250 Mo. 476 | Mo. | 1913
This is an appeal from an order of the eirenit court of St. Louis City granting a new trial after verdict for defendant in an action for damages for injuries alleged to have been the result of plaintiff’s having been thrown from one of defendant’s cars by the sudden application of the air brake. The answer consisted of a general denial coupled with a plea that “whatever injuries, if any, plaintiff sustained, were caused by his own carelessness and negligence in alighting or attempting to alight from the street car while it was in motion. ”
Plaintiff was fifteen years and five months old when injured and had lived in St. Louis a little over six years. He testifies that during this time he had ridden upon street cars a great deal, was accustomed to .riding on them and had been for over a year making six trips daily over the line upon which he was injured. At the time he was injured he lived at 4051 Shenandoah avenue, which is in the block between Lawrence and Thurman avenues, 'and at the latter westbound ears turn south. Plaintiff boarded the car at the Union Station, where he worked, about 9 p. m., and rode on the front platform until he reached *a point nearly opposite his home when he nodded to the motorman to indicate he wished to alight at the corner. He then took a position with both feet upon the step' or one foot upon the front platform and one upon the step, facing inward and southward, with his right hand grasping the handhold in front of him and with his left hand grasping the handhold upon the front of the body of the car. At this juncture the car was on Shenandoah avenue nearly two hundred feet from the entrance to the curve into Thurman avenue and was moving at its usual speed, eight to twelve miles an hour, according to plaintiff. Plaintiff says that he saw the motorman apply the brake, heard the hiss of the air and then, he says “I goi a jolt — the hardest jolt I ever got while I have been riding on the cars, and my right handhold broke, and I
On cross-examination plaintiff testified he didn’t known whether he was thrown backward or forward; that to the best of his knowledge the grasp of his right hand upon the front handhold was first broken and then he tried to hold with his left hand but could not do so. When he was picked up he was lying at a point about one hundred and twenty feet east of the entrance to the curve into Thurman avenue and about one hundred and sixty feet east of the east building line of that avenue and about forty feet west of his home.
Plaintiff is uncorroborated as to the jerk or lurch he says the car gave and both his witnesses and defendant’s say they neither saw nor heard anything of the kind. The motorman testified he saw plaintiff take the position usually assumed by persons about to alight from a moving car and then step off upon the ground and both he and the conductor deny that the air brake was applied in the manner testified to by plaintiff and deny there was any jerk or jolt of the car.
The trial court granted the new trial on the ground' that it had erred in giving, at defendant’s request, the following instruction:
“The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that a reasonably prudent boy of plaintiff’s age and capacity for understanding and appreciating danger would not have placed himself near the edge of the car under the circumstances, and that plaintiff’s act in so placing himself near the edge of said platform and on the step caused, or contributed to cause, his injuries, if any, then your verdict must be for the defendant.”
The theory upon which a defendant, despite a failure to plead it, is permitted to avail himself of plaintiff’s conclusive proof of his own contributory negligence, is that in such circumstances plaintiff fails to make out his case. He disproves it. Recovery can be had only for injuries resulting from the defendant’s negligence and there is a failure of proof when plaintiff conclusively shows he is himself responsible for his injury. [Milburn v. Railroad, 86 Mo. l. c. 109; Buesching v. Gaslight Co., 73 Mo. l. c. 229.]
In Keitel v. Railroad, 28 Mo. App. l. c. 663, Judge Thompson, speaking for the court, said:
“It may not be .out of place to observe that th'e only error committed by the trial court touching the question of contributory negligence was the error of submitting it to the jury at all, since it was not pleaded. It is only where a conclusive inference of contributory negligence arises out of the plaintiff’s own testir mony or that of his witnesses, either on their direct or their cross-examination, that contributory negligence will bar his recovery, although not pleaded. ... In other cases contributory negligence is an affirmative defense, to be pleaded and proved by the defendant, in order to entitle him to have it submitted to the jury; and if it is not so pleaded and proved, and is nevertheless submitted to the jury the case falls within the rule that it is error to submit to the jury an issue not made by the pleadings.”
