212 Mo. 59 | Mo. | 1908
— This case was here once before, on a former appeal, and is reported in 185 Mo. 263. The pleadings are the same now as they were then; but they were not set out in that opinion; but since the sufficiency of the petition has been assailed in this appeal, we will have to give it space in this statement, which is as follows (caption and signatures omitted):
‘ ‘ The plaintiff states that the defendant is and at the times herein stated was a corporation by virtue of the law of Missouri, and owned, used and operated the railway and car herein described for the purpose of carrying passengers for hire from one point to another within the city of St. Louis as a common carrier of passengers by street railway.
“That on the 29th day of October, 1900, the defendant, by its servants in charge of its north-bound car, received as a passenger upon said car, at or near Tenth and Franklin avenue, plaintiff’s husband, Michael O ’Brien, and for a valuable consideration paid by plaintiff’s said husband to the defendant, defendant undertook and agreed with him to safely carry him to his point of destination upon,defendant’s line of railway, to-wit, Twelfth and Hebert street, and to there stop said car, and give plaintiff’s husband time and opportunity to alight in safety from said car.
“Yet the plaintiff avers that the defendant. unmindful of its said undertaking and of its duty in the premises did by its servants in charge of its said car, wholly fail to stop said car at Hebert and Twelfth street in the city of St. Louis, though requested by plaintiff’s husband to do so, but on the contrary carried plaintiff’s husband past his said destination to Thirteenth and Hebert street for the plaintiff’s husband to alight from said car, and whilst said car was so stopped at said place, and whilst plaintiff’s husband was alighting from said car at said place, defendant’s conductor in charge of its said car, whilst undertaking to serve the defendant as such conductor, wrongfully struck and
The suit was begun in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, and a change of venue was had to the circuit court of St. Louis county. The cause was tried and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $5,000, from which this defendant now appeals.
The evidence disclosed by the record is substantially the same as it was when the case was here before, and for that reason it is useless to state it here.
At the trial of the ease below, the plaintiff offered to read to the jury a transcript of the evidence of a witness, by the name of Pick, who testified at the former trial, which was preserved in the bill of exceptions. The following is what occurred upon that occasion, as shown by this record:
“Mr. Taylor: I will read the evidence of August Pick, a resident of the city of St. Louis, given at the last trial of this case.
“Mr. Kiskaddon: I object to it as incompetent. He hasn’t shown where the witness lives now.
‘ ‘ The Court : Objection overruled.
“Mr. Kiskaddon: Note our exception.
“To which action and ruling of the court, defend
The transcript of Mr. Fick’s testimony was then read to the jury.
At the close of all the evidence, the court instructed the jury for plaintiff and defendant in conformity to the law enunciated in the opinion delivered when the cause was here before; and refused several instructions asked by the defendant, which will be noticed hereafter.
I. . The first insistence of the appellant is, that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, for the reason that it charges “that said beating of her husband and said shooting of her husband was done by defendant’s said conductor whilst in charge of its said car as its driver and controller, negligently and with criminal intent,” etc.
The appellant contends that the two allegations, that the beatiug and shooting were “negligently” done, and that they were done with “criminal intent” are inconsistent and contradictory of each other, and for that reason cannot stand together. In other words, that each allegation kills the other, and that the petition is therefore a felo de se.
The Supreme Court of Iowa, in passing upon a similar question, in the case of Ruter v. Foy, 46 Iowa 132, used this language:
“There can be no contributory negligence except where the defendant has been guilty of negligence to which the plaintiff’s negligence could contribute. An assault and battery is not negligence. The former is intentional; the latter is unintentional. Now, the allegations being considered, state acts as being both negligent or inadvertent, and wanton or wilful at one and the same moment. This amounts to a contradiction in terms. If the act was careless or negligent, it was not wilful, and vice versa. The statements of the petition
Touching this same point, this court in the case of Raming v. Railroad, 157 Mo. l. c. 508, quoted the above language of the Supreme Court of Iowa, approvingly, and held evidence which tended to prove a charge of negligence would not support an allegation of wilfully and wantonly injuiing the plaintiff.
The rule announced in the Naming case has not been followed by this court in all its strictness in the later cases. In the case of Lange v. Railroad, 208 Mo. l. c. 475, this court used this language: “Instruction numbered two given for respondent is assailed for three reasons: first, because it leaves out of view the element of wantonness and recklessness on the part of the appellant, its agents or employees, in running the car over the respondent. By this the appellant means that the issue submitted to the jury by the instruction is one of negligence, while the issue made by the pleading was one of wantonly and recklessly injuring her, which it is contended is a departure between the pleading and instruction. It may be said of this case, as was said by Judge BnACK'in the case of Owens v. Railroad, 95 Mo. l. c. 180, 8 S. W. 350, 6 Am. St. 39, that, ‘the next objection to these instructions is, that the plaintiff cannot sue for an assault, and recover for negligence in failing to stop the train. The petition does make some extravagant averments; but notwithstanding it charges an assault by the servant, it also, in terms, charges negligence in not stopping the train a reasonable time, and negligence on the part of the servant in pulling her off. The instructions cannot be said to be a departure from the petition. The petition contains all that is in the instructions, and more too, and it follows that it is not a
The same is true of the case at bar — the petition states both negligence and criminal acts, and, if there was evidence tending to prove either, then it could not be said that the petition charged one cause of action and that the evidence proved another.
But what we have said does not go to the real marrow of the point made by appellant in the case at bar, but was directed at the Raming case, which bears a semblance of authority for the contention of appellant. But returning to the real point made by appellant, that the petition does not state a cause of action.
