178 Mo. 108 | Mo. | 1903
Defendants, two street railway companies, appeal from a judgment for $5,000 recovered against them in the circuit court of St.Louis county by the plaintiff on account of personal injuries alleged to have been received by him through their negligence.
There is not much dispute as to the governing facts of the case. In June, 1900, there was a strike among the employees of all the other street railroad companies in the city of St. Louis, and the only street cars running were those operated by the defendant companies. The consequence was, the cars of these two companies were crowded with passengers beyond their normal carrying capacity. People crowded in, filling the bodies of the cars, the platforms and every part where a seat or foothold could be obtained. Plaintiff on June 14, 1900, boarded a west-bound car of the St. Louis & Suburban Railway Company (which we will call the Suburban car) at the crossing of Fourteenth street and Franklin
I. Appellants’ first proposition is that the court erred in refusing the instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence which defendants asked. The
There are two standpoints from which this proposition is to be considered.
a. That the plaintiff’s position was one of danger and that be would not have been injured if be bad not been where be was, are facts indisputable. But was be guilty of negligence in being there? We need not dwell on tbe fact that tbe car was so crowded that be could not get on it in any other position, because be was not compelled to get on it at all. His taking, passage on tbe car was a voluntary act. Traveling on a street car in a great city is always attended with danger, whatsoever position in or on tbe car tbe passenger may assume. But if it is a position that tbe carrier offers to tbe passenger, or a position which tbe carrier assents to bis taking, and knowingly assumes to carry him in that position, then it becomes tbe duty of tbe carrier to carry him safely in that position if it can be done by tbe exercise of that high degree of care which tbe law requires tbe carrier to observe for tbe safety of its passengers. Tbe degree of care to be observed by tbe carrier in such case must be in proportion to tbe danger which tbe passenger’s position entails — tbe more dangerous tbe position, the greater tbe care tbe carrier is bound to observe. And at the same time tbe law imposes on tbe passenger in like case tbe duty of observing for bis own safety tbe care that a man of ordinary prudence under like circumstances would observe, and that care, too, must be in proportion to tbe apparent danger — tbe more dangerous tbe position tbe more care a prudent man would be expected to observe. It is tbe duty of a carrier who has undertaken to carry a passenger in such a position to carry him safely if it can
In this case the carrier knew the position the passenger had taken and assented thereto, and undertook to carry him in that position. We say this because the motorman saw him there and warned him that it was a position of danger and the conductor saw him there, and without warning and without remonstrance asked him for his fare and received it. If that had been a position of such danger that the carrier was unwilling to assume the duty of carrying the plaintiff therein the carrier had the right to require the plaintiff to leave the car. It was an unusual position, one involving'more than usual risk, and the carrier had the right to refuse to carry him in that position. But unless some other circumstance or condition arose to increase the hazard, it was feasible to carry a passenger safely in that position. This is shown by the fact that, during this period of overcrowded cars, the defendants did carry men safely in that position, and especially by the fact
b. But assuming that taking the position on the step of the platform was itself an act of negligence, and that it contributed to the occurring of the accident, still there was a question for the jury. The motorman and conductor both knew that the man was there and knew the peril of his position; they also knew that he could not jump from the car while it was passing through the curve without the risk of falling and being run over by the approaching east-bound car, or of being run over if he did not fall. Yet in plain view of the other ear, and seeing that it had not stopped as the rules of the company required, and as common sense dictated, the motorman of the Suburban car ran his car into the curve and on until he had crushed the plaintiff’s'body against the Meramec car. The facts of this case make a strong example of the wisdom of the rule which allows a plaintiff, .in exceptional cases, to recover notwithstanding his own contributory negligence, when the defendant sees the plaintiff’s peril and although able by ordinary care to avoid it, yet recklessly or wantonly inflicts the injury. [Kellny v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 67; Morgan v. Railroad, 159 Mo. 262].
The court did not err in refusing an instruction looking to a nonsuit.
II. The plaintiff’s petition stated his cause of action based on alleged negligence of the defendants in bringing their cars into collision or such close proximity as to cause the plaintiff’s injuries. The
“And for a further defense defendants state that all the details of defendants’ tracks and the manner of operating cars thereon were known to plaintiff, or by the exercise of ordinary care might have been known to plaintiff, and that the danger of riding'upon the southern steps of the front platform of the west-bound car was known to plaintiff, or by the exercise of ordinary care might have been known to plaintiff, and that plaintiff assumed the risk of riding upon said part of said car on said occasion.”
