Shohoney v. Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City Railroad

223 Mo. 649 | Mo. | 1909

Lead Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

This cause was heard at the last term of this court and a judgment was then rendered reversing the judgment of the trial court and remanding the cause for a new trial. But in going over the case again on the motion for rehearing it was noticed that the action of the trial court in overruling defendant’s motion to require the plaintiff to make his petition more definite and certain, was not mentioned in the motion for a new trial, although exception thereto was otherwise duly preserved, and we thought the point was sufficiently doubtful to require a rehearing of the case, therefore the motion for rehearing was sustained.

In the opinion delivered at the last term it is stated that before answering, the defendant filed a motion to require the plaintiff to make his petition more definite and certain, that the motion was overruled, that defendant excepted and the exception was duly pre*657served in the bill of exceptions. In the motion for rehearing it was said that there was no shell motion filed and that there was no exception whatever taken to the •overruling' of the motion. The plaintiff in making that statement that there was no such motion filed was mistaken. The filing of such motion and the ruling of the court thereon can be shown only by entries in the record proper; the printed record before us on page 23 shows the entries in the record proper, showing that this motion was filed and that it was overruled by the court and that after the motion was overruled the defendant filed its answer. The motion itself appears in full in the only place it should appear, that is, in the bill of exceptions, as shown on pages 27 and 28 of the record, and the exception to the action of the court in overruling^ the motion also appears in the only place it should appear, that is, in the bill of exceptions, as will be seen by reference to page 28 of the record. The language of the bill of exceptions on this point is: “Which said motion was by the court taken up, considered, heard and overruled and to the action of the court in overruling said motion the defendant at the time saved its exception.” Plaintiff therefore was mistaken when he said in his motion for rehearing that there was no such motion filed, no such motion overruled and no exceptions whatever taken to the ruling.

The ruling on a motion to require the plaintiff to make his petition more definite and certain occurs before the trial, and it may be at a former term, when exception thereto can be preserved only by a term bill of exceptions. Whether it is necessary or proper to bring it to the notice of the trial court again in a motion for a new trial is a question that some of our decisions have rendered a little doubtful. In Boatmen’s Bank v. McMenamy, 35 Mo. App. 198 l. c. 203, the court said: “A motion to strike out part of a *658pleading is not part of the record, and the court’s ruling on such motion must be excepted to, and the exception preserved, both in the motion for new trial and by the bill of exceptions and unless done by both the exception is lost.” As authority fox that ruling the court cites the following cases: Cowen v. Railroad, 48 Mo. 556; Saxton v. Allen, 49 Mo. 417; Margrave v. Ausmuss, 51 Mo. 568; Carver v. Thornhill, 53 Mo. 283; Curtis v. Curtis, 54 Mo. 352; Lancaster v. Ins. Co., 62 Mo. 121; McCoy v. Farmer, 65 Mo. 247; Acock v. Acock, 57 Mo. 156.

It is noticed that in the above case cited from the -Court of Appeals there is no discussion of the question but the decision rests solely on the authorities cited, and taking the eases cited in the inverse order of their citation, they run back for authority to the earliest case or to cases based on the earliest and decide the point as on that authority. In the first case, Cowen v. Railroad, the point was an alleged error in admitting testimony, and so it was in the second case, Saxton v. Allen, and also in the third, Margrave v. Ausmuss, and again in the fourth case, Carver v. Thornhill. In Curtis v. Curtis the appeal was from an order of the court allowing the wife alimony pendente lite, which of course was a trial of that issue. In the case next in line, Acock v. Acock, it appears that on motion.a part of the petition was stricken out, and this court after otherwise disposing of the cause on its merits- said: “The action of the court in striking out a part of the plaintiff’s petition we will not review. It was not embodied as one of tbe errors ox points insisted upon in the motion for a new trial and therefore must be disregarded.” Citing Curtis v. Curtis, supra, and cases there cited. 1'n that case it does not appear that thei'e was an exception taken in any form to the striking out a part of the answer. In Lancaster v. Ins. Co., supra, what the court said in reference to the necessity of assigning the error in the motion fox a new trial was in *659reference to the introduction of the testimony. In the latest case cited by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in the case first above mentioned, McCoy v. Farmer, 65 Mo. 244, the suit was begun by a corporation as plaintiff, but pending the suit the life of the' corporation expired and on application of the last board of directors the suit was revived in their names as trustees. They filed a new petition stating inter alia the expiration of the corporation and that they were the last board of directors and entitled as trustees to prosecute the suit; the defendants answered that petition and denied those allegations. Those facts were therefore in issue at the trial and any adverse ruling of the court occurring during the trial on those issues should of course have been brought to the attention of the court in the motion for a new trial, which was not done, and for that reason this court said they would not be considered.

Those are all the decisions of this court to which our attention has been called that can in any way be claimed to be authority for the proposition that the rulings of the trial court on motions preliminary to the trial must be embodied in the motion for a new trial, and, as we see, nearly if not all of those cases relate to the admission of evidence at the trial or relate to points that arose in the trial. The chief reason for requiring rulings complained of to be embodied in a motion for a new trial is that the trial court should be afforded an opportunity to correct its own error, if error there be, and also to apprise the opposite party of what is complained of. But that reason is not of universal application, for example, the appellate court will review the ruling of the trial court on a demurrer which appears on the face of the record proper, although there be no exception. [Spears v. Bond, 79 Mo. 467; Hannah v. Hannah, 109 Mo. 236; Meissner v. Railway Equipment Co., 211 Mo. 112.] In St. Louis v. Brooks, 107 Mo. 380, it was held that a motion for new trial *660or rehearing on the ruling of the court on a motion after final judgment was not necessary.

