113 Mo. App. 120 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
— Respondent was struck and injured by a street car a little after nightfall. The accident happened on Washington avenue in the city of St. Louis at the intersection of that thoroughfare with Leffingwell avenue. Rissler was hurt while attempting to pass from the southwest to the northwest corner of the intersecting streets. While standing on the curb of Washington avenue and before starting forward, he looked to the west for a car but neither saw nor heard one. He testified that his view of the track was unobstructed for half a block (about 150 feet) but at that distance was intercepted by a laundry wagon. standing against the curb at the third house to the left. If the wagon had not intervened he would have had a clear view for two blocks, or 'six or seven hundred feet. After taking the precaution to look when on the curb, Rissler walked forward without again looking until he was on the near railway track when, just an instant before the car struck him, he saw it, but too late to get out of the way. If Rissler had paid attention to his surroundings he could both have seen and heard the approach of the car from the’ west after he had taken a step or two from the curbstone and have stopped until it passed. There was testimony besides his own that he walked straight ahead. When
The acts of negligence charged in the petition are failure of the motorman to sound the bell, running at too high speed and neglecting to keep a vigilant watch for persons and vehicles and stop the car in the shortest time and space possible on the first appearance of danger to the respondent. There was evidence conducing to prove that the car’s speed was beyond the ordinance limit of eight miles an hour, and some evidence that if the car had been running at that rate it could have been stopped in about twenty feet.
The answer filed was a general denial and a special defense that respondent contributed to his injury by going on the track without looking or listening when, if he had taken those precautions, he would have escaped in: jury. Further, that when he got on the track the car was so close that a collision was bound to happen. We deem it unnecessary to set out all the instructions in the case but will notice those material to this appeal.
The trial resulted in a verdict for the respondent for $1,500.
Among other instructions the railway company requested one directing the jury to return a verdict for the appellant, and we have been in grave doubt whether that direction should not have been given. The rule in this State is that a party about to cross street railway tracks must look and listen for approaching cars before; doing so and will be denied a recovery for an injury due to a collision with a car if the duty is omitted, when by performing it the accident could have been prevented. [Murray v. Transit Co., 176 Mo. 183, 75 S. W. 611, 83 S. W. 995; Hickman v. Railroad, 47 Mo. App. 65; Smith v. Railroad, 52 Mo. App. 36; Sonnenfeld Millinery Co. v. Railroad, 59 Mo. App. 668.] This is on the theory that a
The court gave one instruction the substance of which was that though the jury found respondent carelessly attempted to cross the track at the time and place- and in the manner he did, nevertheless he was entitled' to recover if the evidence showed the motorman saw his peril in time to avoid striking him by the exercise of ordinary care in checking the speed of the car; or if, by keeping a vigilant watch ahead, the motorman could have discovered the peril in time to avoid the accident. This was.the application of the last clear chance doctrine to the case. But we think the facts in proof left no room for a verdict in favor of the respondent on the theory that though he may have been negligent in try
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.