Amos v. Fleming

285 S.W. 134, 221 Mo. App. 559, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 140
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 134 (Amos v. Fleming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amos v. Fleming, 285 S.W. 134, 221 Mo. App. 559, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 140 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

This is an action in damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by plaintiff while attempting to enter a street car operated by defendiants.

The defendant Kansas City Railways Company is a corporation which, at the time of the alleged injury in suit, was in the hands of Fred W. Fleming and Francis M. "Wilson, receivers, named parties defendant. As receivers, these defendants operated a system of street railways in the city of Kansas City, Mo., and environs. As a part of said system there was in operation and under the direction of said receivers, a, line known and designated as the Fairmount Park line which crosses the Blue River at a point about a quarter of a mile east of the village of Sheffield, now within the city limits of Kansas City. The tracks of said street car line cross the Blue River in an east and west direction, over .a bridge used for such purpose only. Immediately east of said bridge and about 125 to 150 feet from the east end thereof, the company maintains a station for receiving and discharging passengers, loo own as Highlander Station. A shed, or shanty, is located there for the convenience of street ear patrons and is lighted at night by two or three electric lights. About twenty-five feet east of said station the street car tracks and the Kansas City Southern Railway tracks cross at right angles and the street cars going in either direction are required to make a dead stop before crossing said railway tracks.

On the morning in question, February 1, 1923, one of defendants’ street ears, proceeding west, between six and seven o’clock in the morning, encountered a freight- train on the said railway' tracks which had pulled upon the crossing and stopped. The street car approaching from the east stopped before it reached the railroad tracks and remained standing until the freight train cleared the crossing and *561 then proceeded to Highlander Station where it stopped) to discharge some passengers.

Plaintiff and his companion, one Mose Newman, alighting from the caboose of said freight train, about forty or fifty feet south of the street car track, were told by the train conductor to proceed to the; street ear station where they could board a car for the city. Plaintiff and' Newman then walked around the rear end of the standing' caboose and proceeded toward Highlander Station. At this point there is some divergence in the evidence of the parties hereto as to what took place, but it is agreed that after the freight train cleared the crossing, the street car proceeded west, crossed the railway tracks and stopped at Highlander Station.

Plaintiff and Newman testified that when they stopped plaintiff was near the front of the car and the motorman motioned them to go to the rear, which they did, and there they saw some passengers alighting, one of whom was an elderly woman with a bundle, or bundles, which the conductor handed to her just as plaintiff placed his foot on the first step in an effort to get on board the car. It is not disputed that the street car was delayed three to four minutes waiting for the train to clear the eróssing and that by reason thereof, the car was that length of time behind its schedule.

Plaintiff stated that as the oldi lady got off, he placed his foot upon the step while the car was standing and made an effort to get in but the door was closed before he succeeded in getting inside the vestibule, and the car started; that the conductor looked at plaintiff; that plaintiff beat upon the door with his hand and the conductor reached over and got hold of something that looked like, a lever inside the glass door. Plaintiff expected the car to be stopped and the door openedi; that when the car had proceeded a distance of approximately 130 feet, he was struck by an upright part of the bridge and knocked from the step to which he wras clinging, and injured; that he was not familiar with that street car line and the proximity of the bridg’e and the conductor gave him no warning thereof. Plaintiff stated that at the motion of the motorman, he "went from the front to the rear of the ear, waited for persons to get off, and then took hold' of the front handhold; that when he came in contact with the upright of the bridge, his body was thrown against the glass of the door, breaking same and that the weight of his body .and the force of the impact pulled the handhold from the body of the car.

"Witness Newman corroborated plaintiff in these statements while the testimony of defendants’ witnesses is flatly contradictory of that of plaintiff’s witnesses upon the circumstances immediately surrounding the accident. -

.One Leonard W. Crump, conductor of the street car in question, testifying for defendants, stated his car stopped on the east side of the railroad crossing for three or four minutes; that when the freight *562 train had cleared the crossing, the car proceeded over the intersection and made, the stop at Highlander Station; some passengers were there discharged after he opened both doors; that there were four or five people standing in the rear vestibule; that he stood with his back to the front facing the rear of the car; that there were no people at the station to board the car and he then closed the doors which are held closed with a wooden button.; after closing and fastening the doors, he gave the usual signal and the car started; that he did not see plaintiff and knew nothing of him until the crash of glass in the door.

The testimony shows there are two doors opening from the vestibule, thus forming an exit on one side of the double doors and an entrance on the other. The conductor stated the crash broke the glass in the exit door and tore off the handle; that after the injury, plaintiff was not on the bridge but, in fact, was eight or ten feet east of the end of the bridge. He also stated that the car crew expected to make up the time lost in waiting for the freight train..

Plaintiff’s witness Newman testified that after plaintiff had been “scraped” from the car, he found him lying on the ties between the rails of the track, on the bridge.

There were six witnesses for defendants who corroborated the conductor as to’the manner in which the door was closed and other things done by him before and during the closing of the door. There seems to be no conflict in the evidence to the effect that when the crash of the door occurred, the conductor gave the emergency stop signal and tliat the ear crossed the bridge in obedience to the company’s rules, and stopped.beyond the west end thereof.

Charles Eberly, the motorman, testified that he saw no one waiting at Highlander Station to board the car, and that he had motioned mo one to go to the rear of the car for entrance. The testimony shows that at the time the injury occurred it was not yet daylight and that the lights at the station were burning. The evidence in behalf of defendants tends to show that the doors in this particular car are not operated by a lever as are the doors on many of the cars operated by defendants. The testimony of all the rear vestibule witnesses was to the effect that there was no woman, young or old, with or without packages, who alighted from the ear at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 134, 221 Mo. App. 559, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amos-v-fleming-moctapp-1926.