In Crossland v. Admire, 118 Mo. 87, the court said: “A motion for a new trial must be predicated upon some error committed in the trial by which the verdict or finding was improper.” In Rigdon v. Ferguson, 172 Mo. 49, the defendant’s answer had been stricken from the files and there was a judgment for the plaintiff. Defendant filed a motion for a new trial; the only grounds stated in the motion were that the court erred in refusing leave to file the answer and in striking it from the files. This court said: “If exception was not otherwise preserved to the action of the court in refusing leave to file the answer, it was not saved in the exception taken to the action of the court in overruling the motion for a new trial. A motion for a new trial relates only to that which occurred during the trial. The ruling on the application for leave to file the answer was no part of the trial and could not be embraced in a motion for a new trial. ’ ’

In Sternberg v. Levy, 159 Mo. 617, the trial court had sustained a motion to strike out a part of plaintiff’s interplea. Plaintiff’s exception to that ruling was preserved in the bill of exceptions, but not in a motion for new trial. This court said: ‘{The plaintiff has properly saved, the right to have the action of the trial court on the motion to strike out, reviewed by this court. No motion for a new trial was necessary to preserve this right.” In 14 Ency. P. and P., p. 829, it is said: “Errors in ruling on demurrers and motions relating to the pleadings may be reviewed on exceptions without a motion for a new trial. Such errors of law are not grounds for a new trial.” And on page 830 the same author says: “A motion for a new trial is generally not necessary to secure a review of decisions on motions rendered before or after the trial, but is required where the ruling is made during the trial. The *661error of the law must be one pertaining to the trial of an issue of fact.”

The above mentioned eases show the condition of the question as the decisions of this court have left it, and we have gone through them for the purpose of pointing out the doubt in our minds that led us to granting a rehearing in this case.

But after all we will not decide that question now, because it is not necessary to a decision of this case, since it relates to that paragraph in the opinion delivered at the last term which holds that the ruling of a trial court on a motion to require the plaintiff to make his petition more definite and certain is, when the exception is properly preserved, reviewable on •appeal, as to which two of the judges of this Division dissented and therefore there was as to that point no decision. Besides, the point is now unimportant because the plaintiff’s case was fully developed at the trial.

Returning now to the case itself, we have discovered no reason for changing our views expressed in the opinion delivered at the last term which is as follows:

Defendant is a. Missouri corporation operating a railroad in this State; plaintiff was in its service in the capacity of yard-master in its switch yard in Milan; his duties were, with the aid of other employees under him, to switch cars and make up trains in that yard; in attempting to couple an engine to a freight car his foot got caught in the couplers and was crushed ; he sues for damages alleging that the accident was the result of the defendant’s negligence; he recovered a judgment for $5,000 in the circuit court, and defendant appealed.

There are two acts of negligence alleged in the petition: first, that the engine furnished by the defendant for use in the yards was not suitable for that purpose and not equipped with reasonably safe appliances for coupling; second, the enginéer negligently ran the *662engine against the ears where the plaintiff was to make the coupling, without having received from the plaintiff a signal to do so.

Before answering defendant filed a petition and bond to remove the cause to the Federal court, on the ground that it was engaged in interstate commerce, and that the action was bottomed on sections 1 and 2 of the Act of Congress entitled, “An act to promote ,the safety of employees and travelers upon .railroads by compelling common carriers engaged in interstate commerce to equip their cars with automatic couplers and continuous brakes, and their locomotives with driving wheel brakes, and for other purposes,” approved March, 1893. The petition for removal also alleged that the plaintiff had theretofore instituted a suit on the samé cause of action in the circuit court of Sullivan county which, on petition of defendant, was removed to the Federal court and, when in that court, plaintiff moved to remand the cause to the State court on the ground that the Federal court had no jurisdiction of it, which motion was by the court overruled and thereafter plaintiff dismissed his suit in that court and instituted this suit in the circuit court of Grundy county. The circuit court of Grundy county denied the defendant’s petition to remove, whereupon defendant caused a transcript of the record in this cause, as it stood up to that date, to be filed in the Federal court and thereafter this cause proceeded to trial in the State court.

I. It is now insisted by defendant that the State court lost its jurisdiction of the cause by reason of the petition and bond for removal to the Federal court, and since, if that contention is well founded, there will be no use in our looking any further into this record, we will give that point first consideration. If, on the record made, the defendant was entitled to the removal prayed, its right is preserved not only for *663the purpose of review in this court, but also in the United States Supreme Court. It is not the order of a State court removing the cause that gives the Federal court jurisdiction, but it is the application for removal in the form prescribed by the act of Congress. If the petition for removal, read in the light of the pleadings in this case, shows a proper case for removal and the bond tendered is sufficient, it makes no difference what action the State court may take or that it take any action, the cause is rightfully in the Federal court.

But a Federal court has no jurisdiction of a suit between two citizens of the same State on a cause of action arising within the State and under the laws of the State. Such jurisdiction, it has never been claimed has been or could be conferred by an act of Congress even under the interstate commerce power. Nor can a defendant by his petition to remove change the plaintiff’s cause of action to make it different from that stated in the plaintiff’s petition, so as to bring it under the Federal law. Neither can a plaintiff so state his cause of action in his petition as to deprive the defendant of the right of removal if the defendant by his answer or plea shows that he relies for his defense on an act of Congress or a provision of the Federal Constitution. This we understand to be the interpretation given this law by the Supreme Court of the United States. [Colorado, etc., M. Co. v. Turck, 150 U. S. 138, l. c. 143.] The mere fact that a railroad company may be engaged in interstate commerce, does not deprive it of the right to engage also in intrastate traffic, or relieve it of its obligation to obey the law of the State while so engaged. If a merchant in St. Louis loads his wagon with goods to be shipped to Oklahoma and starts it to the railroad depot, there is as much reason for saying that the driver and the wagon and team are engaged in interstate commerce as there is in some other instances where it has been so consid*664ered, yet if the driver should so negligently manage the team as to run over a child in the street and kill it, the defendant could hardly claim the right to remove the cause to the Federal court on the ground he was engaged in interstate commerce while he was doing the deed complained of.

