46 Mo. App. 380 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
Lesperance street in the city of St. Louis is crossed at right angles by several of the defend•ant’s railroad tracks. The plaintiff’s minor son was injured at this crossing. He attempted to pass through .a small aperture, which had been left between two of ■defendant’s cars, by climbing over the drawhead of one of the cars. While his foot was on the drawhead, the aperture was closed by a sudden movement of the cars, and the boy’s foot was caught and crushed. The plaintiff seeks in this action to recover the amount paid by him for medicine and medical attendance for his son ; .also compensation for nursing him, and the value of the boy’s services during his minority. The defense was that the defen'dant was not guilty of any negligence, and that the boy was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to pass, in the manner in which -he did, between the cars. Hence,it is claimed by the defendant that the trial court committed error in refusing to sustain a demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence, and that it was additional error to refuse, as the court did, to
There was a trial by the jury, which resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $837.50 for medical attendance and for medicine and appliances; $277 for the nursing of the child by the plaintiff and his wife,. and $1,496 for loss of services, making a total of $2,610.50. The plaintiff voluntarily remitted $150 from the item for medical attendance, etc., and thereupon the court entered a judgment on the verdict for the remainder. The defendant appealed.
I. ' In order to maintain this action, it must be shown that the injury received by the. boy was occasioned by a failure on the part of the defendant, to-properly discharge some legal duty it owed to him. On that point the question of the age of the boy can cut no-figure. In a case like this it can make no difference, whether the injured party was an infant or adult. The fact that the plaintiff’s son was of tender years is only material on the question of contributory negligence, and the question of contributory negligence can only become material, if it is affirmatively determined that there is some evidence tending to prove that the defendant was guilty of negligence, which occasioned the injury. There are cases decided by our own courts, and those of other states, known as “turn-table” cases, in which a different rule of conduct for the protection of children is laid down. But those decisions are based on the idea of attractive danger.
The plaintiff’s evidence, upon which the alleged negligence of the defendant is sought to be established, may be briefly stated as follows: The plaintiff’s son, in company with three or four companions, was going east on Lesperance street. When they reached the railroad tracks, they found the street blockaded with the defendant’s cars, which were standing in the middle of the street. The boys stopped at the crossing for a time
We are of the opinion that the defendant was guilty of negligence, if, without any warning, it closed up the space, between the cars. It owed the traveling public the duty to give some warning of an intention to do so ; or, if the aperture was closed inadvertently by the act of the trainmen in making up the train, it must nevertheless be held to be negligence. It was the duty of the defendant’s servants to know the condition of the cars at the crossing, and to provide against an accidental movement.
The traveler has equal rights with the railroad company to the use of the highway, and, when the facts are as in this case, the plaintiff’s sonmightwell assume that, if any immediate movement was made at all, the cars would be pulled further apart, so as to relieve the street of all obstruction ; or that, if the company intended a contrary movement, it would, as it ought to do, givesome reasonable notice or warning of such intention. If the train had been connected, then we apprehend that the defendant would have been under no obligation to give any notice of such movement, because the trainmen under such circumstances would have had no reason to anticipate that persons on the highway were in a situation of danger as to the train.
In the case of Gurley v. Railroad, 16 S. W. Rep. 11, the plaintiff was passing over a footway leading through the defendant’s yards and over its tracks. It was not a public street or highway, but the railroad company had permitted persons to use it in passing to and from the depot. Across this footpath, there was a •small space about one foot in width between two cars. The plaintiff undertook to pass through the opening, and by a sudden movement he was caught between the ■cars and injured. The supreme court held that no negligence could be imputed to the railroad company, because it was under no legal obligation to notify the plaintiff of the movement of its cars at that point. The •decision was predicated. on the fact, that the footpath was not a public highway, and that the plaintiff’s use of it was merely that of a licensee.
In the case of Stillson v. Railroad, 67 Mo. 671, the plaintiff undertook to pass through a small opening between two trains, and was injured by the trains coming together. The opening was not at a public crossing, and for this reason the court held that the managers of the train had no right to anticipate that this small aperture would invite pedestrians to cross through, and that consequently the company was guilty of no negligence in failing to give warning of the movement of the train at that particular place.
The fact that the plaintiff’s son undertook to climb over the drawheads instead of passing between them, as he might easily have done, does not in our opinion change the legal aspect of the case.
II. We now come to the question of contributory negligence. The court told the jury in its instructions that it was an act of gross carelessness to climb between the cars as the plaintiff’s son did. Whether the facts in the case authorized this direction, it is not necessary for us to decide. But the court instructed the jury further in this connection that, if the evidence showed that the plaintiff’s son was of sufficient years and understanding to appreciate the danger of so doing, then the plaintiff could not recover. The boy was nine years old at the time he was hurt. The defendant’s counsel concede that the general rule is, that the contributory negligence of a child is a question of fact for the jury and not of law for the court. But they contend that the testimony of the plaintiff’s son shows
III. The boy was nursed by his mother and father. On the question of damages the court instructed the jury that, if they found for the plaintiff they should assess as part of his damages, reasonable compensation for his and his wife’s services in nursing the child. The •objection made to the instruction is that it authorized a recovery on the part of the plaintiff both as parent and master, whereas the rights arising from these two relations are different and to some extent incongruous. The answer to this is that the supreme court in Smith v. City of St. Joseph, 55 Mo. 456, and Blair v. Railroad, 89 Mo. 334, where the plaintiffs sued to recover damages both as husband and master for injuries caused to their wives, approved similar instructions, and such decisions must control our ruling.
