183 Mo. App. 304 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff on account of personal injuries received through the negligence of defendant. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
It appears- plaintiff was a passenger on defendant’s street car at the time of her injury, which was occasioned through precipitating her from the step of the ear into the public street. Plaintiff boarded defendant’s car at the corner of Eleventh and Wash
The petition charges, first, that defendant wa ~ negligent, in that the conductor negligently caused the car to move violently forward before plaintiff had reached a position of safety thereon and thus occasioned her injury by throwing her into the street; and, second, that the conductor negligently caused the car to start forward when he knew plaintiff was not in a position of safety thereon and was likely to be crowded or pushed off of the same because of the turmoil and the pushing and shoving of the passengers then upon its rear platform. Because of this carelessness on the part of the conductor and the crowding, pushing and shoving of the passengers on the rear platform at the time it was started, plaintiff avers she received her in
By instructions given for plaintiff, the court referred these several specifications of negligence to the jury as predicates of liability against defendant, if they so found the fact to be. Among other things, the court directed the jury that if they found plaintiff was duly careful on her part and that defendant’s conductor started the car while she was yet on the step in the act of boarding it and that because of such starting she came to her injury, through being pushed or shoved therefrom into the street by the pushing and crowding of the passengers, occasioned by the fight, then she was entitled to recover, though it appears the passengers on the rear platform of the car were negligent, too, and that the carelessness of such passengers contributed in part with that of defendant to her injury.
Plaintiff’s instruction touching this matter is in nowise criticised except it is said the court erred in submitting the matter of plaintiff’s being pushed off of the step of the ear by other persons under the circumstances stated, for the reason there is no evidence tending to prove such to be the fact. It is true plaintiff testified that she was thrown off of the car by its sudden start while she was in the act of boarding it, but she says, too, that “people were pressing toward me and I could not get on. The platform was crowded and the people were crowding towards me. ’ ’ Moreover, several of defendant’s witnesses testified pointedly that plaintiff told them she was pushed off of the car by other passengers because of the fight in progress on the rear platform. Indeed, it appears from the evidence introduced on the part of defendant that its theory of the case, put forward in defense, in part, at least, is that plaintiff was pushed off of the car by other passengers moving about on the rear platform for which it was in nowise responsible, in- that it is
At the instance of defendant, the court instructed the jury that if plaintiff became frightened by reason of the fact that other passengers were fighting on the bach platform of the ear and voluntarily jumped or stepped from the car because of that fact, then she is not entitled to recover and the verdict should be for defendant. But it refused the following instructiot requested by defendant in the form it was proffered :
“.The court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that the plaintiff fell from the car in question by reason of being pushed or jostled by other passengers thereon, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover and your verdict must be for the defendant. ’ ’
Though the court refused this instruction as requested, it gave it in modified form as follows:
‘ ‘ The court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that the plaintiff fell from the car in question, solely by reason of being pushed or jostled by other passengers thereon and not by reason of any carelessness of the persons in charge of the car in question, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover and your verdict must be for the defendant.”
It is argued the court erred in thus refusing defendant’s instruction No. 6 and giving it in the modified form. Obviously there was no error in refusing this instruction as requested, for, while it authorized a verdict in favor of defendant, it reckoned with but a partial view of the evidence. There is evidence, as before said, tending to prove that plaintiff came to
But it is said that though such be true, the court erred in giving the instruction in its modified form, for it implies that plaintiff may recover for “any carelessness of the persons in charge of the car in question.” The court modified the instruction by inserting the word “solely” in one place and the words “and not by reason of any carelessness of the persons in charge of the car in question.” »It is true the words last quoted, when considered apart from the other instructions, seem to imply that defendant might be responsible for “any carelessness of the persons in charge of the car,” when, as a rule, one may recover only on the specific acts of negligence alleged in the petition. If an instruction were given on the part of plaintiff authorizing a recovery in the instant case, in such general terms, it would, no doubt, merit condem
. The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.