In the case at bar the plaintiff’s petition does not state that the defendant railroad company is engaged in interstate commerce, and appellant complains that that was an intentional omission of a fact to defeat the removal, but if the petition had stated that fact it would not have affected the question of removal. The court will take judicial notice that all the trunk line railroads in the State are engaged in interstate commerce, but the court will also take judicial notice that they are also engaged in intrastate traffic, and if while operating its instrumentalities in this State a railroad company should violate a law of this State to the injury of a person in this State, the cause of action would arise under our State law, not under an act of Congress, and when that is the case the fact that the business of the defendant included interstate transportation is immaterial so far as the question of State or Federal jurisdiction is concerned.

The plaintiff’s petition makes no reference to the act of Congress; it states a cause of action at common law that would be perfectly good if there had never been an act of Congress on the subject; it is bottomed on the law that requires a master to- furnish his servant a reasonably safe instrument with which to work and on the State statute which makes the defendant company liable for the negligence of the plaintiff’s fellow-servant.

Defendant does not undertake to frame a defense under the act of Congress; if it did, then, under the decision of the Supreme Court in the case last cited, there would be a case for removal, but defendant says that the plaintiff’s cause of action is based on that *665act, which, as we have already said, is not correct. It is argued on hehalf of defendant that plaintiff’s petition is skillfully drawn to avoid using terms that would give the Federal court jurisdiction yet enable the plaintiff at the trial to claim the benefit of the act of Congress. Whatever may have been the design, the petition states only a cause of action at common law and if at the trial the plaintiff was allowed to take benefit under the act of Congress, either in his evidence, his instructions or his argument it was error, but such error can be corrected on appeal. It does not go to the point of jurisdiction.

It is also argued that the Sullivan county case being based on the same cause of action and that case having been removed to the Federal court and the motion to remand having been there overruled the point of jurisdiction is res adjudicata.

There are some differences between the petitions in the two cases. The petition in the Sullivan county case looks very much as though the pleader had the mind to bring his case under the act of Congress, although that act is not mentioned by name. It states that the defendant was engaged in interstate commerce, which fact, under what we have already said, even if it was the intention to bring the suit under that act, was perhaps unnecessary because it was a fact of which the court would take judicial notice, yet it is a circumstance to show what the pleader had in his mind; and the petition also stated, which is more to the point, that it was the duty of defendant to have its cars equipped with automatic couplers that would couple by impact and that it failed to have such couplers and by reason of the failure the plaintiff was injured. There was at that time no law that required a railroad company to have such couplers except the act of Congress referred to; therefore the plaintiff pleaded that act. The plaintiff might have had a cause of action at common law and also one under the act of *666Congress and, if he had both, he might have sned on either, ox, having sned on one, he might have dismissed that one and brought suit on the other. If in the first place plaintiff had brought his suit in the United States Circuit Court bottomed on the statute and had afterwards dismissed that suit and brought this one in the State court bottomed on the common law, his position would have been exactly as it is now.. The order of the Federal court overruling plaintiff’s motion to remand the cause to the State court, if it was a final judgment on the question of jurisdiction, as defendant contends it was, it was so only in reference to that case which as we have said was different from this one. After that order was made the plaintiff dismissed that suit, and defendant does not question his right to do so or contend that it barred another suit on the merits.

But what is more important still.to observe in this connection is this, the question of a court’s jurisdiction ..-over the subject-matter is never settled until it is settled right. If the Federal court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this suit, the order of the court overruling the motion to remand the other suit, and plaintiff’s dismissing that suit without appealing from that order cannot give the court jurisdiction. Consent of parties cannot confer jurisdiction where the law has not conferred it.

We hold that the circuit court of Grundy county has jurisdiction to try this cause and did not err in refusing to order its removal.

II. We turn now to a consideration of the case on its merits. The petition states that plaintiff was in the service of the defendant as yardmaster in its yards at Milan and his duties were to assist in the switching of cars and making up trains, that the cars handled by defendant were and for a long time had been usually ‘ ‘ equipped with couplers and coupling *667apparatus designed and intended to couple with other couplers and coupling apparatus of others cars and engines to which they were to he, and it became plaintiff’s duty to attach and couple the same; that it was the duty of defendant to furnish an engine for plaintiff to use in those yards that could with reasonable safety be used for that purpose, but defendant negligently failed to do so and instead furnished an engine wholly unsuitable, not properly adapted, equipped or provided as aforesaid for said uses and purposes and which had generally by all railroads been abandoned for such use and purpose; that said engine was not provided with coupler or coupling apparatus which would with reasonable safety and convenience, or could be with safety and convenience, coupled with said cars, and was not provided as it should have been with footboards upon the sides or end thereof upon and for which plaintiff was to stand in the discharge of his duties; that it was a road engine, not a switch engine; that by reason of the defect when the engine came to couple to the car it failed to couple and it became necessary for plaintiff to go in between the engine and the car to effect a coupling and while he was there the engineer negligently, without signal to come, moved the engine on with great force and caught the plaintiff’s foot in the jaws of the coupler and crushed it.

Before answering, defendant filed a motion to require the plaintiff to make his petition more definite and certain, first, as to the supposed defects in the engine, and second, as to the conduct of the engineer; the motion was overruled and defendant excepted and the exception is duly preserved in the bill of exceptions. After the overruling of the motion and the preserving of the exception, defendant filed its answer to the merits.

The first question on this motion is, was the exception to the overruling the motion to make the peti*668tion more definite and certain waived by the filing of tbe answer? There are three decisions of this court that seem to answer that question in the affirmative, but it may be doubted if it was a question seriously in dispute in either case. [Sauter v. Leveridge, 103 Mo. 615; State ex rel. v. Bank, 160 Mo. 640; Dakan v. Chase, 197 Mo. 238.]

