Jager v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
Jager v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
“It is alleged in plaintiff’s petition that on the 15th day of April, 1903, between the hours of five-thirty and six-thirty in the afternoon, the plaintiff was driving across Main street at the corner of Spring street, in an ordinary rock wag'on, drawn by two horses, intending to go south on Main street; and as he was crossing the tracks of the railway on said Main street, a south-bound car of appellant was so carelessly, recklessly and negligently run and operated by appellant, at such an undue and excessively rapid rate of speed, without ringing the bell or giving any other warning of approach, that it was run into- and against -the wagon in which plaintiff was riding, throwing him violently to the ground, the result of which plaintiff received a broken shoulder blade, an injury to his ankle, and body bruises; that defendant’s servants in charge of the car saw plaintiff and his wagon on the track, or by reasonable care could have seen him in time to have avoided injury to him.” Defendant’s answer was the general denial coupled with the plea of contributory negligence, to which plaintiff filed the usual reply.
The facts, as disclosed by the evidence, are these: Main street- in Kansas City runs north and south; Thirty-first and Thirty-second streets run east and west, crossing Main at right angles; between Thirty-first and Thirty-second streets is Spring street which enters into Main street from the east, but does not cross Main street. Main street is eighty feet in width and Spring-street is fifty feet; from Thirty-first street southward, it is- three hundred feet distant to Spring street; on the southeast corner of Spring and Main streets is situated a drug store running back eastward on the south side of Spring street, and at the north side of the drugstore there is a watering trough, which is sixty-four feet eight inches east of the east rail of defendant’s double track
Plaintiff, at the time of his alleged injuries, was sixty-four years old, and Avas in the business of hauling rock. On the 15th day of April, 1903, the plaintiff, after hauling rock all day, at about six o’clock in the evening, drove from the north, on Main street, turned into Spring street, drove to the trough, watered his horses, and then, backed his wagon in a north-westerly direction, in order to make a turn to the right, so he could go on south on Main street. After making the turn, he drove in a southwesterly direction, angling across the street car tracks; as he started to go across the east track, a northbound car passed, and plaintiff crossed that track behind said north-bound car. When plaintiff started from the watering trough to go across the tracks, he looked north and saw a car about half Avay between Spring and Thirty-first streets, coming south, and also the car that struck him leaving Thirty-first street. He passed behind the north-bound car, and crossed the first or east track, and drove onto the west track, looked back and saw the first south bound car and he pulled his team and wagon onto the east track, and allowed that car to pass, and immediately pulled back to the right onto the west track, and on looking back as he went to go on that track, he saw the second south-bound car, seventy-five or eighty yards behind him; that is his version of the matter.
Plaintiff gives as a reason for not going straight across Main street that a number of wagons were standing in the street west of the tracks, and he drove southwesterly to get over on the west side of Main street to
“Q. Did you notice, when you turned to go over on the west side, where the second car was — the car that hit you — where was that, then, when you started to turn over? A. The second car what hit me? Q. Yes, sir; where was that, then? A. About thirty-five yards behind me. Q. That would be in feet, a little over a hundred feet? A. Yes, sir. Q. Somewhere near a hundred feet, at the time you turned to go back across the track again? A. Yes, sir. Q. When you turned out of the way of that car your horses were headed south, were they not? A. Yes, sir. Q. They were on the east track at that time? A. Yes, sir. Q. Before you turned them around and got them on the west track, did you look up to see whether there was any other car coming? A. Yes, sir. Q. Where was it then? A. It was about thirty or forty yards behind me at that time.” The fore*17 going is taken from appellant’s abstract and is admitted to be practically correct.
Tbe motorman testified that he saw plaintiff when the car started from Thirty-first street and that he saw him backing away from the water trough going south. Plaintiff all the while was in plain view of him. He says that he commenced watching plaintiff when he was within a half block from him. He also stated that the car was running at the rate of eight or ten miles an hour; and that he at that rate of speed could usually have stopped the car at the distance he was from plaintiff when he discovered his danger in time to have prevented striking him, but he was unable to do so on that occasion — but he does not give any reason why.
Plaintiff stated that he knew the car was coming but that he could not get off the track because other wagons were in the way, and that he signaled the motorman to stop. The evidence tended to show that the car was run at a rapid rate of speed. Plaintiff stated that they ran as fast as they could go, and it was shown that the force with which it struck was sufficient to kill one of plaintiff’s horses and carry the weight of the wagon and load —2,000 pounds — as some witnesses stated, “fifty feet.”
The judgment was for plaintiff and defendant appealed.
The defendant offered a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence which was refused by the court. It is insisted that the action of the court in that respect was error as the evidence showed, that plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence as precluded his right to recover, and that there is nothing in the evidence that brings the case within the humanitarian rule as the acts of defendant did not show a willful and wanton disregard for human life. The plaintiff was not a trespasser as he had a right to be on the street in question. We have at the present term gone into the question raised by defendant as to the application of said rule. See Ross v. Railway,
It is further insisted that the court committed error in giving instruction number one for plaintiff for the reason that there Avas no evidence that defendant ran its cars at a rapid rate of speed. But we think there was ample evidence upon Avhich to predicate the instruction. And the other objection that it left the jury to determine, as a question of law, Avhat constituted negligence is equally without merit as the court fully and correctly instructed the jury as to the laAV in that respect.
The criticism on instruction numbered three is hypercritical. It is not in conflict Avith instruction numbered five given for defendant and it does not appear to be in conflict AAuth defendant’s number one, which reads as folloAVS:
*19 “The court instructs the jury that in this case the mere fact that the plaintiff was injured by a street railway company gives him no right to sne and recover damages therefor from such street railway company. Before he can recover in this -case, you must find not only that the defendant street railway company was negligent in the particular and specific respects submitted in these instructions, but you must further find that such negligence was the direct cause of his injury, and even then he cannot recover in this case if he was negligent and his negligence contributed to his injury.”
Said instruction is based upon the concurring negligence of both plaintiff and defendant as the direct cause of plaintiff’s injury, while that of plaintiff is based upon the separate negligence of defendant as the direct producing cause. Both state correct propositions of law and as such in no way conflict.
It is further insisted that the instruction is wrong because there was no evidence upon which to predicate it. That is to say, that there was no evidence that after the motorman saw plaintiff he could have stopped the car in time to have averted the collision. This is renewing the former contention, leaving out of consideration the other theory of the case that defendant was liable if the motorman could have seen the plaintiff in time, by the exercise of proper care, to have saved him from injury. There was evidence that the motorman could have stopped the car after he saw the plaintiff in danger had he made a proper effort. He stated that he had stopped his car at other times going at the same rate of speed within the distance plaintiff was from him at the time he discovered him on the track, but for some reason not given he was unable to do so at the time in question. It was a question therefore for the jury and was properly submitted by the instruction.
Affirmed.,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.