Stone v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
Stone v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s street cars in Kansas City, and in attempting and while in the act of alighting therefrom
If we accept the statements in the petition as true, it is very rare that a fall from the steps of a -street car could have resulted disastrously in so many distressing ways. These allegations are (italics ours) that “plaintiff’s head and skull were bruised, lacerated and contused; her back, spine, left leg and thigh and the bones, muscles and nerves thereof were bruised, wrenched and contused; her left foot and the bones' thereof, were wrenched, bruised aand mashed, and plaintiff’s entire nervous system was shocked and plaintiff was injured in all of her internal organs”, and that “all of said injuries are permanent.” But we are not at liberty to say that all of these allegations could not possibly be true, and we pass to the trial of the case.
It is first insisted that no case was made for the jury. Accepting the evidence in plaintiff’s behalf as true, we think this objection to the judgment should not be sustained. Plaintiff signified to the conductor her desire to leave the car at twenty-fourth street and Troost avenue. The car stopped at that point. She had gone to the platform, passing by the conductor, and when the car had stopped she reached the step and was in the act of alighting when the car started “with a terrific jerk”, and threw her to the pavement. She had told the conductor she was going to get off and she passed by him in going to the exit, but before she could safely alight she was thrown to the pavement. We think the trial court justified in submitting the case to the jury.
But at the close of the case the court by instructions pointedly withdrew from the jury’s consideration the evidence as to Charcot’s joint and the injury to the heart. Defendant claims that this was not sufficient. Such method as to improper evidence, in civil cases, has been frequently approved by the Supreme Court and Courts of Appeals.
There may be instances where prejudice to the right of a party to a fair trial would be apparent, as where improper evidence had been designedly gotten before the jury (Peck v. Traction Co., 131 Mo. App. 134), but the circumstances and surroundings, being in the immediate view of the trial court, its action should have some weight with the appellate court. We therefore do not feel authorized to interfere. [Harrison v. Electric L. Co., 195 Mo. 606, 635; Anderson v. Railway Co., 161 Mo. 411, 420; O’Mellia v. Railway Co., 115 Mo. 205.]
We think excessive verdict was cured by the remittitur. The judgment will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.