The first of those cases was a suit on two promissory notes, the original petition being in one count; a demurrer to it was sustained, then the plaintiff filed an amended petition in two counts alleging in each that the note sued on was lost. Defendant filed first a general demurrer which was overruled, then a motion to strike out the amended petition which was overruled, then a motion to make more definite and certain as to the time when the notes were lost, which was also overruled. Glancing at the briefs in that case we see no reference to the motion to make more definite and certain. The counsel seemed to treat it, as well they might, as frivolous; the appellant on that part of the case complained only of the overruling of his motion to strike out the amended petition and respondent said that if there was error in that ruling it was waived by pleading to the merits. The only discussion of that part of the case in the opinion relates to the motion to strike out, and after that discussion is ended and cases cited the court adds: “The same rule applies to the motion to make the petition more certain. Bliss on Code Pleading, 425a.” That is all there is in that case on that point, and if we go to the authority cited we find that it does not sustain the proposition, but is rather to the contrary. In section 425, Bliss on Code Pleading, the author quotes our statute, showing that the court may cause the pleading to be made more definite and certain by amendment, then he refers to other code states where the statute authorizes the court to strike out a pleading that is indefinite and uncertain or else the fault may be made the ground for demurrer. *669Then in the next section, 425a, the author proceeds to show how the different decisions and dicta in the different states may he reconciled; that is, inter alia, a pleading may he so uncertain and indefinite that facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action cannot he gathered from it, o,r a petition may contain statements of evidence which ordinarily should be stricken out as redundant, but if it contain nothing else and there would be no substantial pleading left if those statements should be stricken out, then the author says they should not be stricken out, and he concludes the subject by saying: “The only remedy, then, must be to move for an order to make the pleading more definite and certain — an efficient remedy for slovenly, ambiguous and argumentative statements.” If that is the only remedy a party has to apply to a material feature of his defense, and if he has done his best to avail himself of that remedy and the right has been denied him, what' justice is there in saying that he must abandon his right to have that adverse ruling reviewed by the appellate court or else abandon all further defense at that stage and leave his adversary master of the field?

In the second case above referred to, State ex rel. v. Bank, 160 Mo. 640; there was a motion to make the petition more definite and certain, but it was treated with indifference by appellant and no argument was made in its defense. - The following is all that appellant said in its brief on the subject: “The motion to make the petition more definite and certain was certainly well taken and it is unnecessary to argue this point, as it speaks for itself. But the vital point in the case is the assessment.” The case being presented by appellant in that way the court without going into an investigation and without discussion said that the filing of the answer and going to trial on the merits was a waiver of the motion.

*670In the third ease cited, Dakan v. Chase, 197 Mo. 238, what was said on this subject was obiter dictum, because as said in the opinion in that case, the motions and the exceptions were not preserved in the bill of exceptions on which the case came here. The writer of this opinion feels less hesitancy in criticising what was said in the opinion on this point in that case because he wrote that opinion himself.

Although, therefore, it appears that we have said in those three cases that the filing of an answer is a waiver of the exception to the overruling of a motion to make more definite and certain, yet upon an examination of them we see that the point was not seriously contended, for there was no discussion of the subject; therefore we ought not to hesitate to enter into a consideration of the question as though it was a new one.

The reason for our ruling in case of an overruled' demurrer has no application in a case of an overruled motion to make more definite and certain. "When the demurrer is overruled everything of substance, as contradistinguished from matters of form and convenience, is preserved to the end and is subject to review in the appellate court, but in an overruled motion to make more definite and certain nothing is preserved, if it is not preserved in a. bill of exceptions.

We say that filing an answer after a demurrer to a petition is overruled waives every objection that the demurrer could make to the petition except that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject or that the petition does not state a cause of action, and our reason for that is that all else reached by the demurrer is non-essential or does not deprive the defendant of any defense. That the plaintiff is a minor, that there is another suit pending on the same cause of action, that there is a defect of parties, that several causes of action are improperly united, that a party nained in the petition is not a necessary party — all these are *671really non-essential in the sense that they do not prevent the defendant from knowing exactly what he is. sued for or from making his defense. Bnt not so when a petition is so vagne and indefinite that defendant does not know what he is to answer.

It is the duty of a plaintiff to state his case with such clearness and definiteness that his adversary may know exactly what the complaint against him is. Our statute says the petition must contain “a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting a cause of action, without unnecessary repetition.” [Sec. 592, R. S. 1899; Ann. Stat. 1906, p. 612.] That duty devolves on the plaintiff and it is one that appeals to our sense of justice and fair play. There are no-words in the Code of Civil Procedure more significant, of the spirit which actuated its authors than the words-just quoted. The requirement is that the facts he stated, not mere conclusions of law. If the servant complains that his master furnished' him a defective implement he must state in what respect it was defective, unless it is a case in which the thing speaks for itself. In Sidway v. Missouri L. & L. Co., 163 Mo. 342, l. c. 375, the court said: “The theory of our code is that the facts in a. pleading are constitutive, and in order to he proved must he alleged. [Pier v. Hein, riehoffen, 52 Mo. 333.] Every substantial fact which the plaintiff in order to recover must prove, he must, also allege so that an issue can he made thereon. [Lanitz v. King, 93 Mo. 513.]”

In close connection with the section above quoted follows section 612, in which it is declared: “And when the allegations or denials of a pleading axe so indefinite or uncertain that the precise nature of the charge or denial is not apparent . . . the court may require the pleading to be made definite and certain. ’ ’

In an early case, discussing the above provisions-of the code in their application to an answer filed in *672the case, the court said: “The object of the present practice act was to introduce truth and simplicity in pleadings.” And again the court said: “The parties cannot expect to obtain an advantage by evasive pleading. If the pleading is insufficient, it ought to be disposed of before going into trial. . . . Indeed, the failure o.r neglect of the inferior courts to comply with the plain requirements of the statute renders it ahnost impossible to do anything with the practice act now in force.” [Atteberry v. Powell, 29 Mo. 429.]

