56 Mo. App. 678 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
— This is an action for personal injuries, in which the plaintiff recovered a judgment for $1,500. This is the second appeal. 49 Mo. App. 644. On the first appeal, we reversed the .judgment for error in the instructions. The facts are fully stated in that
The objection to the instruction is that, giving it a
The next assignment is, that the judgment is not supported by the evidence. The plaintiff, when burned, was only four or five years old. No one saw the accident. Where and how the plaintiff's clothing was ignited are matters of inference only. She was first seen running along Ninth street about two or three hundred feet from the fire in front of the defendant’s premises. Her clothes were then burping. The accident occurred about 11.45 a. m. During the morning she and several of the neighborhood had been playing around the fire above mentioned. They were searching in the embers for nails. The other children went away leaving the plaintiff at the fire. One of the boys who was with her testified that he had only been gone from the fire five or ten minutes, when the accident occurred. The other children had been gone from one-half to three-quarters of an hour. One of the witnesses testified that the plaintiff put the nails which she found into a tin can. Another testified that, a few minutes after the child was burned, she went to the fire in front of the defendant's premises, and that she
This evidence presents two possible theories as to the cause of the accident. For only one of these the defendant can, under any circumstances, be held responsible. Under this condition of the evidence, counsel argue that the defendant’s liability must necessarily rest on bare conjecture, for the reason that there was equally as strong a possibility or probability that the injury was brought about by the other cause for which the defendant could not be held. The position is untenable, since there was substantial evidence to support the plaintiff’s theory. The supreme court in the case of Kelly v. Railroad, 70 Mo. 605, passed on a similar state of facts. The court there said: “Whether Kelly came to his death by stepping off the train before it reached Mooresville Station, or whether it was occasioned by his being thrown under the cars in attempting to alight from the cars, while moving slowly, by direction of defendant’s officers, or whether
In the case at bar, the plaintiff was seen playing in the fire in front of the defendant’s premises about five or ten minutes before she was hurt. She had a tin can, in which she was putting the nails which she found. A few minutes after the accident, a tin can was found lying in the embers where the plaintiff had been playing. From this evidence the jury was authorized to draw the inference that the plaintiff was injured in the manner charged, especially when the plaintiff’s evidence, that there was no fire on the vacant lot at all, is considered. This assignment will likewise be overruled.
Binding no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.