138 Mo. App. 143 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
— This is a suit for damages because of defendants’ negligence.
The defendant city granted a charter to its co-defendant railroad company to lay down a line of railroad, oyer which to operate its cars on Fourth street between Main and Grant streets, and on Grant street north to Third street, and west on Third to Main street, and south on Main street to the southern boundary of the city. At the times herein mentioned, the defendant railroad company had built its line of railroad and was operating its cars oyer said streets by the use of electricity. The company, in doing work in and about its tracks, dug up the earth at the intersection of Main and Fourth streets and piled it up near the east line of Main street and near the southwest corner of the public square.
Plaintiff’s evidence is to the effect that the pile of dirt had remained on said street for several weeks prior to the 29th day of January; that it was from fifteen to thirty inches in height; that Main street was thirty-one feet, six inches wide between the curbings; that the track of defendant was laid about the middle of the street; that it turns east from Main onto Fourth street at the southwest corner of the square and makes a loop around the square and intersects with South Main street again at the southwest corner of the square; that in making the turn off of Main street to Fourth street, the track comes within two feet of the curb at the southeast corner of the cross street; that the cars bound for Galena, after making the circuit of the square, were usually stopped in front of the business house of Holbrook, the car projecting slightly south of the north line of Fourth street; that said pile of earth on Fourth
Defendants’ evidence tends to show that all the dirt piled upon the street prior to the 28th day of January had been removed; that there was sufficient room between the pile of dirt and the curb for vehicles to pass in safety; that plaintiff was driving at a rapid gait; that there was sufficient light to enable a traveler to see the pile of dirt; that, although plaintiff’s horse usually was gentle, it had a habit of shying and shied at street cars; that plaintiff lost control of him which caused him to run upon the pile of dirt; that after passing over the pile of dirt nothing happened until the horse struck a stone cross-walk in the street when he slipped and fell, turning the cart over and throwing plaintiff out.
Plaintiff recovered judgment for $4,000, from which defendants appealed.
In the trial of the case, the court excluded evidence
Defendants offered to prove by a witness tbe evidence of plaintiff on a former trial of tbe case. ■ As bis testimony was taken down by a stenographer and tbe notes shown to be still in existence, and defendants not being-able to show diligence in an effort to obtain a copy of sucb notes, tbe court excluded tbe testimony of tbe witness. This action of tbe court is urged as error, and tbe claim is made that tbe stenographer’s notes are not the best evidence of what tbe plaintiff testified to at said trial, and that it was so held in Padgitt v. Railroad, 159 Mo. 143. We think tbe decision, when properly construed, does not so bold. We endeavored to show in Estes v. Railway Co., 111 Mo. App. 1, that tbe Padgitt case was not in conflict with tbe decision in Bradley v. Spickardsville, 90 Mo. App. 416, which, bolds that tbe notes of tbe stenographer are tbe best evidence of what a witness testified to at a former trial. It requires no argument to support tbe view, that tbe statements of a witness taken down in Avriting at the time by a skillful official under oath are more reliable for accuracy than tbe recollection
Instruction No. 1, given at the instance of plaintiff, is criticized on the ground that, while it purports to cover the whole case upon which to predicate a verdict, it omits to include material questions presented by the pleadings-and evidence. Said instruction is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they find from a preponderance or greater weight of the evidence that the agents or servants of the defendant, Southwest Missouri Railroad Company, in relaying and paving its tracks on Main street or on Fourth street near the southwest corner of the public square in Carthage, Missouri, deposited dirt or gravel in Fourth street near the southwest corner of Fourth street and Main street at the point mentioned by the witnesses in such a quantity as to render travel ón said street at said point unsafe and dangerous, and negligently permitted the same to remain in said street after the same could have been removed by the said railroad company, by the exercise of ordinary care; and if you further find from the evidence that the defendant, the city of Carthage, had notice of the existence of said dirt or gravel and of the dangerous condition in which the said railroad company had left said street at said point, in time to have removed the same, or might have so known by the exercise of ordinary care, and that on the evening of January 29, 1907, while traveling east from Main street on Fourth street and in the exercise of ordinary care in driving, plaintiff’s horse became frightened by a noise made by air escaping from a car of the defendant railroad company, and ran the vehicle in which the plaintiff was riding onto and against said pile of dirt or gravel, and plaintiff was thereby thrown from the vehicle and his leg was thereby broken and injured, you will find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and
The omission consists in not calling the attention of the jury to defendants’ side of the case, which was supported by evidence that the dirt was removed from time to time and within a reasonable time after it was dug up in the progress of the work; or that, considering the conditions and character of the weather, defendants had not had reasonable time to remove the dirt before the plaintiff’s injury; in omitting to submit to the jury the question whether there was ample room in the street for the passage of plaintiff’s vehicle, had he used reasonable care; and in omitting to submit to the jury the question whether plaintiff’s injury was the result of his own negligence in driving his horse at a rapid gait combined with the fright of said horse.
It seems to use that the instruction, in effect, negatives all the matters indicated and that it comprehends and calls to the attention of the jury every material matter which the plaintiff should prove to entitle him to a verdict. And further, we are of the opinion that all the so-called omissions are purely matters of defense and such the instruction of plaintiff was not required to mention. The court in instructions given at the instance of defendant submitted them as special matters of defense.
The criticisms on instructions No. 2 and No. 3, given for plaintiff, we consider, as entirely without any substantial basis.
The court' gave thirteen instructions asked by defendant and refused ten. It is true, some of those given were modified by the court, but we think properly. It seems that a party to any ordinary suit ought to be satisfied with a less number of instructions than thirteen. The defendants in this case nearly exhausted the alphabet in order to identify their instructions, and seriously
Notwithstanding there may have been room enough for a vehicle driven with ordinary care to have avoided •the pile of dirt in the street, still plaintiff was entitled to recover under the evidence. “It is the well-settled law of this State, that it is the duty of cities to keep their streets in a reasonably safe condition for the use of the traveling public, and for a failure to perform that duty they are held to be liable to persons traveling thereon in the exercise of due care.” [Fockler v. Kansas City, 94 Mo. App. 464, and cases cited.]
In Hull v. City of Kansas, 54 Mo. 598, it is held, “If the driver of a horse is in the exercise of ordinary care and prudence, and injuries to the animal are attributed to the insufficiency of the street conspiring with some accidental cause, the municipality is liable in damages.”
In Bassett v. The City of St. Joseph, 53 Mo. 290, the facts were that the plaintiff, in attempting to pass along the sidewalk connected with the public street opposite to an excavation and between the excavation and a wagon standing in the street and to which there was attached a pair of mules, was kicked at by one of the mules and that she was either kicked into the excavation, or, in
We believe we have discussed all the material questions raised on the appeal.
Affirmed.