Thus we see . how important the law-maker regarded this point and how important this court has regarded it. The motion to make more definite and certain is the only remedy the opposite party has against a pleading that is so evasive and indefinite as to leave him in the dark as. to what issue he must prepare to meet, and if the trial court erroneously overrules the motion, that remedy is lost unless he abandons the case at that point and allows his adversary to take judgment. Is there any justice in that? The appellant may bring us a record showing that the pleading of his adversary failed to comply with that important requirement of the statute, that he resorted to the method pointed out by the statute for relief, that the trial court erroneously overruled his motion, that submitting, as he was compelled to do, at his peril, to the erroneous ruling, he went to trial in the dark and issues were sprung on him that ought to have been tendered in the pleading, yet we say we will give no relief. How can we say that an error materially affecting the merits of the case was committed and the exception was preserved in the manner provided by law and the injury can be remedied in no other way, yet we will not hear it? Such ruling not only places a party at the mercy of the trial court, but its tendency is to belittle the motion and it does not stimulate care in considering it.

This court, in Melvin v. Railroad, 89 Mo. 106, in a *673short per curiam memorandum, reversed a judgment of the kind just supposed, and said it was error to have overruled the motion to make more definite and certain. If the overruling of such a motion was error and the party aggrieved has no other remedy why should we not correct the error? To correct error which cannot he elsewhere corrected is what this court was created for.

We have no fault to find with what we said in Sauter v. Leveridge, 103 Mo. 615; State ex rel. v. Bank, 160 Mo. 640; Dakan v. Chase, 197 Mo. 238, concerning any of the questions seriously in dispute in those cases; but what was said to the effect that filing an answer and going to trial after the overruling of a motion to make more definite and certain is a waiver of the error, if any, in such ruling, does not, on mature consideration, meet our approval and should not be followed.

The motion to require the plaintiff to make his petition more definite and certain should have been in part sustained or, if overruled altogether on the ground that in part it was sufficiently specific, the order of the court should have so indicated, so that the issues to be tried should be limited to those specifically tendered. The petition was sufficiently specific in charging negligence on the part of the engineer, whose duty it was to hold the engine until he received a signal from the plaintiff to come forward, yet who, the petition said, came on without signal. The petition is also specific enough in saying that the engine used was defective in the fact that it did not have footboards on the sides for the switchman to stand on. Therefore, the plaintiff had the right to prove, if he could, that he was injured through the specified negligence of the engineer or because of the absence of the footboards, but he did not try his case on éither of those theories. There was evidence tending to show that- the engineer was negligent in the respect specified, but the plaintiff *674did not ask an instruction that entitled him to recover for that negligence; the only reference to the engineer’s alleged negligence in plaintiff’s instructions was on the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence. There was evidence tending to show that there were no footboards on the sides of the engine, but there was no evidence tending to show that the absence of the footboards had anything to do with the accident.

The theory on which the plaintiff tried his case was that the engine was unsafe because it had a defective coupler, and that is the theory on which he gained his verdict, but the petition does not specify in what respect the coupler was defective, and the motion to make more definite and certain called for such specification. The petition states that it was a road engine, whereas it should have been a switch engine, that it was not adapted to such use, that the coupler on it was not “reasonably safe and convenient” to be used in. coupling cars for switching purposes, that the engine was wholly unsuitable for such purpose. To say that the engine was unsuitable and that the coupler was unsafe is but to state a conclusion; it is not a “plain and concise statement of the facts constituting a cause of action.” Why was the engine not suitable? In what particular was the coupler defective? The insufficiency of the petition in these particulars is clearly illustrated by the facts of this case; the point on which the case seemed at last to turn was that in the coupler on the engine there was not as much lateral movement as in another kind of coupler in general use. Counsel for plaintiff at the trial said that he had himself just been informed of that defect. If plaintiff thought that that was a defect and defendant was to be held liable in damages therefor, what justice was there in not requiring the plaintiff to state in his petition the fact on which he relied?

The ruling of the court denying the plaintiff’s motion to make more definite and certain and allowing *675the case to be tried on the vague and indefinite statements as to the insufficiency of the engine, was error.

ELI. In his opening speech at the trial the attorney for the plaintiff stated that there were two special causes of negligence alleged in the petition: one the drawhead or coupler of the engine, the other the act of the engineer putting the engine in motion without a signal for him to do so. Whilst the testimony was quite voluminous and wandered sometimes from the real issues, yet in the main it was directed to the issues mentioned by the attorney and chiefly to the character of the coupler.

The testimony for the plaintiff tended to show as follows: Plaintiff was, as stated in the petition, yardmaster in defendant’s switch yard at Milan, or, as stated by him in his testimony, foreman of the engine, by which term we understand he meant that the engine should move only on his signal. His duties were to attend to the switching of cars and making up of trains, he was foreman of the switching crew. He had been in the service of the defendant in this capacity at this place about six or seven months prior to the accident. The engine furnished by defendant for switching purposes in that yard was not a regular switch engine but was a road engine. A part of the time tiff’s witnesses, over defendant’s objection, that a road engine. There was opinion testimony of one of plaintiff’s witnesses over defendant’s objection that a road engine was not suitable for or adapted to switching. He stated that the engine in question was reasonably safe for the purposes for which it was being used, but was not as safe as a switch engine and not adapted at all for switching. Plaintiff himself testified that when the switch engine was in the yard -they used it in preference to the road engine “because it was more convenient, better to work with.” Nearly all the cars coming into defendant’s yards were equipped with an *676automatic coupler called the Tower coupler, which was a later invention than the Leeds coupler and had come into general use by nearly all railroads in preference to the Leeds. The difference in the mechanisms of the two couplers was described in the evidence. The engine that was in use in this instance was equipped with a Tower coupler on the rear end and a Leeds on the front end. The Tower coupler was so contrived that it would couple automatically by impact with another coupler of the same kind or with a Leeds, but the Leeds would not automatically couple with another Leeds because it had a solid case head that did not open to receive the knuckle of the other. All of the plaintiff’s witnesses on this subject but one testified that the Leeds was an automatic coupler, and that one said he did not so consider it, because whilst it would couple automatically with other standard couplers it would not so couple with one of its kind. Two Tower couplers would not couple automatically by impact unless the jaws of one were open and those of the other closed and if the jaws of a Tower were open a Leeds would couple with it as effectually as with another Tower. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses explained that if there had been a Tower coupler on the front end of the engine the switchman could have opened the jaws of it while standing on the front footboard. But that fact could have had no influence in this accident, because in order to make the coupling, even if it was with two Towers, it was necessary to have the jaws of one open and those of the other closed. If both were open they would not couple. In this instance the jaws of the coupler on the car were already open, therefore if it had been a Tower instead of a Leeds on the engine the switchman would not have opened it, but would have left it with a drawhead as rigid as that of the Leeds.

