129 Mo. App. 708 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Plaintiff was injured while riding as a passenger on a street car operated by defendant, and sues to recover the damages sustained on the ground that they were caused by the negligence of defendant. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff and defendant appealed.
The first complaint of defendant relates to the refusal of the trial court to instruct the jury peremptorily to return a verdict in its favor. At about five o’clock in the afternoon of February 2, 1904, plaintiff (a minor) became, a passenger on an east bound cable train operated by defendant on one of its lines of street railway in Kansas City. He boarded the gripcar at Ninth and Broadway streets, intending to ride to Main street, a distance of five, blocks, and stood on the running-board. He states that the coach was crowded and the gripcar “pretty well filled” with passengers and gives this as the reason for not seating himself. Running at usual speed, the car approached a point where a coal wagon was backed to the sidewalk to unload. It stood crosswise in the street between the track on which the train was coming and the curb and the horses had been turned to the west and stood at a right angle to the line of the wagon. This position threw the hub of the right forward wheel so close to the track that, when the car passed, the hub projected a few inches over the running-board on which plaintiff stood. Plaintiff states he was
All of the witnesses for defendant state that some of the seats in the grip car were not occupied and as plaintiff does not state positively to the contrary, we shall assume that he could have found a seat but, instead, chose to stand on the footboard for the short distance he had to go. It was not negligence per se for plaintiff,
Objection is made to the submission in the first instruction given at the' request of plaintiff of the question of whether the gripman ran the car rapidly past the wagon. Claim is made that there is no evidence that the car was run at rapid speed. We think when fairly interpreted, the evidence of plaintiff does tend to show that the car was running at usual speed when the danger was discovered and that no effort was put forth to lower speed until plaintiff was struck. The word “rapidly” is to be construed in the light of the circum
The words italicized in the following instruction are criticized: “The jury are instructed that due care on the part of an infant does not require the judgment and thoughtfulness that would he expected of an adult person under the same circumstances and if the jury believe from the evidence -that the plaintiff was an infant under the age of fourteen years and that he exercised that degree of care which under like circumstances would reasonably be expected of one of his years and. capacity, then plaintiff would not be guilty of contributory negligence.” It was not prejudicial error for the court to direct attention to a peculiarity of infantile nature with which every person of ordinary understanding is perfectly familiar and about which there can be no difference of opinion among reasonable minds. What we said in Mann v. Railway, 123 Mo. App. 486, is pertinent : “The conduct of a boy twelve years old should not be measured by the standard of care applied to an adult because the immaturity of youth ordinarily embraces not only an imperfect knowledge of natural facts and laws and of the proper relation between cause and effect, but when possessed of these elements necessary to the exercise of reasonable care it still lacks the discretion, thoughtfulness and judgment presumed to be an attribute of the ordinarily prudent adult and which may be said to come only with experience. Thoughtlessness, impulsiveness and indifference to all but patent and imminent dangers are natural traits of childhood and must be taken into account when we come to classify the conduct of a child.” [Anderson v. Railway, 161 Mo. 411; Burger v. Railway, 112 Mo. 238.] Cases are plentiful where the act of the infant has been so glaringly dan
Our discussion of the demurrer to the evidence contains a sufficient answer to the remaining objections urged by defendant against the instructions given at the instance of plaintiff. There is evidence in the record which strongly tends to show that the gripman actually discovered the peril in time to have averted the injury had he acted with reasonable promptitude and judgment. Applying to this hypothesis of facts the salutary principle of the humanitarian doctrine, the facts that plaintiff may have been negligent either in standing on the running board or in not looking ahead for possible danger will not absolve defendant from liability for the reason that such facts, if either or both existed, did not absolve defendant from the duty of availing itself of the last fair chance it was offered of protecting its passenger against injury. Its failure to perform that duty properly should be regarded as the negligence which became the immediate cause of injury and, as such, it occupied the entire
The judgment is affirmed.