The statute upon which this action is based is section 2864, Revised Statutes 1899, and it authorizes a recovery where the death is “occasioned by the negligence, unskillfulness or criminal intent,” etc. This statute gives the widow a cause of action where the death of her husband is ‘ ‘ occasioned by the negligence . . . . or criminal intent,” etc., of the defendant, or its agents or employees; and in pursuance of that statute she has charged not only that he was negligently killed, but that he was criminally assaulted and killed. The most that can be urged against the petition is, that it states two causes of action in one and the same count.
If the conductor negligently shot and killed O’Brien, as charged in the petition, then the statute gave his widow a cause of action against the company. If, upon the other hand, he shot him with criminal intent, it likewise gave her a cause of action, as charged. So it is thus seen that the only true objection that can be lodged against the petition is that it states a double
For this reason the doctrine of félo de se has no application to this case, because it is operative only where one cause of action stated is destroyed by another, which shows that no cause of action exists in fact; but that is not true in this case, for the reason that the allegation that deceased was negligently shot does not alter the fact, if fact it be, that the conductor shot him with criminal intent. That being true, and as was said in the Lange and Owens cases, supra, the petition not only charged negligence but criminal intent also, which is a complete cause of action under the statute.
Now, both parties, at each trial, having ignored the former allegation and having tried the case upon the latter, necessarily treated the former as redundancy, thereby leaving the latter as the only cause of action stated in the petition.
If those two causes had been stated in separate counts in the petition, then we apprehend that it would not be contended that a good cause of action was not stated in each. If they were inconsistent, then the proper practice would have been to have filed a motion to compel plaintiff to elect upon which of the two causes of action she would go to trial.
The defendant also, had it seen proper to do so, could have demurred to the petition, because it stated two' causes of action in one count of the petition, but having done neither, and having answered over and gone to trial on the issues, it will not now be heard to complain of those defects. This court, in a very carefully-considered case, White v. Railroad, 202 Mo. l. c. 561-2, speaking through Lamm, J., used this language:
“Moreover, the ruling on the motion was right, because, in the philosophy of the science of pleading,
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the petition states a cause of action, and that the imperfections before noticed were waived by answering to the merits and going to trial thereon.
II. It is next contended by appellant, that the action of the court in permitting the transcript of Pick’s testimony, given at a former trial and preserved in the bill of exceptions, to be read in evidence was error.
The admission of such evidence is governed by the provisions of section 3149, Revised Statutes 1899, which reads as follows: “Whenever any competent evidence shall have been preserved in any bill of exceptions in a cause, the same may be thereafter used in the same
This statute does not give an unconditional right to the parties litigant to read to the jury, or to the court, evidence preserved in the hill of exceptions, hut it, in express terms, restricts that right to the same conditions upon which the depositions are admissible in evidence. That being true, we must ascertain what'the latter conditions are, and then apply them in the same manner to the hill of exceptions, when an offer is made to read therefrom. Section 2904, Revised Statutes 1899, prescribes the conditions upon which depositions are admissible in evidence. That section reads as follows:
11 Examinations or depositions taken and returned in conformity to the provisions of this chapter may be read and used as evidence in the cause in which they shall have been taken, as if the witness were present and examined in open court on the trial thereof. The facts which would authorize the reading’ of the deposition may be established by the testimony of the deposing witness or the certificate of the officer taking the same: First, if the witness resides or is gone out of the State; second, if he be dead; third, if by reason of age, sickness or bodily infirmity he be unable to or cannot safely attend court; fourth, if he resides in a county other than that in which, the trial is held, or if he be gone to a greater distance than forty miles from the place of trial without the consent, connivance or collusion of the party requiring his testimony; fifth, if he be a judge of a court of record, a practicing attorney or physician, and engaged in the discharge of his official or professional duty at the time of the trial.”
When counsel for plaintiff offered to read the testimony of Fick from the bill of exceptions, the defendant objected, because it had not been shown that he was not a resident of St. Louis county, the county to which the venue of the cause had been sent, and in which the
The section of the statute just quoted provides that the deposition of a witness may be read in evidence where “he resides in a county other than that in which the trial is held,” which, of course, negatives the right to read it when he resides in the same county where the trial is had. We have searched this record in vain for evidence showing Fick’s residence. It' is perfectly barren upon that subject; and counsel for plaintiff seems to admit there is none such, but seeks to supply that omission by having this court to presume Fick resided in the city of St. Louis, from the fact that he was there present and testified as a witness on the former trial of the cause. This, we cannot do, for the reason that it would establish a presumption that all witnesses who testify in a case reside in the county where the trial takes place.
There is no such presumption indulged in by the law; and, besides, our knowledge and common experience teaches us that there are hundreds of witnesses who testify in cases who do not reside in the county in which the trial is had; and to presume otherwise would be a most violent presumption, and with no basis upon which to- rest.
The admission of that testimony was against the letter and spirit of the statute, and was for that reason erroneous. [Gaul v. Wenger, 19 Mo. 542; Wetherell v. Patterson, 31 Mo. 458.]
III. The instructions given by the court, for both the plaintiff and defendant, correctly and fairly presented the law of the case to the jury, as declared by this court when the case was previously here.
Defendant’s refused' instructions, in effect, declared that if the jury found from the evidence that the deceased brought on the difficulty, then the plaintiff under no circumstances could recover. That is not the
Because of tbe error before mentioned, tbe judgment is reversed, and tbe cause remanded for a new trial.