Battles v. United Railways Co. of St Louis

161 S.W. 614, 178 Mo. App. 596, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 175
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 161 S.W. 614 (Battles v. United Railways Co. of St Louis) 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
Battles v. United Railways Co. of St Louis, 161 S.W. 614, 178 Mo. App. 596, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 175 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

This is an action instituted by respondents, husband and wife, for the death of their minor son, Shelby Battles, through the alleged negligence of the defendant. Plaintiffs recovered, and the defendant prosecutes the appeal.

Respondents’ minor son met death by being struck and run over by one of defendant’s street cars in the city of Maplewood, St. Louis county, on Manchester avenue, a public street of said city, on October 31,1910, at about eleven o’clock a. m.

[603]*603THE PLEADINGS.

The petition, which is quite lengthy, counts upon several different theories of negligence.

The first assignment of negligence charges, in substance, that the car which struck and killed deceased was being operated at fhe time at an “ excessive, dangerous and unlawful rate of speed,” and one that was negligent at common law, in view of the fact that it was being operated through a thickly populated portion of the city of Maplewood, and which was much, frequented by children.

The second charge of negligence is that defendant’s motorman, in charge of the ear which struck and killed deceased, was negligent in failing to sound a gong or bell as the ear approached and passed another car going in the opposite direction, upon an immediately adjacent and parallel track.

The third assignment of negligence charges a violation of a municipal ordinance of the city of Maple-wood, in that the car which struck and killed deceased was being operated at a rate of speed in excess of fifteen miles per hour, in violation of said ordinance.

The fourth assignment of negligence charges a violation of another ordinance of said city of Maple-wood, requiring street cars to be equipped with fenders “projecting from the front platform of all said cars, and designed to catch and sustain any human being who may be in the way of said car. ’ ’

The fifth assignment of negligence also charges defendant with a failure to equip its cars with a fender of the design required by the municipal ordinance aforesaid, and that in lieu thereof defendant had equipped the car in question with a fender of a different character and design, describing the latter; and it is alleged that the device which defendant thus adopted was defective in design and construction, and ineffective to accomplish the results, intended by the ordinance.

[604]*604The sixth assignment of negligence also charges a violation of the ordinance respecting the equipment of cars with fenders; and charges that the defendant had undertaken to provide and equip its said car with a device or guard intended to accomplish the same result as was intended by said ordinance viz., to catch and sustain any person in the way of and struck by said car, but it is charged that the defendant negligently failed to keep such device or guard in working order and condition, and permitted it to become broken, defective and out of order, whereby it failed to operate and by reason whereof the deceased was drawn under the car and killed.

The seventh charge of negligence is, in substance, that, the defendant’s motorman in charge of the car which struck and killed deceased could have lowered the fender with which the car was equipped, by operating a certain lever, in time to have prevented the injury and killing of deceased, and negligently failed so to do.

The answer is a general denial, and a plea averred that the deceased was killed through his own negligence and inevitable accident.

PLAINTIFF’S CASE.

Manchester avenue, at and about the point where plaintiffs ’ son was struck and run over by defendant’s car, extends east and west, the central portion of the street being, at the time, occupied by double, parallel street car tracks of the defendant, which extended west to Sutton avenue where they turned to the south along the latter street. Plaintiffs’ son, a boy of nine years of age, was struck by a west-bound car on Manchester avenue, between two cross streets, viz., Sutton avenue on the west and Arthur avenue on the east, and run over and killed; his body being dragged some distance west. The evidence discloses that the car which struck [605]*605him did not carry passengers, but was an “express car,” which made bnt few stops.

Plaintiffs offered no eyewitness to the accident; that is to say, none of plaintiffs’ witnesses saw the boy before he was struck by the car. Some of them heard the crunching and grinding noise made by the car when the motorman thereof attempted to stop it, their attention being attracted thereby, and saw a clond of. dust raised by the car in thus coming to a stop. And two witnesses testified to seeing the boy’s hat fly in the air at this time. Other witnesses for plaintiffs only saw the ear after it had stopped. The testimony of plaintiffs’ witnesses, and which is undisputed, was that when the car came to a stop the boy’s body was under the rear wheel of the forward truck of the car, on the south rail of the west-bound or north track; and that he was then dead, and his. body frightfully mangled.

Plaintiffs’ evidence went to show that the boy was struck by the car in front of the Banner Lumber Company’s building, situated on the north side of Manchester avenue, and that after striking him the car dragged his body west until it come to a stop about opposite Mrs. Ray’s restaurant or lunch room, also situated on the north side of the street. Plaintiffs’ evidence was that the distance which the car thus, ran after striking the boy, before coming to a stop, was about one hundred and sixteen feet.

The testimony of plaintiffs’ witnesses was to the effect that the car was going quite rapidly at the time that it struck the boy, though much of this was by way of conclusions or opinions of the witnesses, who used such expressions as, “Awful fast;” “very fast;” “much faster than ordinary.” One witness, however, estimated that the car was running from twenty to twenty-five miles per hour. This witness stated that he first saw the car when it was east of Arthur avenue; that his attention, was attracted to it because-of its rapid speed; that he came out of Mrs. Ray’s res[606]*606taurant, or lunch room, and started to cross the street, when he hesitated on account of the speed with which the car was approaching; that he saw a passenger car going east on the other or south track, and which passed the west-bound express car, but that though he was looking east toward the approaching express car, he did not see it strike the boy; that he saw a cloud of dust rise from the car, opposite the Banner Lumber Company’s building, and noticed that the car began to slacken speed, and he then proceeded on across, the street.

One witness said that the car was going twice as fast as she had ever seen passenger cars run in that neighborhood. And another witness testified passenger cars ordinarily ran along there about fifteen miles per hour — sometimes as high as twenty.

"Witnesses for plaintiff who were near the scene of the accident testified that they heard no bell or gong sounded. It was shown that this part of Manchester avenue was a mixed business and residence street of the city of Maplewood, frequented by children, especially by those attending a school some blocks west.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.W. 614, 178 Mo. App. 596, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battles-v-united-railways-co-of-st-louis-moctapp-1913.