Respondent recovered judgment for damages for injuries she alleges she received when a truck in which she was seated was brought into collision with one of appellant’s cars, and this appeal followed.
On July 4,1916, a picnic party of eighteen young men and women of Kansas City were on their way to Fair-mount Park. They were being conveyed in a motor truck, and had proceeded to a point on Washington Park Boulevard, a short distance east of Cambridge Avenue, when they reached the tracks of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Company, which there cross the avenue about at right angles. The evidence tended to show that a long freight train was then passing over the crossing; the truck was stopped upon appellant’s east bound track a few feet west of the crossing, and stood there facing east toward the passing train for three or four minutes; one of appellant’s cars approached from the west at a speed of twelve or fifteen miles an hour; when the motorman was more than four hundred feet distant from the truck he saw it upon the track upon which his car was proceeding ; the back of the truck was toward the street car, and respondent was seated with her back toward the car; the track was almost level and was dry, and the car could have been stopped within a distance of thirty or forty feet; there was a safety stop for east-bound cars,-near the place where the truck was standing and between it and the point from which the motorman first saw it; the motorman sounded no signal or warning, did not check his car at all, but ran it at undiminished speed past the safety stop and against the truck, and thereby seriously injured respondent. There was a verdict for $20,000. The trial court required a remittitur of $8000, and judgment was entered for *263 $12,000. Appellant contends "the court erred (1) in refusing to sustain a challenge for cause to juror Hogue; (2) in refusing to discharge the jury because juror Barker, appellant contends, became disqualified during the trial; (3) in admitting evidence concerning respondent’s mental condition; (4) in giving and refusing instructions; and (5) in permitting judgment for an excessive sum.
It is true that the question concerning a juror’s qualification is to be tried by the court and not by the juror (Theobald v. Transit Co., 191 Mo. l. c. 417), but it is also true that after the court has tried it the ruling *264 comes here accompanied by a presumption of correctness which is overthrown only when the record shows the ruling was clearly against the evidence. [Theobald v. Transit Co., supra, and cases cited.] The record does not convict the juror of prejudice. He, in effect, denied the assumption by counsel that he entertained such a feeling. The character of the matter with respect to which the juror did not approve appellant’s course was not, in its nature, so far as the record shows, such as to prove prejudice in 1918 and disprove the juror’s denial of prejudice. Hogue was apparently candid with court and counsel. He recognized the irrelevancy of the franchise question to the issue in this case. He thought it “had nothing to do with it” and that the evidence should govern. He said the evidence would govern him. We do not think the record shows the trial court erred in overruling the challenge for cause.-
Though the injury to Mrs. Barker, whatever it was, occurred on the evening of June 8, 1918, and the verdict was not returned until nearly forty-eight hours later, no motion to discharge the jury was made before verdict. The ruling on the point will not be put on that ground, however. With Barker’s affidavit on file no additional evidence, documentary or other, was offered to show that either he or Mrs. Barker had made any claim against the company. From this and the affidavits and the date of the order overruling the motion for new trial it appears, therefore, that at least as late as July 13, 1918, neither Barker nor his wife had attached enough importance to *266 Mrs. Barker’s injury to have made claim for damages. That fact is of no great consequence, but it is not improper to mention it. The significant thing is that at no time did appellant inform the trial court of the character of Mrs. Barker’s injury. It may well be that there are injuries the nature of which is such that a feeling of hostility toward the person or agency which inflicted them would be fairly inferable. We do not think that a bald showing that Mrs. Barker was injured in some way “while riding as a passenger” discloses enough to justify such an inference of hostility toward appellant. Besides the failure to show whether the injury was a serious one or a mere scratch, there was also a failure to show appellant’s fault or responsibility. It is quite possible for one “riding as a passenger” to receive an injury for which the carrier is in no wise responsible. It was incumbent upon appellant, upon this ground of its motion, to convince the trial court that the incident upon which it r.elied so disqualified Barker that a verdict in which he participated ought not to stand. It was essential that appellant show that appellant had so injured Barker’s wife that prejudice on his part against • appellant resulted of such character that the-verdict was invalidated thereby. Appellant did not even admit responsibility. Perhaps, it had in mind the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. We are of the opinion that the circumstances called for a. frank exposition of the facts and that the guarded, careful and successful effort to avoid acceptance of responsibility for Mrs. Barker’s injury, while perhaps commendable as protective of appellant’s rights as against Mrs. Barker, falls short of showing the facts necessary to sustain this ground of the motion for new trial. The showing made does not convict the trial court of error in its ruling.
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(4) The refusal of one instruction asked by appellant with respect to the burden of proof is.justified by the fact that other instructions given at appellant’s instance covered this feature.
*271 After a consideration of the facts and of the cases cited the court is of the opinion that the judgment is still excessive.- It should he reduced to $10,000. Therefore, if respondent will, within ten days, remit the sum of $2,000, the judgment will stand affirmed, as of the date of its original entry, for $10,000; otherwise the judgment will he reversed and the cause remanded.