IY. The defendant offered to read in evidence the deposition of a witness. The court refused to allow the •deposition to be read, for the reason that the witness
V. It is insisted that the recovery for the loss of services cannot be maintained, for the reason that there was no proof that the plaintiff was entitled to the services of his minor child. It is well settled that such a right of recovery is not predicated on the relation of parent and child, but on that of master and servant. Hence, it is necessary for a plaintiff in such a case to allege and prove the relation of master and servant. In the present case the. uncontradicted evidence showed that 'the boy was only nine years old ; that he lived with his parents at the time of and since the accident; and that he was taken to his home at the time he was hurt, and was there nursed for several months by his parents. We think that these facts were sufficient to show that the boy had not been emancipated, and that his father was entitled to his services. Wood on Master & Servant, sec. 228; 2 Glreenleaf on Ev., sec. 576.
But it is urged that the court committed error in its instructions by assuming this fact. The general rule is that the trial court must not assume, in its. instructions to the jury, the existence of any controverted fact. Bank v. Crandall, 87 Mo. 208 ; Maxwell
YI. The defendant also complains of the action of the court in permitting the plaintiff to remit the sum of $150 from the finding of the jury for medical attendance and medicine. ' And it also claims that the verdict as to other items of damage is excessive under the plaintiff’s own evidence, and that the findings of the jury were the result of passion or prejudice. It is urged that under the recent case of Gurley v. Railroad, supra, the remittitur was not permissible. We think that the law of that case can only be applied, where the remittitur affects damages which are incapable of being definitely fixed by an exact money standard, as in a case of a recovery for personal injuries. Here the damage, from which the remittitur was had, was capable of definite
The recovery for the loss of services was $1,496, which amount defendant insists was excessive. The court instructed the jurors that in estimating the value of such services they should consider ‘•’•the earning capacity of the boy in his injured condition,” and also the possibility of his death during his minority, and from the amount thus ascertained the probable cost for his support should be deducted.
This instruction, under the facts of the case, was erroneous in that it directed the jury, in estimating the value of the services, to deduct from the gross amount of the probable earnings of the boy during his minority the reasonable cost of his support, and that the difference, less the amount which he probably could have earned in his injured condition, would represent the sum for which the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment on this item of damage. If the boy had been killed, then it would have been proper to direct that the cost of support be deducted from the gross earnings, because the plaintiff would then have been relieved of such support, and his actual damage could not have exceeded the probable gross earnings less the probable cost of support. But this cannot be the rule, where the child is only injured. In such a case, actual compensation to the parents is the probable value of the gross earnings of the child, less his earning capacity in his injured condition. In cases where the injury is of such a serious character as to render the child incapable of performing any labor, then the application of the rule is
The misdirection of the jury on the question of damages, which we have discussed, is one of which the defendant cannot complain; but in another respect the instruction was erroneous, and in that we think the defendant was prejudiced. The court told the jury that, in estimating the value of the services, they should “consider the earning capacity of the boy in his injured condition.” That portion of the instruction correctly stated the law in the abstract, but the difficulty is that the plaintiff introduced no evidence oh that point. Both the attending physician and plaintiff testified that the boy was able to perform any kind of sedentary labor which did not require too much walking or standing. But we can find no evidence of the probable value of such labor. How could the jury consider the earning capacity of the boy in his injured condition, in the absence of any testimony fixing or approximating its probable value % It was incumbent on the plaintiff to introduce some substantial evidence on that subject in order to make out a case. Duke v. Railroad, 99 Mo. 347. We cannot agree with his contention, that it was permissible to allow the
The defendant insists that the verdict of the jury on the question of damages was manifestly the result of passion or prejudice, and that their misconduct in this respect was so palpably wrong that it ought to discredit the finding on the main issues in the case. We áre inclined to this view. Let us look into the evidence. As we have shown, the verdict for medical allowance 'and medicine was for $187.50 too much. The finding as to the value of the boy’s services was $1,496. The plaintiff alone testified concerning this item. The highest estimate made by him was $8,036. In this estimate no allowance is made for loss of time or the possibility of the boy’s death. The maintenance of the boy is placed by the father at $1,722. On this basis, the, difference between the earnings and the maintenance is $1,814, whereas the finding was for $1.496. We then have an excess of $182 without any credit for the present earning capacity of the boy ; without any consideration of the chances of death ; and without 'any deduction for loss of time. The jurors were excusable for failing to take into consideration the earning capacity of the boy, because there was no evidence on that subject for their guidance. But their action in fixing the damage without making any allowance for sickness, or loss of time from other causes, or for the possibility of death during the time, is inexcusable, and cannot very well be accounted for, except as the result of passion or prejudice. It can make no difference that the direction of
There are other matters discussed in the briefs, to which it is not necessary to allude, as they were mere accidents of the trial, and will not likely occur again.
There is another question which we have not noticed, but which maybe of importance ona retrial.- The effect of the remittitur, was to bring this case within the appellate jurisdiction of this court. We doubt whether this can be legally done by the voluntary action of the plaintiff.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed, and the cause remanded.