiff abandoned this charge of negligence in his petition. Where a plaintiff in an action for damages caused by the negligence of another pleads several acts of negligence, he may recover by proof of one as to the cause of the injury, and it is not necessary to instruct the jury as to those acts of negligence alleged but not proven. [Feddeck v. St. Louis Car Co., 125 Mo. App. 24, 102 S. W. 675; Wallack v. St. Louis T. Co., 123 Mo. App. 160, 100 S. W. 496; Spaulding v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., 129 Mo. App. 607, 107 S. W. 1049.]
A correct summary of the evidence in this case as to the derailing switch is given by appellant in its brief as follows: “There is no evidence offered tending to show whose duty it was to provide the derailing switch, and no evidence whatever to show that a properly located derailing switch would have prevented the injury, and more especially, unless it was open. . . . And
Appellant insists that the court erred in refusing to charge the jury that if a derailing switch had been erected and maintained at a proper point between appellant’s siding and the main track where the plaintiff was injured, then the appellant would not have been liable. The ground of this contention is that the failure to erect and maintain a properly located derailing switch was such a new and independent cause intervening between the wrong and the injury that there was no unbroken connection between the wrongful act and the injury. We are not prepared to give our assent to this view. Nor can we say that a failure to act — a mere negation — can become a cause so as to bring into operation the legal maxim, Causa, próxima non remota speoatur. But if the proof had tended to support this contention, and it had been established that other parties should have maintained a derailing switch, and that such a switch, properly maintained, would have prevented the accident, and that by reason of such act they were guilty of negligence contributing to plaintiff’s injury, such state of facts would have constituted no justification for the appellant in this case. A contributing to the injury on the part of the tortfeasor is, in the eye of the law, the same as causing it, and if it were proven that other parties had also been guilty of acts contributing to this injury, such proof would not have excused the appellant if it was also guilty of negligence. [Bragg v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., 192 Mo. 881, 91 S. W. 527.]
IY. This action was commenced against the appellant, together with the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and the Manufacturers’ Railroad Association of St. Louis. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the two last named defendants filed a demurrer to the evidence which was by the court sustained and to which
Our statute, section 545, Revised Statutes 1899, provides : “Every person who shall have a cause of action against several persons, . . . may bring suit thereon jointly against all or as many of the persons liable as he may think proper, ...” If the proof in the case justified the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer, the plaintiff cannot be held responsible for such action, to which he was not consenting. Section 2870, Revised Statutes 1899, providing for contribution, declares that defendants in a judgment founded on an action for redress of a private wrong shall be subject to contribution and all other consequences of such judgment in the same manner and to the same extent as the defendants in a judgment in an action founded on contract. This provision of the law affords no support to the contention of the appellant herein. It only provides for the right of contribution after judgment, as between the defendants therein, and has no application to any proceedings prior thereto.
Y. It is lastly assigned that the verdict of five thousand dollars is excessive. The testimony of the plaintiff was to the effect that he was forty-six years of age; that his leg was scarred up considerably, and the wounds on it did not heal for about a month. That the muscles on his right leg are to some extent shriveling and that there were also some cuts and bruises on the same leg; that his knee has been weak since the injury; that he had been unable to act as switchman since the injury; that he cannot hit the footboard with his foot as switchmen are required to do when the train is in motion. That his wages at the time of the injury was thirty cents an hour.
Plaintiff’s physician testified that he saw plaintiff four or five days after the accident and found that there
Several physicians testified for the defendant. Among them was Dr. A. V. L. Brokaw, who testified that he had made several careful and exhaustive examinations of the plaintiff; that there remained very little objective sign of the injury, although at first there was an injury to the muscles above the kneecap, and the limbs still show the deepset scar on the muscles as the result of the tear and the repair; that there is a slight difference of perhaps half an inch in the size of the two limbs. Between the time he exámined plaintiff before the trial and the date of the trial there had been no change in sensation, no change in circulation, and there was no paralysis in the limb, and its movements were good. There were no signs at all of any active inflammation. “Positively, there is no evidence of any synovitis or inflammation of the joint. If there is any impairment in the function of that leg it would seem to be slight, and I say the symptoms are subjective and not objective, and the sooner he goes to work the better it will be for him.”
Under the evidence of eminent surgeons, the voice of science is uncertain as to either the extent or permanency of the plaintiff’s injuries and leaves in great doubt the question whether they are of such a nature as to permanently impair the use of the plaintiff’s limb. Under these circumstances, our conclusion is that the judgment is excessive. It is therefore ordered that the judgment be affirmed on condition that the respondent file with the clerk of this court within thirty days from