126 Mo. App. 619 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
Action by a passenger against a common carrier to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the carrier. Judgment was for plaintiff in the sum of $1,500, and defendant appealed.
Between eight and nine o’clock in the evening of May 29, 1905, plaintiff became a passenger on an electric car operated by defendant on the Chelsea Park line of its street railway system in Kansas City. She entered the car at Tenth and Main streets in Kansas City, Missouri, paid her fare, and told the conductor (so she testified) that she wished to alight at the intersection of Sixteenth street and Stewart avenue in Kansas. City, Kansas, a regular stopping place. She was on her way to visit a married daughter who lived near that corner. The conductor failed to stop> the car when it arrived there and plaintiff, who was not very familiar with the locality, did not know she was being carried beyond
It is not contended, from the foregoing statement, that the conductor compelled plaintiff to alight at Midland Park or that he intended to be understood as refusing to carry her to the end of the line and back to her destination, but that he induced her to leave the car and walk back over the track as the distance was short and that was the most expeditious course for her to pursue. By walking, perhaps four blocks, plaintiff could have gone to the home of her daughter over public streets, but owing to the darkness and her ignorance of the locality, she concluded to follow the directions of the conductor. She walked but a short distance on the track when, unexpectedly, she came to a trestle bridge, of the presence of which she had no knowledge, fell through it, and was injured.
The facts related by defendant’s witnesses differ materially from those we have just stated. The conductor denies that plaintiff informed him of her wish to alight at Sixteenth street and Stewart avenue and states that as the car neared that place, he called.out the name of the station loud enough for all of the passengers in the car to hear it and that, in answer to a signal given by a passenger, the car came to a full stop, the passenger alighted and the car remained stationary long enough for plaintiff to have departed in safety, but she remained
At the conclusion of the evidence, defendant requested and the court refused to give an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. The theory of the law of the case, expressed in the instructions given to the jury is well exemplified in two instructions which we will quote, the first being one given on behalf of plaintiff, and the second one asked by defendant which the court refused to give. Plaintiff’s instruction is as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that it was the duty of defendant and their employees to exercise toward the plaintiff the highest practical degree of care and skill of a very prudent person engaged in like business in view of all the facts and circumstances as shown in evidence and to carry her to her place of destination. If, therefore, you believe and find from the evidence that on the 29th day of May, 1905, Mrs. Stevens was a passenger upon the car mentioned in evidence, and that Mrs. Stevens was carried past her place of destination to Midland Park station and that at said Midland Park station said car was brought to a stop to let off passengers, and if you further believe that the conductor in charge of said car there assisted plaintiff to alight and negligently and carelessly instructed plaintiff to walk back over the track to her place of destination, and if you further believe and find that plaintiff did alight from said car in*624 obedience to the instructions of the conductor in charge of said car and walked back over the said track and while so walking back over said track, plaintiff fell through a trestle and was thereby injured, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff, provided you find and believe from the evidence that at the time plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care.”
Defendant’s refused instruction follows: “If you find and believe from the evidence that plaintiff was a passenger upon the car of defendant and desired to alight therefrom at Sixteenth and Stewart avenue, when said car reached said point, and that plaintiff notified defendant’s conductor that she desired to alight at said point, then if you further find and believe from the evidence that when defendant’s car in question reached Sixteenth and Stewart avenue, said car was stopped at said point for the purpose of allowing passengers to get on or off of the same and the conductor upon the car of defendant announced that said car had reached said point sufficiently loud for all passengers in said car to hear the same, and that passengers on said car got off of the same, and that said car remained standing at said point a reasonably sufficient length of time for all who were on said car desiring to alight, to get off in safety, and plaintiff wholly failed and neglected to get off of said car and remained on said car until after it had started on from said point, then you are instructed that defendant is not liable for any injury caused to plaintiff by reason of her being carried past said point at Sixteenth and Stewart avenues.”
It will be observed that the jury were instructed to return a verdict for plaintiff should they find that she was injured in consequence of the negligence of the conductor in directing her to Avalk back over the track without telling her of the presence of the trestle bridge in her way, regardless of whether she had been carried- beyond her destination by the fault of the conductor or by rea
From the standpoint presented by plaintiff’s statement of facts, her injury was the direct result of the negligent acts of the conductor, first, in failing to give her a reasonable opportunity to leave the car in safety at her destination, and then, in inducing her to alight at the next station, to return over the track without informing her of the obstruction which he must have known lay in that path. When plaintiff, at the beginning of the transportation informed the conductor of the place where she wished to depart, the place thus designated being a regular station, it became the duty of the conductor to stop the car at that place, call its- name or otherwise notify her that she had reached it, and to hold the car a réasonably sufficient time for her to leave it in safety.
The relation of passenger and carrier does not cease until the carrier transports the passenger to his destination and affords him a reasonable opportunity to alight in safety from the vehicle. And, as was well said by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Winkler v. Railroad, 21 Mo. App. 99: “If a railroad carrier, instead of discharging his passenger at the place of destination called for by the contract of carriage, lands him at another place from which he cannot reach the place of destination by any practicable route without incurring a serious danger, and the passenger, immediately thereafter, proceeding by the only practicable route to the place of destination, without fault or negligence on his part, encounters such danger and is hurt, we have no
Left as she Avas in darkness, in a strange place, and
Passing to the second question we have marked out for solution, we have reached the conclusion that prejudicial error is embodied in the instructions under which the issues of fact were submitted to the jury. Plaintiff’s right to recover was made by them to depend entirely on the question of whether, the conductor told her to walk on the track without telling her that she Avonld have to cross a trestle bridge. Finding this fact in her favor, the jury was compelled to return a verdict for her (the fact that she fell through the trestle and was injured not being disputed), though they might believe from the evidence that she avus carried past her station in consequence of her oaaui negligence. If, as defendant’s witnesses say, plaintiff did not notify the conductor of her purpose to stop at Sixteenth street, and when the car stopped at that point to permit passengers to alight, remained in her seat, she is not entitled to recover from the fact that the conductor afterwards negligently directed her relative to the best way to reach her destination. We do not agree with counsel for defendant in the proposition that when the car left Sixteenth street, she had ceased to become a passenger and defendant owed her no contractual duty. The fare she paid entitled her to ride to the end of the line if she chose. On receiving timely notice from her, it was the duty of the defendant to stop at any regular station and.
In stepping to the street, under the hypothesis of facts we now have under consideration, plaintiff voluntarily abandoned her status as passenger and, thereafter, she could follow the advice or directions the conductor had given her, or proceed in any other way; but in either event, defendant should not be held responsible for her future mishaps. Such directions or advice bear no relation to the performance by the carrier of its part of the contract of transportation and, therefore, cannot be said to have been an act of the conductor performed within the scope of his employment. It was his business to perform his master’s contract, viz., to carry plaintiff to the place where she notified him to stop for her to alight and to hold the car long enough for her to step
In view of the fact that the cause must be remanded for another trial, we will add that as plaintiff has specified in the petition a number of injuries inflicted by her fall, she will not be permitted to recover damages for injuries not specifically alleged.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.