Appellants now complain that the instruction given at the request of the plaintiff ignored the defense set up in that plea.
That is not a good plea. The fact that the plaintiff had negligently taken a position on the platform step outside the gate was a fact already properly pleaded as an act of contributory negligence. To the plea of contributory negligence the plaintiff replied and the issue was properly joined. But the part of the answer above quoted, and which appellants call their plea of assumption of risk, presents no affirmative defense. If it is intended by that plea to say that the plaintiff’s injuries were the result solely of his voluntary act of riding on the step of the platform, then it means that the injuries were not the result of the defendant’s negligence, which defense was already covered by the plea of general denial. The petition having charged that the,plaintiff’s injuries were caused by the defendant’s negligence, and the defendants having denied that chai'ge, they were at liberty, under their general denial, to prove anything to show that the plaintiff’s injuries did not result from their negligence.
If the pleader intended to say that to ride in that position was so dangerous that injury to the plaintiff could not have been avoided by the exercise of the care incumbent on the carrier, and that the fact that it was so dangerous was obvious or known to the plaintiff, then the fault of the plea is that it does not say that, and, in the light of the evidence, if it had said so the court would not have committed error in ignoring it in the instructions, because there was no evidence to support it. All the evidence shows that the accident would not have occurred if the motorman had used even ordinary care.
If by that plea it was intended to say that the plaintiff’s negligent act of riding on the step joined with the defendant’s negligent act of attempting to pass two cars in a space that was not wide enough for them to pass in safety, and that thus the plaintiff contributed to cause his own injury, that defense was already covered by the plea of contributory negligence.
But if it was intended by the plea to say that the plaintiff by voluntarily taking that position released the defendants from their duty to exercise the degree of care due from the carrier to the passenger, or if it was intended to say that by taking that position the plaintiff assumed not only the risk incident to it but assumed also the risk of the defendant’s negligence, then it was not a good plea.' The passenger never assumes the risk of the carrier’s negligence.
There is always a risk of personal injury to a person traveling, even if there be no negligence either on his own part, or on the part of the carrier. That risk is incident to the act of traveling, and is greater or less according to the circumstances and conditions. That risk the passenger assumes. But if to the danger incident to the act of traveling under the circumstances and
Assumption of risk is one thing and contributory negligence is another. [Curtis v. McNair, 173 Mo. 270.] The court did not err in ignoring that plea in its instructions.
Instruction numbered 3 given for the plaintiff begins as follows: “The jury are instructed that if you believe, and find from the evidence in this case that the servants of defendant St. Louis & Meramec River Railroad Company, who were in charge of its said eastbound car on the occasion mentioned in the evidence, prior to and at the time of the alleged injury to plaintiff, were not exercising ordinary care to avoid said collision, ” etc.
Appellants complain of this instruction because they say that by the use of the words ‘ ‘ said collision, ’ * it assumes that there was a collision, instead of submitting the question to the jury. There was no dispute on that point. The evidence of defendants showed that there was a collision, as well as that of' the plaintiff. Although the general denial put every fact stated in the petition in issue, yet a fact about which there was no real dispute, and that was conceded at the trial, may be assumed in an instruction. The defendants asked five instructions, marked B, C, D, E and F, the effect of which were that the plaintiff by taking the position of obvious danger on the step of the platform was not entitled to recover. From what we have above said it
Instruction G- ashed by defendant was to the effect that if the Meramee ear at the moment of the accident was not passing through the curve, the verdict should be in favor of the Meramee company. That instruction called for a verdict for that defendant even though the Meramee car had.stopped after it had entered the curve, as some of the evidence tended to show, at a point, where the danger was greatest. It was not error to refuse that instruction.
III. It is earnestly argued that the damages awarded by the jury are excessive.
We do not deem it necessary in this opinion to discuss the evidence bearing on this point. It is sufficient to say that the assessment by the jury is not so much out of the way as to justify us in invading their peculiar province. There is nothing to indicate that it is, not the result of calm judgment and we will not disturb it.
We find no error in the record and therefore the judgment is affirmed.