108 Mo. App. 465 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
— The declaration of plaintiff’s cause of action was prefaced by introductory allegation of the relationship of common carrier and passenger existing between the parties on the Jefferson avenue line in the city of St. Louis, with purpose on her part of transferring at Olive street to another line of defendant’s system and, continuing^ charged:
‘ ‘ That as the car approached said Olive street she signalled the servants and employees of the defendant corporation in charge of said car to stop said car at
The defense made was a general denial united with affirmative plea of contributory negligence on part of plaintiff, in leaving her seat and carelessly starting to alight from the car while it was in motion. A jury trial terminated in verdict for the plaintiff in a substantial sum.
The evidence disclosed that plaintiff, a young woman then studying stenography, with a male and female companion, boarded a north-bound Jefferson avenue summer car at Scott avenue, the gentleman of the party paying the three fares and obtaining transfer tickets for the Olive street division. As the car drew near Olive street, in response to the gentleman’s signal, the car stopped momentarily at the usual stopping place and plaintiff arose, with typewriter instructor and other like books, to leave the car, but before she had descended therefrom, it moved suddenly forward and continued some distance northward before finally stopping, and the sudden forward movement of the car precipitated plaintiff to the ground, landing her between the feet of a mule hitched to a coal wagon, which animal became unmanageable, and the wagon wheels passed over her several times producing injuries, the extent and nature of which were the subject of expert testimony by. medical witnesses tendered by both parties.
‘ ‘ The court instructs the jury that if you find from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff fell from defendant’s car while said ear was in motion, and before it had come to a stop for the purpose of discharging and taking on passengers, then plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and your verdict must be for the defendant.”
But as the court, at defendant’s instance, had given instructions presenting the like theory even more strongly for defendant, this refusal was not error, the instructions given being as follows:
“If, after a full and fair consideration of all the evidence in this case, you are unable to determine whether the plaintiff was precipitated from defendant’s chr by being knocked, jostled or pushed off of said car by persons getting on or off of defendant’s car at the time, or by being thrown therefrom by a sudden and unusual motion of the car, then plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and your verdict must be for the defendant.”
“Judge Spencer: You heard the statement of the jurors on their voir dire in this examination, how out of eighteen men, three of them were either injured or had claims—
“Mr. Arnold: I object to that statement.
“The Court: That is improper, Judge Spencer, and should not be referred to.
“Judge Spencer: I retract it, Your Honor.
“The Court: There is nothing except the testimony in the case before the jury.
If the counsel for respondent was about to transcend proper bounds and abuse his privilege in argument of the case, as the fragment of his interrupted sentence might presage, the error, if imminent and about to be consummated was summarily withheld, promptly rebuked, counsel admonished by the trial judge, a plenary retraction and apology tendered by the attorney, and the occurrence of the incident in the judgment and discretion of the presiding judge did not exact sustaining the motion for new trial at instance of defendant and we see no just ground for differing in this regard from the trial court.
Judgment affirmed.