Applegate v. Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City Railroad

158 S.W. 376, 252 Mo. 173, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 10, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 158 S.W. 376 (Applegate v. Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Applegate v. Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City Railroad, 158 S.W. 376, 252 Mo. 173, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 110 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Plaintiff began his action in the Grundy Circuit Court for personal injuries' grounded on negligence. The venue was changed to Daviess on •defendant’s application. From a judgment on a verdict for $10,000, defendant, on apt and due steps, appeals. An outline of the case is this: .

A brewing company of Quincy, Illinois, built a ■cold-storage beer warehouse hardby defendant’s spur track (known as a “team’.’ track) at Trenton, Missouri, on defendant’s right of way. This warehouse [180]*180had three 'doors next to the team track and was built under a contract between defendant and said brewing" company. Presently, under a contract between brewing company and one Davis, a beer dealer at Trenton, said Davis got the use of the warehouse to store beer purchased by him from the brewing company in car load lots and carried by defendant from Quincy to-Trenton and delivered at the warehouse at so much per car. The details of these contracts are unimportant except as evidence of a running arrángement for the mutual benefit and profit of defendant, Davis and brewing company. Certain kinds of loaded freight cars (among them beer cars) consigned to Trenton over defendant’s railroad were customarily stored on this team track to be unloaded by their respective consignees. Under the running arrangement between brewing company, defendant ánd Davis, when a car of beer came in it was “spotted” on its team track, so that the car door would be opposite the east or west door of the warehouse. The brake was then set and, by use of a plank runway from the car door to the warehouse door, the beer would be unloaded into the warehouse, kegs in one door and the bottled goods in another. The warehouse was so arranged that this could only be done by moving the cars. 'When defendant spotted such car, as aforesaid, the unloading was done by Davis. Any spotting of the car contemplated, however, that there would be a necessity to move the car from one door to the other of the warehouse, and to do that man power was necessary —the team track being a gravity track on a grade of one per cent fall to the east.

On the 8th day of May, 1909, defendant company “spotted” a car load of beer, consigned to Davis by said brewing company, in front of this warehouse on its team track in such way that the car door was-opposite the west door of the warehouse, set the brake and left the car there to be moved as necessary, un[181]*181loaded and then reloaded by Davis from tbe warehouse with “empties” ready for resbipment. This' car was loaded in such way that to unload its contents into tbe warehouse it was necessary to move it by manpower, as usual, from one door to tbe other, say nineteen feet. Tbe unloading as well as tbe moving were wholly performed by Davis’s men, as usual. Plaintiff was an employee of Davis in and about moving and unloading tbe car as were all others so engaged. In moving this car it gathered speed unexpectedly en route, and ran on a pinch bar used by plaintiff to chock it. The pinch bar thereat caught the top of plaintiff’s boot leg and crushed his right leg down, mashing the bone of that leg between the knee and ankle, making immediate amputation necessary.

More than one ground of negligence is averred in the petition, but only one was put to the jury, namely, the negligent condition of the track.

So, a swarm of exceptions were saved. at the trial, but defendant does not here press rulings thereon as reversible error except as follows:

First: In overruling an objection to the introduction of any evidence, for that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
Second: In refusing a mandatory instruction at the close of the case (and herein of contentions (1) that plaintiff’s own negligence caused his injury, and (2) failure to prove that the pleaded negligence caused his injury, and (3) because the condition of the track was not the cause of plaintiff’s injury).
Third: In giving plaintiff?s instruction number one, for that the evidence did not support -it and it ignores both pleadings and evidence.
Fourth: In giving plaintiff’s second and fourth' instructions.
[182]*182Fifth-. In refusing defendant’s third and fourth instructions as asked and in changing them by inter-lineation and giving them as changed.
Sixth-. In refusing defendant’s second instruction.
Seventh: Because the damages are - excessive (and herein of passion and prejudice engendered hy inflammatory language and conduct of plaintiff’s-counsel in his closing argument).

It is obvious that those questions fall logically under four heads, viz: (1) The sufficiency of the petition; (2) the sufficiency of the evidence to make a case (and herein of the mandatory instruction); (3) the instructions; and (4) the excessiveness of the verdict.

We will dispose of the appeal under those subheads. Sufficient of the pleadings, evidence and other parts of the record to present the case understandingly will - appear in connection with the determination of those questions seriatim.

■ I. Of the sufficiency of the petition.

(a) No demurrer was filed, hut counsel objected to the introduction of testimony, for that (they argued Pleading: ^ Testimony!0 then and now) the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. On the disallowance of the objection (which happened), the point was. saved.

That way of testing the sufficiency of a petition is not entirely without the pale of correct practice, and this is so by virtue of the doctrine of this court that a petition so lame as to state no cause of action at all presents a jurisdictional defect. [East St. Louis Ice & Cold Storage Company et al. v. Kuhlmann, et al., 238 Mo. 1. c. 702 et seq.] Such course smacks of lying-in wait, comes late after all invited preparations for [183]*183trial are made on issues of fact joined, and is tolerated, bnt not favored.

The rnle to go by on such belated objection is this: It is never sustained because of lack of certainty or definiteness in allegation, or for informality in the statement of essential fact, or because a cause of action is defectively or obscurely stated. Such objection is disallowed if (by reasonable intendment or fair implication from facts stated or by most liberal construction) the essential allegation may be pieced out- or made clear by reasonable inference. It has been held that the rule applied in disposing of motions in arrest is applicable to' such objection wherein the grace of- every implication is allowed to aid the verdict and mere ambiguity in allegation is resolved in its favor. [Vide the Kuhlmann case, supra, and authorities therein cited and discussed.] It is by that rule the petition must be judged.

(b) ' The petition charges, in substance, that plaintiff is a domestic railroad corporation, in the times in hand owning and operating a railroad and its Bre^fTof contract or Tort.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W. 376, 252 Mo. 173, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/applegate-v-quincy-omaha-kansas-city-railroad-mo-1913.