108 Mo. App. 437 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
(after stating the facts). —
“If the jury find from the evidence that plaintiff refused to pay his fare to the conductor of the Fourth
' This instruction, additional to the infirmity of commingling the repugnant theories of carelessness and wantonness, authorized the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff,, if the conductor carelessly threw or pushed him from the car; the petition embraced no charge* of want of care by the conductor, but on the other hand pleaded that plaintiff’s expulsion was wantonly effected, a theory excluding and at variance with want of care in the act complained of. The allegations of plaintiff to the effect that with copassengers he had been transferred to the Fourth street line; that he had entered a car of the last-named line and reiterating that he was lawfully on such car, that defendant’s conductor catching him with both hands assaulted him, unlawfully and forcibly, had dragged him to the rear platform and with great force and violence had ejected him from the car, and repeating that at the time such assault was unlawfully made by the conductor, plaintiff was lawfully on the car and demeaning himself in peaceable and orderly manner, and that the injuries received were directly caused by the unlawful, wrongful and wanton acts of defendant’s servant, collectively and singly set forth a state of facts, which if legally established, exhibited a right of action for a tortious ejection from the car. The essence of his cause of action was the unlawful manner of his- ejection from the car, if the conductor resorted to an unnecessary degree of force and violence in expelling him from the car or wantonly had thrown or pushed Min from the