Prom a judgment in favor of plaintiff, a boy nine years of age, in the sum of $7,000, against defendants for personal injuries sustained by
The accident happened about half past 10 o’clock in the forenoon of the twentieth day of July, 1892, at the intersection of Frederick avenue with Eleventh and Faraón streets in the city of St. Joseph, Missouri. At that time defendant company owned and operated by electricity a double track line of street railway, the tracks of which lie parallel with each other, near the center of the avenue, as close together as they can be laid, so as to permit the ears to pass each other. The tracks run east and west. Oars moving east do so on the south track, while those moving west do so on the north track.
Plaintiff, his brother, and Clarence Corby, desiring to go west to Eleventh street, boarded a car (number 19) at the east end of the avenue. When the car arrived at Eleventh street, the point at which plaintiff and his companions desired to alight, the conductor in charge of the car gave the usual signal to the motorman for the car to stop, in order that they might do so. The evidence as to whether or not the car came to a full stop before the boys started to alight, as to what transpired there at that time, and especially as to what was said and done by the conductor, was conflicting. Just as the boys had alighted, and started around the rear end of the car toward the sidewalk on the south side of the avenue, a car (number 21) pulled up from the west, ran against the plaintiff and his brother knocking them down, the plaintiff going under the car, his left leg was caught in the cogwheels which propel the car, and he shoved along on his back five or six feet before the car was stopped. Several efforts to release plaintiff’s leg, which was badly crushed below the knee, from the cogwheels, proving unavailing, it
An ordinance of the city of St. Joseph was read in evidence, which required all street railway companies to provide each car with a fender “placed not more than two inches from the ground or surface of the street,” and to “entirely surround the running gear of the car. Such fender shall be pointed at each end of the car, shall extend as far as the platform and shall be so constructed and placed as to afford the best possible protection to persons with whom such car might come in contact.” There were no fenders on the car at the time of the accident, but it was shown to have had fenders on it the day next thereafter.
Defendant introduced evidence tending to show that the cars could not be run with fenders upon them, such as required by the ordinance, that a gutter at Edmund crosses the track, and every time the car passed over the gutter, the car dipped so that the fenders were broken off. In opposition to this, defendant’s own servants swore that fenders sometimes lasted a week; that every trip over the gutter did not break them off; that defendant had men in its employ whose duty it was to repair and replace the fenders. Plaintiff’s evidence showed that the fenders remained on the cars for a greater part of a month.
The defendant, John R. Owens, after the accident, was appointed receiver of the defendants’ railway and property, and he was, therefore, made a party defendant in the cause.
Plaintiff’s first instruction is criticised in that it is insisted that it submitted to the jury questions not
The evidence with respect to the rate of speed at which the car that caused the injury was moving at the time placed it from three and one half to five miles an hour; two witnesses stated about twice as fast as a man can ordinarily walk, and one witness about three times as fast as he could walk. The cars passed each other in the middle or near the east line of Eleventh street, and the ordinance of the city which was read in evidence, provides that cars shall not be stopped on crosswalks nor in front of intersecting streets, but that they shall stop with the rear platform partly over the crosswalks when allowing passengers to alight.
What constitutes negligence in any given case, must necessarily depend upon the facts connected with the accident which is claimed to have been occasioned thereby, and the place where it occurred. What would be a negligent rate of speed for an electric street car in one locality, would not necessarily be so in another part of the same city or the same street. Plaintiff’s right to the use of the street where the accident occurred was concurrent with that of defendant company. It happened under circumstances where and when the law required of those in charge of the car the exercise of such care and watchfulness, including its rate of speed, as the circumstances of the ease, and the place where the accident occurred. Under the facts and circumstances in evidence the court would not have been justified in declaring as a matter of law, that the car was not moving at a rapid rate of speed at the time of the accident. There was sufficient evidence on this question to justify giving the instruction.
But even if it were faulty in that it did not tell the jury what facts would constitute negligence on the part of defendant, when it is read in connection with defendants’ first instruction, as it should be, any such suspicion is dispelled, as that instruction is the counterpart of plaintiff’s and covers any supposed omissions or defects therein.
The second instruction given for plaintiff is as follows:
*21 “2. It was the duty of the servants of the railway company in charge of the east bound car, in approaching and passing by a car which they saw standing on the street, or in the act of stopping, to let off passengers, to conduct and run said east bound car with great caution and care, and at such a rate of speed that they might be able to check and stop the same should it become necessary in order to avoid striking and injuring any one alighting and passing from such car to the sidewalk of said street, and if the jury find from the evidence that plaintiff, Allane Van Natta, received the injuries of which he complains while attempting to gain the sidewalk after alighting from the car, in consequence of the careless, reckless, and negligent manner in which the servants in charge of said east bound car managed and operated the same, while approaching and passing the car from which plaintiff had alighted, your verdict must be for plaintiff on the first count of the petition; provided, the plaintiff was exercising that degree of reasonable care usually exercised by boys of his age and capacity.”
Several objections are urged against this instruction. The first is that it assumes that the servants in charge of the east bound car, saw that the west hound car was standing still, or that they Jcnew that it was in the act of stopping to allow passengers to alight, when the evidence did not warrant such assumption.
That the car upon which plaintiff was a passenger was stopped in order to permit him to alight was one of the material allegations in his petition. This allegation was put in issue by the answer. The evidence was conflicting as to whether or not the car had stopped at the time plaintiff and his companions left it. It is true that it showed that the conductor in charge of it rang the bell and signaled the motorman to 'stop the car for that purpose, but in assuming under the cir
The second objection is that it imposed on defendant railway company a higher degree of care in the operation of its east bound car than is required by law. This criticism is not without merit. While defendant company owed to plaintiff the highest degree of care and was bound to run its cars with great caution and care in order to protect him, he being a passenger, this instruction imposed upon it a still higher duty, that is, to run its car at such a rate of speed that those in charge of the car might be able to stop the same should it become necessary in order to avoid striking and injuring anyone alighting and passing from such car, regardless of the place, or circumstances under which plaintiff left the car or the injury occurred. The carrier, however, must be without fault or negligence. Leslie v. Railroad, 88 Mo. 50; Weber v. Cable R’y Co., 100 Mo. 194.
A still further objection is that the instruction did not properly define plaintiff’s duty, in that it only required of him the exercise of that degree of reasonable care, “usually exercised by boys of his age and
However, upon a retrial, we would respectfully suggest that it be made to meet the objections now urged against it.
Defendant’s objection to plaintiff’s third instruction is untenable. Whether the car that caused the accident was running at an improper and dangerous rate of speed, when meeting the ear going in the opposite direction, the place and circumstances considered, was a question for the consideration of the jury under the evidence.
It is unnecessary to say more with respect to the objections urged against plaintiff’s sixth and ninth instructions, than they seem to us to be free from grounds for such objections.
As to whether the cars could be operated with fenders attached was a question for the consideration of the jury, under the evidence, which seems to have been fairly submitted to them by the instructions.
No error was committed in refusing instructions asked by defendant, as those that were given on that side of the case, presented it very fairly from their standpoint.
Nor was there error committed in refusing the instructions asked by defendant in the nature of demurrers to plaintiff’s evidence. As to whether he was in the exercise of such reasonable care as usually exercised by boys of his age and capacity under the evi
For error committed in giving plaintiff’s second instruction, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to be tried in accordance with the views herein expressed.