69 Mo. App. 54 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
On the sixth day of June, 1894, the plaintiff, while a passenger on one of defendant’s street cars, was injured in a collision occurring at Eleventh and Main streets, Kansas City, between said car and one of the hose wagons belonging to the city fire department. In a suit for damages, the plaintiff charged that the injuries resulted from • the carelessness of defendant’s employees in handling the train. At the trial the plaintiff had a verdict and judgment tor $2,125, and defendant appealed.
At the time of this collision the city ordinances of Kansas City provided that all steam engines, hose carts or wagons, and other apparatus belonging to the fire department, should have the paramount right of way oyer all streets, etc., when going to a fire, but required that they should keep the right side of the street, except where the same was obstructed. It was also provided by ordinance that when such engines or apparatus, going to a fire or answering an alarm, shall' come up with or approach any street car, then the party in control or in charge of the street car or train shall cause the same to come to a full stop and so remain until such apparatus of the fire department has fully passed or come to a stop. On the evening in question the fire department was responding to a fire alarm west and south of its central station, and when going west on Eleventh to Main street, this hose wagon kept to the north side of the street, until it approached Main street, but there a buggy, with a lady driver, confronted the firemen, and the hose wagon was pulled over to the south side. Groing at the rapid speed it was then being driven, it would have been difficult to pass south on Main between the cable tracks and the curb line on the east side of Main street, because there was there only a space of twelve to fourteen feet.
Under this state of facts, with what show of reason can it be contended that the gripman and conductor in charge of the cable train in question were free from fault or negligence? If the facts were as above stated (and we are bound to so assume, because the jury has so found on evidence abundant for that purpose), then clearly defendant’s employees were, under the circumstances, quite negligent'in managing the train. Street car companies, iike ordinary railroad corporations, owe
But the jury found, as they might well have done under the evidence, that the gripman did not, at the time, perform his duties with the care of even an ordinarily prudent man. If the testimony of plaintiff and his several witnesses is to be credited, the gripman’s
It is unnecessary to further extend this opinion with any discussion of the objection to the amount of damages awarded by the jury. It is clear that they are not excessive. Judgment affirmed.