The accident occurred in the effort to couple the Leeds, which was on the front end of the engine, with *677a Tower, which was on a car to be switched; the jaws of the Tower, as already said, were open to receive the drawhead of the Leeds, and the engine, under the direction of the plaintiff, moved forward to make the connection, but it so happened that that end of the car was on a curve leading from the main track, on which the engine was moving, to a sidetrack, on which the car was standing, and that condition threw the two couplers a little out of line with each other and therefore when the two bodies came together the Leeds coupler struck to one side of the Tower and they failed to unite. Then, according to the plaintiff, he got off of the footboard of the engine where he wa,s riding and signaled to the engineer to back, and when the engine had backed, plaintiff went to the end of the car and endeavored to shove the Tower coupler with his hand into position where it Would be in line with the Leeds, but not being able to shove it with his hand he attempted to do so with his foot, and he placed his right foot on the inside of the Tower’s jaws, standing on his left leg, and while in that position the engine came without signal and by the impact the Leeds coupled with the Tower and caught the plaintiff’s foot and crushed it.

Thus far there is nothing in the evidence tending to show that the appliances furnished were not reasonably safe when handled with ordinary care. The road engine was not as convenient or as well adapted to switching work as an engine made for that purpose, but however clumsy or inconvenient the implement may be, the master is not to blame if it is reasonably safe. The law does .not hold the master liable for not providing for the convenience of his servants if he ex-, ercises reasonable care to provide for their safety. The master complies with all that the law requires when he uses reasonable care to provide for the safety of Ms servants, the care reqMred varying in degree according to the character of the business, that is, what *678would be reasonable care in a business involving little danger might not be so esteemed in another business involving great danger, but the standard of measurement is reasonable care for the safety of the servant under the circumstances. [Huhn v. Railroad, 92 Mo. 440; Blanton v. Dold, Í09 Mo. 64; F'riel v. Railroad, 115 Mo. 508; Steinhauser v. Spraul, 127 Mo. 541.] We find the term “suitable appliances” used by the law-writers, but “suitable” in that connection means compatible with safety. Some of the plaintiff’s witnesses said that a road engine was not suitable for switching, and that was evidently correct in a certain sense, but none of them said it was not reasonably safe; the plaintiff himself only said that the switch engine was more convenient. This engine had been used there for a long time and it had performed the work of a switch engine with reasonable safety. Whilst some of the witnesses were allowed to express the opinion that it was not suitable, yet none of them ventured to show in what way it was not safe. It would not require a very learned expert to be able to say that a road engine was not as suitable for switching purposes as a regular switch engine — every man of common experience knows that — but when that is said it is far from saying that a road engine cannot be used for switching cars with reasonable safety when handled with ordinary care. No witness in this case said so.

This engine as equipped, would have effected the coupling automatically by impact if the coupler on the car had been in line with it; the only reason for the failure was that the car was on a curve. The plaintiff was the master of the operation, the jaws of the Tower coupler on the car had been opened by him or under his supervision to receive the Leeds drawhead, and he could have adjusted it to do so at the same time he opened the jaws if he had observed the situation, but he overlooked the fact that the end of the car was on a *679curve and therefore his first attempt to couple was a failure. Who was to blame for that? Certainly not "the Leeds coupler.

A great deal was said in the course of the trial about the desirability of having couplers that would not require the switchman to go between the cars, borrowing in that respect the language of the act of Congress regulating interstate commerce, but whilst the act of Congress had nothing to do with this case, yet, even if it had, this Leeds coupler did not require the plaintiff to go between the cars. The jaws of the Tower coupler could be opened by a device of its own without going between the cars, and when open and in line the Leeds would couple by impact. But it is said that the Tower coupler has a lateral movement; that is, it may be moved three or four inches to the right or left and thus bring it in line with the coupler with which it is aimed to unite, whereas the Leeds has a lateral movement of. only about an inch and a half, and the argument is that if there had been a Tower coupler on the front end of this engine the plaintiff could have stood on the footboard of the engine and have shoved it to one side and thus have brought it into line; and the plaintiff’s whole case, as far as it is bottomed on a defect of engine, was reduced to that point and on that point he went to the jury and obtained his verdict. But that defect, if defect it was, was not pleaded in the petition and if it was known to the plaintiff and considered by him a defect, he did not mention it to his counsel, because as the counsel himself said at the trial, it had just then come to his knowledge. But suppose it had been pleaded and suppose it was a defect that might have caused an accident, the vital question still remains, did it have anything to do in causing this accident?

