132 Mo. App. 472 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Action to recover damages for persbnal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. Verdict and judgment were for
On behalf of defendant, the evidence discloses a different state of facts. Witnesses say plaintiff was driving on the east side of the track, that the street was not crowded and that plaintiff suddenly and without compulsion, turned his team to the west, attempted to cross in front of the car when it was so close that a collision could not be avoided and that the motorman, as soon as he discovered the purpose of plaintiff to cross over, made every effort to stop the car and did succeed in greatly reducing its speed.
It is alleged in the petition that the injury was “directly caused by the carelessness and negligence of defendant, its agents, servants and employees in this, tovvit, that the servants and agents of defendant in charge of said car carelessly, negligently and unskillfully managed, controlled and operated said car and caused it to collide with plaintiff’s wagon. 2nd. That the motorman in charge of said car sawq or by the exercise of, ordinary care could have seen, plaintiff in a position of peril on said track, and could by the exercise of ordinary care have stopped or slackened the speed of said car in time to have avoided injuring plaintiff, but negligently failed to do so. 3rd. That the defendant carelessly and negligently operated said car at the time and place of the accident and collision at a high and dangerous rate of speed.” The answer contains a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. Demurrers to the evidence offered by defendant were overruled and, at the request of plaintiff, the jury were instructed, in part, as follows:
“The jury are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that on or about the 29th day of September, 1903, at about 8:15 a. in., the plaintiff was driving a coal wagon in a southerly direction on Main street,
“The jury are instructed on behalf of plaintiff, that neither the defendant or plaintiff had the exclusive right to use the street, where the accident occurred, and that it was the duty of the motorman in charge of defendant’s car, to manage it with reasonable care to avoid injuring persons driving along, and upon the street and tracks, and by reasonable care is meant, such care as an ordinarily prudent person would use under the same or similar circumstances.
“3. The jury are instructed that although you may believe from the evidence, that plaintiff was himself guilty of negligence in driving along or across the track of defendant at the time and place of the collision mentioned in evidence, that alone will not discharge the' company or its employees from the observance of reasonable care in the management of its cars.”
Defendant argues that its request for a peremptory instruction should have been granted for the reasons, first, “that there was an entire failure of proof of negligence on the part of the motorman as alleged in the petition,” and, second, that “the plaintiff was guilty
And from the viewpoint we are occupying for the purposes of the demurrer, it likewise is apparent that plaintiff should not be denied recompense for his damage on the ground that he was negligent in law. Either from necessity or choice, he had the right to drive along that part of the street occupied by defendant’s track, until a car appeared. The streets of a city are for the use of all sorts and classes of people and no individual or corporation may possess any superior right of way over that which others may exercise. [Cole v. Railway, 121 Mo. App. 605.] The obligation imposed on plaintiff to leave the track in order that the car might pass did not arise from any superior right of defendant to that part of the street, but sprung from necessity. As we observed before, the course of a street car is restricted to its tracks, while the whole roadway is open to the use of wagons. Certainly in meeting,, wagons must leave the track; otherwise they would entirely block the way of cars and thus, themselves, assert a paramount right to the use of that part of the street covered by the railway. In being where he had the right to be, plaintiff was not negligent and, as his evidence shows that immediately on the appearance of the car, he did all he could to avoid obstructing its passage, we fail to perceive any reason for pronouncing him negligent in law. The learned trial judge was right in overruling the demurrer to the evidence.
Rut prejudicial error was committed in the giving of plaintiff’s third instruction. In effect, the jury were told that negligence of plaintiff would not bar his right to recover if the jury found that defendant had been negligent. This is not the law. If the peri
The 'instruction under consideration practically ignores in toto the defense of contributory negligence. Thus instructed, the jury, under the pleadings and evidence in the record before us well might have found as a fact that the motorman was not guilty of any breach of duty to plaintiff, after he knew, or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known of the existence of danger, but had been negligent in a way to aid in the production of the danger. The vice of the instruction lies in the omission to restrict the application of the principle stated therein to what we may call humanitarian negligence. So restricted, we think the instruction would have declared a sound rule of law, since logically, it would be absurd to say that the consequence to defendant of the negligent failure of the motorman to stop the car after he knew of the presence ■of the danger should be removed or softened by the fact that plaintiff had been “guilty of continuing negligence concurring with . . . negligence on the part of the defendant.” It is the very fact that the person in danger has been and perhaps is negligent that calls the rule of the humanitarian doctrine into play. The foundation of that doctrine is the principle that
Counsel for plaintiff argue that instructions given •at the request of plaintiff, read as a whole, properly restrict the scope of the instruction under consideration, but we do not think so. Further, they say that defendant’s instructions declare the correct rule and thereby cure the error. Where the instructions of the successful party state an erroneous rule and those of the defeated party state the rule correctly, the latter should not be considered as curative of the former. The ■only presumption permissible in such cases is that, as the instructions are conflicting, the jury discarded the true for the false.
It follows that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.