60 Mo. App. 207 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
The only point made by defendant on this appeal is that, upon the entire evidence adduced upon the trial, the court should have instructed the jury to find a verdict in its favor. At the close of the entire evidence the defendant requested such an instruction, and the court refused it, and the defendant excepted and still excepts. The jury thereupon found a verdict for the plaintiff. The rule in this state is that it is the duty of the court to give such an instruction at the close of the plaintiff’s case, if all the evidence adduced by him is insufficient to support a recovery, or at the close of the entire case if all the evidence adduced in the cause fails to support a recovery. Weber v. Railroad, 100 Mo. 195, 204. It thus becomes incumbent on us to determine, first, whether the plaintiff by his evid ence has shown any right of recovery, and, next, whether, if his evidence is insufficient for that purpose, the defendant’s evidence aids the plaintiff’s case to an extent entitling the plaintiff to recover on all the evidence.
The plaintiff’s evidence is to this effect: He is a teamster, and familiar with the operation of electric cars. On October 26, 1892, he was engaged in driving a one mule coal wagon, of a gross weight of fifty-two hundred pounds, into a coal yard situated on the east side of Fourteenth 7 street and south of Destrehan street. Mallinkrodt street is one block north of
On cross-examination the plaintiff stated that, when he first saw the car, he was about one hundred feet south of Destrehan street, and the car was at Mallinkrodt street (about four hundred and fifty feet). His mule was headed north, so that he had a full view of the car which was moving south. He then drove about ten feet north, then drove across the track to the west side, made a round circle and turned across the track again to drive into the coal yard. He again repeated the statement that the car was about one hundred and fifty feet or more from him when his mule’s feet were on the track of the defendant’s railroad upon his crossing it the second time, and that the ear was running at an ordinary speed, which is shown by all the testimony to have been between seven and eight miles per hour. It wras shown by the plaintiff’s evidence that the length of the team from the mule’s nose to the rear end of the . wagon did not exceed nineteen feet.
The plaintiff’s evidence tended to make the distance between himself and the car not less than 100
' Turning from the plaintiff's evidence to that of the defendant, the following ¡facts are shown. The colliding car was a motor car without a trailer; The
It will be thus seen that there was nothing in the defendant’s evidence, which in any way could aid the plaintiff’s case. If the defendant’s evidence is to be believed, the plaintiff was guilty of negligence amounting to almost recklessness, while the defendant’s motorman used the utmost diligence to avoid the collision. None of the plaintiff’s witnesses testify to any acts of
All the judges concuring, the judgment is reversed.