The aim was to couple the Leeds coupler on the front end of the engine with the Tower coupler on the end of the car. The engine came forward under plain*680tiff’s direction to make the coupling, the plaintiff riding, as he now claims, on the pilot of the engine. When the contact came the effort to couple failed because the couplers were not in line. Then the plaintiff gave the engineer the signal to back and when the engine had backed plaintiff got off the engine and walked to the car and undertook to adjust the coupler by shoving it with his foot; then the engine came and caught him. When the plaintiff was coming forward standing on the pilot of the engine he expected the coupling to be made by the impact when the coupler on the engine should strike that on the car, and it was not until the contact had come and the failure to couple had resulted that the plaintiff discovered the necessity of a lateral movement of one coupler or the other; then he got off the engine and went to the car. If there had been a Tower coupler on that end of the engine the plaintiff would have had the choice of moving either that one or the one on the car and he might have chosen the one ox the other, but the purpose would have been served as well in moving the one as the other. If the alleged defect in the Leeds was obviated by the presence of the Tower, where was the danger in having a Leeds? If the coupler on the engine had been a Tower instead of a Leeds and plaintiff had choice which he would move, it is not difficult to imagine why he would have preferred to stand on the ground to move the coupler on the car rather than to stand on the footboard of the pilot of the engine to move the other, especially if the engine was moving and more especially if it was necessary for him to use his foot in the operation which would involve standing on one leg. But however that may be, the plaintiff makes out no case of negligence on account of the lack of lateral movement in the Leeds when there was a Tower at hand to perform the same service.

In the first instruction given for the plaintiff the *681jury were authorized to find for the plaintiff if they found that the coupler attached to the engine was defective “by reason of not having sufficient lateral play or movement to enable it to conform to the other couplings to which the same was undertaken to he coupled,” and if the plaintiff’s foot was “caught and crushed solely by reason of such defective coupler on said engine without any contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff,” etc. It was error to submit the case to the jury on that issue.

IV. The plaintiff, as has been pointed out in a preceding paragraph of this opinion, first brought his suit based on the act of Congress therein mentioned and that cause having been removed to a Federal court, plaintiff, preferring to sue in a State court, dismissed that suit and brought this one founded on the common law, which he had a perfect right to do and no criticism of his action in that particular is intended. The plaintiff’s learned counsel were very careful to avoid saying anything in their pleading in this case that could give any ground for calling this an action under the act of Congress and, since they preferred the State court as they had a right to do, they were wise in so carefully shaping their petition. But having put themselves altogether outside of the act of Congress in their pleading, they ought to have remained outside in their evidence and their arguments before the jury.

The act of Congress requires railroads engaged in interstate commerce to use automatic couplers that will couple by impact without requiring switchmen to go between the cars. Whilst the Leeds coupler, as it was being used in the case now before us, was an automatic coupler and did not require the switchman to go between the cars, yet, because it would not couple automatically with one of its'kind, it did not measure up to the standard prescribed by the act of Congress. But an act is not per se negligence at common law *682because it fails to meet the requirement of a statute. Failure to sound the whistle at a crossing is not negligence per se at common law, but is so under our statute. Failure to place a guard over machinery is not negligence per se at common law, but is made so by statute under certain conditions. So, although the Leeds coupler may have come under the ban of the act of Congress, yet unless it could be shown to have not been reasonably safe for the uses to which it was put, it furnished no cause of action for the plaintiff in this case.

Sometimes the fact that a particular mechanical device which had been in general use but had been generally abandoned in favor of another mechanism is significant of the idea that the former was abandoned because the latter was found to be safer, and in such case evidence of the general abandonment is competent on the question of safety, but unless the evidence shows or the circumstances indicate, that it was abandoned for that reason, it is not competent and the jury should not be instructed to consider it. Many mechancial devices that at one time were in popular favor have been generally abandoned because later inventions are more efficient, that is, will produce more for the same amount of investment. This is as true of railroad equipments as it is of manufacturers. Even the air-brake, whilst it is perhaps safer than the old fashioned hand instrument, yet has its economic characteristics that commend it to men whose chief aim in business is financial success.

All the trunk line railroads in the country are engaged' in interstate commerce and they must all conform to the acts of Congress passed in pursuance of the Federal Constitution on that subject, therefore it is easy to account for the fact that nearly all, if not all, the railroads in the country have abandoned the Leeds coupler; since the passage of that act of Congress they have abandoned it because it has been considered as *683condemned by the act of Congress. Bnt that does not justify a court while trying a cause of action arising under the common law, in instructing the jury that if the evidence shows that the Leeds coupler had been generally abandoned, without anything to show why, they may take that fact into account in determining whether or not it was safe. But that is what the court did in the second instruction given at the request of the plaintiff.

One of the plaintiff’s witnesses was an inspector of safety appliances for the Interstate Commerce Commissioners, and one reading his evidence cannot fail to see that all his opinion evidence was derived from the standpoint of his official connection with the Interstate Commerce Commissioners and the act of Congress under which he held his office. In spite of the objections on the part of the defendant and rulings of the court sustaining the objections, this witness was constantly (and perhaps unconsciously) conveying to the jury the idea that the Leeds coupler had been condemned by the act of Congress, for example: “Q. What has become of that coupler (the Leeds) ? A. All railroads are doing away with that and adopting automatic couplers. Q. For what reason? A. Because the law makes them.” There was, of course, no law but the act of Congress so requiring, and the court should not have allowed that evidence to go in; but the court not only allowed it but instructed the jury in the second instruction that if the railroads in the country had generally provided their switch engines with automatic couplers that would couple by impact without the necessity of going between cars, and if the “Leeds coupler” (by name in the instruction) had generally been abandoned, “and was not reasonably safe, suitable and adapted” for switching purposes and the other kind was easily accessible and obtainable, then it was the duty of defendant to have discarded the Leeds and obtained the other .kind.

*684Not only was the requirement of the act of Congress and the failure of this coupler to meet that requirement carried by the evidence of this witness to the mind of the jury, but counsel for the plaintiff in their argmnents were unable to restrain themselves within their common law lines. Several times the defendant objected to their remarks and the objections were sustained, but it did no good — the thought was planted in the minds of the jury and could not be eradicated by the court’s merely sustaining the objections. It sometimes happens that a trial judge is conscious that a cause on trial has drifted away from his control and is decided against his rulings, and when that is the case he has but one course of duty, that is, to set aside the verdict.

