Scamell v. St. Louis Transit Co.
Scamell v. St. Louis Transit Co.
Opinion of the Court
Action for personal injuries alleged to have.been caused by the negligence of defendant’s employees in .starting one of its cars while plaintiff was in the act- of alighting from it. Plaintiff and his mother took passage on a car of defendant company for a trip south on Jefferson avenue in St. Louis, intending to get off at Laclede avenue. As the car was bound south it ran on the west of two tracks which parallel each other. The bell was rung for a stop at Laclede, but according to the testimony the car ran from forty to eighty feet south of the crossing before it stopped. It
According to the witnesses, the plaintiff was not thrown prostrate by the fall from the car on which he was riding before he was struck by the other car, but was “balanced forward;” that is, with his head leaning southward from the line of his body and his hands upraised in an effort to save himself. In this attitude he was struck by the north-bound car and thrown in the air. Such is the substance of the testimony of the plaintiff himself, his mother and several other eye-. witnesses of the accident.
There was contradictory testimony for the defendant to the effect that the plaintiff was standing on the footboard, looking inside the car and talking to some young ladies as the car started, and that he afterwards stepped off and walked several steps to the east track, thus carelessly placing himself in front of the car advancing northward so that he was run against.
The points raised on this appeal make it necessary for us to deal only with the testimony adduced by the plaintiff, which, it is insisted, proves there was no causal connection between the alleged negligence of
The argument against the connection between the untimely starting of the car and the injury to plaintiff is, that the plaintiff intended to step on the east track, to which he was precipitated by the movement of the car, and if he had not been jolted there, would have stepped there and been struck anyhow. A statement of this contention suffices to show its utter barrenness. The testimony shows plaintiff intended to get off the car he was on as soon as his mother was out of the way; but that he intended to step on the east track in front of the approaching car, there is nothing to show, and it would be the wildest assumption to deduce that conclusion as a necessary inference from the facts. Defendant’s counsel argues that the two tracks were so close together that plaintiff must necessarily have stepped on the east one and asks us to take cognizance of that fact; but courts take no notice of such facts unless they are in evidence. So far as we are apprised there may have been ample room between the tracks for plaintiff to alight without getting on the eastern one; and, even if there was not, it by no means follows that he would have deliberately stepped on that track when a car was approaching, if he had been able to regulate his movements by his own will.
That contributory negligence is conclusively shown is argued from the statement of the plaintiff himself that when he lost his footing, he was not looking for a ear on the east track and did not intend to look for one, but was looking where he meant to step. This statement is said to prove plaintiff meant to step on the east track in front of the coming car without looking. Plaintiff had not yet stepped from the body of the car he was on, to the footboard, and what he meant was that he had his eye on the footboard, where his next
There is no merit in this appeal; for one of the most imperative duties of street railway companies is to hold their cars motionless until passengers and persons taking passage have time to get safely on and off; nor can there be a more flagrant violation of duty than to start a car without giving ample time for this purpose. Such a violation occurred in the present case, according to the testimony of many witnesses; which testimony was for the jury’s consideration.
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.