71 Mo. App. 670 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by the plaintiff in consequence of the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff had judgment and the defendant appealed. The errors complained of arise out of the action of the trial court in the giving and refusing of instructions.
During the progress of the trial the plaintiff, to maintain the issue in his behalf, introduced in evidence an ordinance of Kansas City which declares that “no conductor, engineer or fireman, brakeman or other person shall move or cause to be moved, any locomotive, tender or car within the city at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour” under a certain penalty therein prescribed. Thereupon the defendant introduced evidence the tendency of which was to prove that from a mile and a quarter to two miles of its railway track is within the limits of said city; that Elm Dale station — a flag station on its line and the point at which plaintiff was injured — is located a mile or more east of Grand Central depot, but within the city limits; that the defendant runs its cars between Grand Central depot in said city and the city of Independence; that its line, after crossing the tracks of the Missouri Pacific Railway, near Grand Central depot runs to the south shore of the Missouri river and from thence on a high embankment it meanders with said shore in an easterly direction until it passes Elm Dale station some distance ; that on the north or river side of its track there are no houses or improvements of any kind between where the same crosses the tracks of the Missouri Pacific Railway and a quarter of a mile or more east of Elm Dale station; that none of the streets of said city extend across it to the river; that there are no houses on the south side thereof within the limits just indicated
The court, by request of plaintiff, and against the objections of defendant, gave an instruction which'told the jury that, “if you believe from the evidence that on the night of August 2nd or 3rd, 1895, locomotive engines and trains of cars were by an ordinance of Kansas City prohibited from being run within the corporate limits of said city'at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour, and that on said day defendants, by their servants, did run an engine and train of cars, known as the ‘backover’ within the corporate limits of said city at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour; and that plaintiff was sitting in a position on-said platform where he was in danger of being struck by said train, and that in consequence of-said train being run at said time arid place at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour defendant’s servants running said train were unable to stop the same after they saw plaintiff in danger, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen that plaintiff was in dan-ger of being struck by said train, in time to have avoided striking and injuring plaintiff, and that had said train been running at said-time and. place at a rate
The defendant asked and the court refused an instruction which in effect declared that the said ordinance introduced in evidence had no binding force or effect against defendant as to the operation of its trains at and near Elm Dale station and that it could not be found guilty of negligence for the reason that it ran its train faster than six miles an hour at the time plaintiff was injured. The defendant contends that the said ordinance is inoperative and void because unreasonable, oppressive, and operates as a restraint upon commerce.
In White v. R'y, 44 Mo. App. 540, there was an ordinance which prohibited the running of railway trains within the limits of the city of Marshfield at a greater rate of speed than four miles an hour. The incorporated area of the city covered one square mile and the defendant’s railway ran diagonally through it for over a mile; only two hundred and twenty acres of the city tract was platted, and the population of the city did not exceed fifteen hundred. The negligence alleged in the petition was that the defendant run a train within the territorial limits of the city at a rate of speed in excess of four miles an hour and by reason of which a cow of the plaintiff was killed. In deciding the ease the. court say: “The restriction, if valid at all, extends over the entire area. As far as the farm lands are concerned, the necessity of any restriction whatever is not obvious, and as far as the residents of
No reason has been shown, nor has any been seen by us, why the speed of the defendant’s trains should be reduced on that part of its road situate between the eastern city limits and the crossing of the Missouri Pacific Railway. The defendant’s track, for the most of the way, is on a high embankment on the north side of which there is nothing but the unused river shore and on the south side there are only agricultural lands. There are no street intersections and only one or two public traveled roads crossing its track. People do not habitually go along or over its track. What, then, is the necessity for the restriction? It seems to us that it is so manifestly unnecessary for the protection of life and property that no two reasoning minds could differ as to it.
It is well known that a great number of people, who are engaged in commercial and other pursuits in Kansas City, reside at Independence, Fairmount Park, and near other stations along the line of defendant railway, and to successfully carry on their business must have the advantage of rapid transit to and from the city. Why oblige the trains of defendant, while engaged in carrying them to and from the city, to take twenty to twenty-five minutes in running the two miles or less between the eastern limits of the city and the Missouri Pacific crossing, which could, and no doubt would be accomplished in five minutes or less, but for the restriction imposed by said ordinance? This need
It is not quite as clear and explicit in expression as it should have been. It would have been exempt from criticism had it been expressed in about this wise: The court instructs the jury that notwithstanding they believe from the evidence the plaintiff negligently
The action of the court in refusing the other numerous instructions asked by the defendant was not error. "We think the plaintiff was clearly entitled, under the evidence, to a submission of the cáse to the jury but on account of the errors already noticed the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded, and which- is so ordered.