For the reasons above stated the court erred in giving the second instruction for the plaintiff. Instruction three for the plaintiff contained the same infirmities as above mentioned in instruction two and it also should have been refused.

Y. There was evidence tending to show that it was the duty of the engineer to hold the engine in place after the first effort to make the coupling had failed, until he received a signal from the plaintiff to come on, and that he neglected to observe that duty but came on without signal. The testimony on that point was conflicting but still there was sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to go to the country on that issue. That question was not submitted to the jury in a form that authorized a recovery if decided in plaintiff’s favor. On a retrial the plaintiff will be entitled to have that issue presented to the jury.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to be retried according to the law as herein expressed.

Lamim, P. J., and Woodson, J., concur in all except paragraph II, as to which their views are expressed in the dissenting opinion of Lamm, P. J. *685Graves, J., concurs in all except that in his opinion an exception to the overruling of a motion to make a petition more definite and certain is not preserved unless it is assigned for error in the motion for a new trial.





Dissenting Opinion

DISSENTING OPINION,

LAMM, P. J.

No system of jurisprudence can be so wise and all-embracing that hard cases cannot be put in matters of practice. Might it have been better to allow appeals from orders overruling motions to make more definite and certain, or to strike out? Much can be said against that plan because it would clog the machinery of justice and breed delay. Now, delay tends toward a denial of justice. Justice shall be administered without delay, said the Great Charter and so says our Constitution. Experience taught, we have reached the settled rule of practice that joining issue on.the merits is a waiver of interlocutory rulings on motions and demurrers, except where the petition does not state a cause of action or there is a lack of jurisdiction of the subject. We should stand by that rule; for we have said so so often that the profession understands our position. If we unsettle the rule the door is opened wide for confusion to come in — certainty being of the very essence of good law. If the rule inherently and necessarily tended to injustice in the end, it would be different. But it will be found to rarely, if ever, so result.

(a) Take the case of a motion to elect. If causes of action are commingled which contradict each other, and are self-destructive through repugnancy, the point can be saved after answering, for in such case the petition does not state a cause of ^action. [White v. Railroad, 202 Mo. l. c. 562; Jordan v. Railroad, 202 Mo. l. c. 426-7.] Or if such répugnant causes go to *686the jury and a general verdict comes in, a motion in arrest lies. Or if there is no repugnancy and the evidence sustains the whole charge, what injury is done if the jury be properly instructed?

Take another case. If the petition commingle good with bad causes of action and a motion to strike out, or to elect, or a demurrer on that score is overruled and a general verdict comes in afterwards for plaintiff, the defendant ultimately suffers no wrong because a motion in arrest lies. [Mooney v. Kennett, 19 Mo. 551; Christal v. Craig, 80 Mo. l. c. 371.]

Take the case of a motion to make more specific and certain. If it be inadvertently overruled and issue is thereafter joined by answer and if the petition states a cause of action at all, the interest of defendant may be guarded in the introduction of testimony, or in instructions, or if, on the trial to the merits, a just result has not been reached, justice can be attained in the trial court by sustaining a motion for a new trial. Therefore, in the long run, no harm is done.

If however, a defendant refuse to stand on his motion to make more specific (lacking faith, maybe), but answers over and invokes and takes his chance of winning or losing on a trial on the merits, that chance, so invoked and taken, waives his motion by abandoning it, and heals the error, if any, in overruling it. Otherwise a court becomes a place of gambling on chances, and the time and expense of a trial are wasted if on appeal we lose sight of the very judgment appealed from, cutting behind it (though it may have been rendered on a fair trial free from error) and treading back and tripping up a respondent’s heels on an interlocutory ruling not affecting the merits of the judgment a whit. To overturn a verdict and judgment in that way is not in accord with our practice act. [R. S. 1899, secs. 865, 602.]

My learned brother’s opinion explodes, it seems to me, the doctrine of a line of cases, if we rule as he *687has written. For example: White v. Railroad, supra; Jordan v. Railroad, supra; Ewing v. Vernon Co., 216 Mo. 681; O’Brien v. Railroad, 212 Mo. l. c. 69 et seq.; Scovill v. Glasner, 79 Mo. 454 et seq.; Paddock v. Somes, 102 Mo. l. c. 235; McMillen v. City of Columbia, 122 Mo. App. 34. See also the cases criticised by him.

Therefore, I dissent to paragraph two of the opinion.

(b) Moreover in this case the attention of the trial court was not called by the motion for a new trial to the error, if any, in the ruling on the motion to make more specific. Such motion for a new trial, as its name indicates, assembles the reasons and grounds for a new tria,! and presents them to the trial judge anew in order that he may have one last chance to heal his own errors by opening the case to be heard without error. Under our practice act all motions must specify the grounds the movent relies on. If the ruling on the motion to make more specific was such ground, then it should have been so stated in the motion for a new trial. If it was not such ground it need not be stated, but if it was no such ground below, it is no such ground above. If a ruling on a motion to make more specific need not be challenged in the motion for a new trial, then, by the same token, rulings on continuances, applications for changes of venue, motions to strike out, motions to suppress depositions, motions for judgment on the pleadings, or for this, that or the other thing, need not be challenged in the motion for a new trial, but all of them come here for review though abandoned by that motion. I do not agree to that. Since, then, by discussing the motion to make more specific in paragraph two of his opinion, my Brother necessarily assumes it is here to discuss, it would seem the opinion by implication will mean to the profession that such motion gets here *688tbougli tlie ruling nisi be not challenged by the motion for a new trial.

Therefore, I dissent to such apparent inferential holding.

In all other respects I concur.

Woodson, J., agrees with these views.
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