Blumenfeld v. Meyer-Schmid Grocer Co.

230 S.W. 132, 206 Mo. App. 509, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 35
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 132 (Blumenfeld v. Meyer-Schmid Grocer Co.) 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
Blumenfeld v. Meyer-Schmid Grocer Co., 230 S.W. 132, 206 Mo. App. 509, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 35 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

ALLEN, P. J.

This action was instituted against the Meyer-Schmid Grocer Company, a corporation, and Robert C. Rolf, defendants, to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted upon the plaintiff by a servant of the defendants in charge of a team and wagon belonging to them. At the close of plaintiff’s case the court gave two peremptory instructions, one to the effect that under the pleadings and evidence plaintiff could not recover against the defendant Meyer-Schmid Grocer Company, and the other to the effect that under the pleadings and evidence plaintiff could not recover against the defendant Rolf. It appears that the plaintiff did not except to the giving of the peremptory instruction as to the Meyer-Schmid Grocer Company, but did except to the giving of the instructions as to the defendant Rolf; and plaintiff thereupon took an involuntary nonsuit as to defendant Rolf. Thereafter plaintiff moved to set aside the nonsuit, and, upon this motion being overruled, appealed to this court.

The petition charges that on November 2, 1915, an agent and servant of defendants was driving a two-horse team and wagon, belonging to defendants, across the “McKinley Bridge” behind a wagon which plaintiff *513 was driving; tliat defendants’ said servant unlawfully demanded that plaintiff drive his wagon to the side to permit defendants’ team and wagon to pass, “and unlawfully, willfully and maliciously then and there made an assault upon plaintiff, for the purpose of forcing plaintiff to get his wagon to the side so that said two-horse team and wagon could pass, and then and there did strike and beat plaintiff in and about the face, head and body, and thereby injured and damaged plaintiff’s right arm and left leg. And it is averred that as a result of his said injuries plaintiff has become incapacitated from doing work and will be so incapacitated in the future to his damage in the sum of $5000. It is further alleged that said acts of defendants’ servant were done maliciously and without legal justification, entitling plaintiff to recover exemplary damages therefor. Judgment is prayed for $5000 actual and $2500 punitive damages.

The evidence shows that the team and “two-horse wagon” mentioned in the petition were the property of the defendant Ro f, though the wagon had upon it the name “Meyer-Sch.nicl Grocer Company;” and that one Harry Becker, who was upon the wagon, was an employee of defendant Rolf. The goods in the wagon belonged to the Meyer-Schmid Grocer Company, but were being hauled under a contract between that company and the defendant Rolf, upon whom alone plaintiff now seeks to fasten liability for the assault upon him.

When the controversy arose resulting in the assault, plaintiff was driving his wagon westwardly across the McKinley Bridge, i. e. approaching; the City of St. Louis, and the said wagon of defendant Rolf — whom we shall hereafter term the defendant — was being driven across the bridge in the same direction. Tt appears that though Harry Becker was a. servant of defendant in charge of the hitter’s team and wagon, he was not driving the team when the trouble arose, but was seated in the bed of the. wagon mending a whip while his brother, *514 John Becker, sat upon the driver’s seat and held the reins. John Becker, it is said, was not in defendant’s employ, but got upon the wagon, at Harry Becker’s invitation, to ride across the river. At the time of the assault plaintiff’s wagon was in front of defendant’s team and wagon, and both wagons, and other traffic upon the bridge as well, had been stopped by a herd of cattle which was being driven westwardly across the bridge.

The testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses is set out in appellant’s abstract in narrative form. Respondent, however, has filed an additional abstract setting forth some testimony of the witnesses not included, it is said, in appellant’s abstract. We shall undertake to set out the substance of the testimony of the witnesses, so far as here material, as it appears in the Wo abstracts filed.

The testimony of paintiff’s first witness, ohe Cannefax, as shown by appellant’s abstract, is substantially •as follows:

The Avitness testified that he was with a friend in an automobile on the McKinley Bridge at the time mentioned, driving toward St. Louis, and that they could not proceed forward on account of a large herd of pattle in front of them; that the two wagons, viz., plaintiff’s one-horse wagon and defendant’s two-horse wagon, were in front of the automobile in which the witness was riding, and were on the north side of the bridge, on the “approach” on the St. Louis side of the river, plaintiff’s wagon being, immediately in front of defendant’s Avagon; that the men in defendant’s wagon “hollered to plaintiff to get out of the way, plaintiff’s wagon at the time being as close to the outside railing as it could be;” that plaintiff told them he could not get out of the Ava.y because of the cattle in front of him; that “they then drove the tongue of their wagon against plaintiff’s wagon and tried to shoe his wagon into the cattle, Avhoreupon plaintiff said lie could not get out of the Avay and could not run over the cattle;” that there *515 upon one of these men jumped off the wagon, grabbed plaintiff by the neck and tried to pull him from the wagon, and “then went and got a stake from the Meyer-Schmid Grocer wagon and they both .ran plaintiff off of his wagon; ’ ’ that there were two men on the rear wagon, one of whom was driving, the other being seated in the bed of the wagon, and that the one who first got off of the wagon called to the other, saying: “Come on lets get the Jew son of a — .” The witness stated that the “other fellow” then got out of his two-horse wagon, bringing a wagon stake with him, and struck plaintiff, “who at the time was hollering and begging and pleading, and who jumped off his wagon and ran into the herd of cattle.’'’ And the witness said that he saw “both men of the Meyer-Schmid Grocer wagon strike plaintiff.”

On cross-examination the witness reiterated that he saw both men from the Meyer-Schmid Grocer wagon strike plaintiff.

Further testimony of this witness set out in respondent’s abstract is to the effect that he “saw the driver of the stake wagon go up and take the Jew by the neck, and that the Jew hit him with a whip; that the man who had been driving the stake wagon went back and got a stake and called to the other man, who was lying down in the back of the stake wagon, as stated above; that “at this place upon the bridge there was room for two wagons to pass, the plaintiff’s wagon being close to the north side of the bridge.”

The testimony of plaintiff, as a witness in his own behalf, as preserved in appellant’s abstract, shows that plaintiff lived in Venice, Illinois, where he was engaged in the scrap iron and junk business; that on the day mentioned he was driving his wagon to St. Louis across the McKinley bridge from Venice, Illinois, when he came upon a herd of cattle, proceeding in the same direction, on account of which he could not pass, the cattle taking up the entire width of the bridge. He testified that he bad his wagon on the north side of the bridge, “against the railing,” that a stake wagon drove *516

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 132, 206 Mo. App. 509, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blumenfeld-v-meyer-schmid-grocer-co-moctapp-1921.