In Schultze v. Railroad, 32 Mo. App. l. c. 448, the Kansas City Court of Appeals, after conceding the rule to be that plaintiff disproves his case when he
“Yet it should not be understood that in all cases where there may ,be evidence tending to show contributory negligence such defense may be raised at the trial though not set up in the answer. To be thus utilized on the trial, the contributory negligence shown in plaintiff’s evidence should be so cl¿ar and flagrant as to disprove the cause of action stated in the petition. If it falls short of this, and remains a question of fact, which might be decided either way, then we have little doubt that it should be pleaded to be available as a defense. ’ ’
The same court in Voegeli v. Marble & Granite Co., 49 Mo. App. l. c. 653, says that before defendant can, without an appropriate plea, avail himself of plaintiff’s evidence tending to show contributory negligence, that evidence “must be of such a character as to enable the court to say, as a matter of law that the plaintiff has been guilty of such contributory negligence as would defeat the action. If the question is a debatable one, then it is error to submit it, where the defendant has failed to make the defense in the answer."
In Fechley v. Traction Co., 119 Mo. App. l. c. 368, Judge Goode, speaking for the St. Louis Court of Appeals, said that unless it was pleaded plaintiff’s “contributory negligence was no defense, according to cases in this State, unless the testimony he introduced so clearly showed he was negligent in a manner which contributed to cause the accident, that the court would have been warranted in denying him a recovery." The same ruling is found in McCormick v. City, 64 Mo. App. l. c. 200, and in State ex rel. v. Hallen, 165 Mo. App. l. c. 438, et seq. In this last the authorities are collected.
Sporadic decisions (Brick Co. v. Railroad, 21 Mo. App. l. c. 656; Pim v. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. l. c. 716, 717) indicating a contrary view do not seem well con
Finally, Division No. 2 of this court in Collett v. Kuhlman, 243 Mo. 585, passed upon the question now presented and held that “the fact that plaintiff’s evidence tends to prove contributory negligence does not, in the absence of such plea, authorize the submission of such issue to the jury.” The judgment was reversed and the cause remanded solely on the ground that this principle had been violated.
Either this and like rulings are right or the rule that contributory negligence must be pleaded will be practically abrogated. It can be safely stated that in the majority of cases of this kind circumstances are shown in plaintiff’s evidence, on cross-examination of his witnesses or otherwise, which tend to prove contributory negligence, and to hold that in every such instance the question of contributory negligence is introduced into the case is to destroy plaintiff’s right to rely upon the issues made by the pleadings and require him to prepare to meet one nr several issues of contributory negligence which different, and possibly reluctant or unfriendly, witnesses may testify into the ease. The situation is different when plaintiff’s evidence conclusively makes out his own contributory negligence as is apparent from the very statement of the matter and from the cases cited.
At tbe time plaintiff’s instruction was asked and given there was not in tbe case any evidence of contributory negligence by any possibility proper for submission to tbe jury save tbe evidence that plaintiff took bis place upon tbe step of tbe car while it was moving rapidly through tbe block at a point nearly two hundred feet from the corner at which be expected to alight, and before tbe speed bad been slackened in tbe least.
Plaintiff could recover only on the negligence alleged. If be stepped off the car in the middle of the block while it was moving, as be testifies, eight to twelve miles per hour, two reasons barred recovery: (1) nothing in the petition warranted it and (2) such an act would constitute negligence as a matter of law. [Spencer v. Railroad, 111 Mo. App. 653.] Tbe facts alleged in the second paragraph of the answer constituted a complete defense and the evidence offered of them was admissible under the general denial. [Parks v. Railroad, 178 Mo. l. c. 118, 119; Neville v. Railroad, 158 Mo. l. c. 311, 312.] The quoted clause of the instruction cannot, therefore, be logically said to refer either to that paragraph or to any evidence offered in support of it.
