263 Mo. 509 | Mo. | 1915
STATEMENT.
This is a proceeding by certiorari to review and quash the judgment and decision of the Kansas City Court of Appeals, in reviewing the case of Andrew J. Stark, Jr., by Guardian, v. Chicago, R. I. & Pac. Ry. Co., wherein the plaintiff recovered a judgment in the trial court for one thousand dollars for injuries caused by the fall of a loaded truck, standing on the platform of the railroad station, against which plaintiff leaned, causing it to fall over and catch and break his leg, and inflicting other injuries. The truck fell because it had no proper support at one end — a leg intended to support that end was partly broken, and when the weight of plaintiff, a boy of fourteen, was applied to that end of the truck, it tipped and caused the injury.
OPINION.
Applying tbis rule to tbe matter in band, we are unable to find in any part of tbe decision of tbe Court of-Appeals certified to us, the announcement of any principle of law repugnant to tbe ruling made by tbis court in. tbe case of Kelley v. Lawrence. . That case is directly referred to by tbe Court of Appeals, its authority is not questioned by them, and they distinctly put their ruling upon tbe ground that tbe facts in tbe case before them were essentially different from those in tbe case of Kelley v. Lawrence. In tbe latter case an employee of tbe defendants passed through a viaduct from tbe main store to another building where bis employer stored buggies for sale, for tbe purpose of making a trade witb a prospective purchaser. Upon tbe return of tbe employee, plaintiff, and tbe purchaser, they stopped in tbe viaduct for tbe purpose of discussing the deal, and tbe plaintiff sat down, or started to sit
“The plaintiff in this cause, as disclosed by the evidence preserved in the record, was entirely familiar with the use of this viaduct; he used it frequently for a considerable length of time; he concedes that he knew that this railing or banister was not placed on the sides of the viaduct to be used as a seat or a resting place, and that it was not intended or designed for that purpose; hence the use of it by him in the manner disclosed by the evidence, which resulted in the injuries complained of, must be attributed to his own carelessness and negligence, and this being so, the defendants should not be held liable for such injuries, and the.court properly sustained the demurrer to the evidence interposed by defendants at the close of the plaintiff’s case.”
We fail to see anything in the judgment of the Court of Appeals in the case in hand repugnant to the above ruling of this court, for there was nothing in the evidence recited in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, which shows that the boy injured in this case was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. He was rightfully on the platform of the defendant railroad, and the evidence does not demonstrate that he was aware of the defective and dangerous condition of the broken truck permitted by defendant to remain standing on the platform. The matter in hand, therefore, does not fall within the ruling of the court in the case cited (to which I dissent) that the decision of any Court of Appeals, and its judgment
It follows that the writ of certiorari in this case was improvidently awarded and should be quashed. It is so ordered.
The foregoing opinion of Bond, J., rendered in Division One is adopted as the opinion of the Court in Banc.