Further, tbe instruction itself sufficiently points to tbe fact that it was the inference deducible in tbe circumstances from plaintiff’s presence on tbe step that tbe clause mentioned was intended to require the jury
The sixth instruction, in effect, simply submitted the question whether that act constituted negligence and, if so, whether it contributed to cause the injury and required a finding for defendant if both questions were affirmatively answered. That an instruction on this theory was invited by plaintiff’s instruction is clear enough. The requirement that the jury should, before returning a verdict for him, find plaintiff was exercising ordinary care for his own safety constituted a submission of the question of his contributory negligence. [Krehmeyer v. Railroad, 220 Mo. l. c. 675.] Plaintiff thus injected this issue and secured its submission to the jury. Though it be conceded that in the circumstances it was unnecessary, nevertheless plaintiff put it into the case. A clause like that employed as stated in the instruction mentioned is of no consequence and may be ignored when incorporated in the petition in a case of this kind (Hudson v. Railroad, 101 Mo. l. c. 29) but that is because there is a presumption obviating ordinarily the necessity of such allegation. By incorporating the clause in the instruction, however, plaim tiff evidenced his desire that the question of his freedom from negligence be submitted as an issue of fact and secured such submission. Having done so he was in no position to complain because the defendant accepted the issue and asked and secured an instruction thereon. Undoubtedly if the trial court had not sus
In another case (Henslee v. Cannefax, 49 Mo. l. c. 296) in the discussion of an analogous question it was said: ‘ ‘ This negligence of the plaintiff was encouraged by the defendants. They stood by and saw heavy costs accumulate in making out plaintiff’s case, adding to them the costs of their own witnesses, and then asked the court to declare that their defense had been admitted from the beginning. This will not do and courts should not allow traps to be thus sprung, although upon the inattentive. ’ ’
In a recent case (Mott v. Morris, 249 Mo. l. c. 137) in which appellants contended the principal issue tried and submitted by all parties was not cognizable under the pleadings this court said: “Plaintiffs can with ill grace complain that the chancellor took them at their word and decided the issue. If it be error to go so far (a question we reserve) then the maxim applies: Consensus tollit errorem.”
These cases announce the true principle and that principle is as applicable on the hearing below on the motion for new trial as it is when the case is presented here on appeal. Even if this is not universally true it certainly is so when the error invited is the submission
The instruction before authorizing a' verdict for defendant, required the jury to find (1) that plaintiff, in the circumstances, in placing himself on the edge of the platform and step, was not in the exercise of ordinary care, i. e., was negligent, and (2) that this lack of ordinary care contributed to cause his injuries. .
The petition, does not count upon the humanitarian- or last clear chance doctrine and, consequently, plaintiff neither asked nor was entitled to instructions upon that theory. [Peterson v. Railroad, 211 Mo. l. c. 521.] Decisions in cases in which that theory was presented are not entirely in point here. This case is one in which the right to recover depends upon an allegation of what is sometimes termed simple negligence.
The instruction objected to requires the jury before returning a verdict for defendant, to find that specified acts of plaintiff constituted a failure to exercise ordinary care and does not leave the jury to speculate as to what acts may be considered as negligence. The argument, therefore, that the instruction authorized a finding for defendant on the ground, of some remote negligence of plaintiff not amounting to a want of ordinary care, is unsound -and the cases in which
Further the instruction requires not only a finding of a want of ordinary care on plaintiff’s part but also a further finding that this want of ordinary care contributed to cause his injuries; consequently, decisions condemning instructions which employ the phrases “contributed to his injuries,” “in any way contributed to his injuries” and the like, do not decide the exact question in this case. It is well established in this State that ordinarily in a case of this kind it is entirely correct to instruct that if plaintiff’s negligence “directly contributed to his injury” he cannot recover, and error to instruct that if his negligence merely “contributed to his injury” recovery is barred. The function of the word “directly” in such a phrase is to exclude remote negligence and require the jury to find a causal connection between plaintiff’s negligence and his injury.
The instruction given excludes remote negligence by requiring a finding that a specified act constituted a want of ordinary care and requires, also, a finding that such want of ordinary care not only “.contributed” but that it contributed to cause plaintiff’s injuries. To the writer, in the circumstances of this case, it seems the explicit requirement to find a want of 'ordinary care plus a causal relation between it and the injury sustained was even more likely to convey clearly to the jury the correct idea than would have been the case had the'usual phrase “directly contributed to his injuries” been employed. No case or authority cited and.none examined discusses the exact question presented but principles frequently invoked warrant the conclusions stated.
Further, if the jury found plaintiff’s act in taking a position on the car step constituted lack of ordinary care on his part in the circumstances and also found it contributed to cause his injuries, how could it be possible it contributed at all save directly? That question,
It is doubtful whether the instruction mentioned had a great deal to do with influencing the verdict found since that verdict accorded with the great weight of the evidence and since plaintiff’s own testimony indicates a reversal of natural law in one particular. However that may be, a careful examination of the questions presented has led to the conclusion that the sixth instruction was not erroneous in the circumstances of this case and no other reason being suggested or appearing to justify the order granting a new trial, that order is reversed and the cause remanded' with directions to reinstate the verdict and enter judgment thereon for defendant.
PER CURIAM. — The foregoing opinion of Blair, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.