Boston v. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co.

7 S.W.2d 1006, 320 Mo. 408, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 775
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 21, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 S.W.2d 1006 (Boston v. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co.) 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
Boston v. Kroger Grocery & Baking Co., 7 S.W.2d 1006, 320 Mo. 408, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 775 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

Plaintiff, an employee of the Kroger Grocery Baking Company, sued the defendants for damages for personal injuries resulting from a negligent collision of a street car operated by Rolla Wells, as receiver, with a truck of the Kroger Grocery Baking Company, in which plaintiff was riding. The amended petition charges negligent operation and collision of the truck and street car at the intersection of Newstead Avenue and Hodiamont Street in the city of St. Louis, without using ordinary care to foresee or avoid a collision. The answer of each defendant is a general denial. Plaintiff had a verdict for $20,000 damages. Pending motions for new trial, a remittitur in the sum of $7500 was entered and judgment was rendered for plaintiff against both of the defendants for $12,500, from which separate appeals were allowed. By stipulation these appeals have been consolidated and argued and submitted on one abstract of the record.

It has been stipulated also that if the judgment "is reversed outright or affirmed as to the defendant Kroger Grocery Baking Company, then it shall be affirmed as to Rolla Wells, Receiver of the United Railways Company of St. Louis; and if said judgment is reversed and remanded as to defendant Kroger Grocery Baking Company, then the same shall be remanded for a new trial as to Rolla Wells, Receiver of the United Railways Company of St. Louis."

There is little, if any, disagreement between learned counsel as to the facts.

Adolph Pheedler testified: I was superintendent of transportation for the Kroger Grocery Baking Company in December, 1923. The company maintained trucks of various sizes for delivery purposes; one was a tractor and trailer about thirty feet long. Harold Shields was the chauffeur or driver of one of these trucks. Leslie Boston, the plaintiff, was employed as a helper on the truck. I hired him. I told him his duties were to help on the truck; do anything the driver told him to do after they got away from the plant. He took his orders from the driver; he had to ride on the back end of the trailer; he had nothing to do with the driving. When the truck and trailer leave the warehouse they are usually full of merchandise, but there is usually room for the helper to ride in the trailer. The duty of the driver and helper is to deliver merchandise to the various Kroger Company stores in St. Louis. When they left the warehouse with a loaded truck the driver was given a route sheet with directions as to the route and order of delivering to the various stores. In addition to driving the truck the driver assisted in loading and unloading the merchandise. On December 3, 1923, when the truck and *Page 412 trailer were returned to the Kroger Company garage, I noticed a mark of yellow street-car paint on the right rear corner of the trailer. The plaintiff had been working for the company for about a year. The route sheet, with the addresses, was given to the driver. When the driver and helper arrived at a store they both took part in unloading the goods and if there was anything to be returned to the warehouse both helped in loading the same on the truck.

Harold Shields testified: I was the driver on December 3, 1923. Boston and I started out with the loaded truck and trailer at about 6:30 A.M. I kept the delivery sheet and kept the helper informed. We finished our first load, and returned and got a second load about noon and delivered all afternoon. Boston and I divided the work. Sometimes I delivered to one store and Boston at the next. While I drove from one store to another, Boston rode in the trailer, placing the goods ready for the next delivery, and to keep them from falling out of the trailer. It was a dark, drizzly, rainy day and the streets were wet. I was driving south on Newstead Avenue. On approaching the crossing of the street car lines at Hodiamont, I looked and listened; could not see or hear anything. I knew it was a street car line and that cars ran on it. I started to drive across. When my front wheels were on the north or westbound track, I saw a street car coming from the west on the south track; it was about seventy-five feet distant. I thought the street car would slow down and that I had time to continue across. The street car struck the rear end of the trailer. I was driving six or eight miles an hour and could have stopped in one, two, or two and a half feet. The force of the collision caused the trailer to swerve, and the left wheel of the trailer hit the curb on the east side of the street. I found Boston unconscious. He was lying along the eastbound car track. He was taken to the hospital.

Other evidence shows that the street car stopped in Newstead Avenue, and that Boston was taken to the city hospital; was treated for fracture of the skull; that he was unconscious for about eight days and remained in the hospital until December 28th.

Harry Steerman, motorman on the street car, testified that the track was straight and clear for two blocks west of the crossing; the street car was running about five miles an hour and could have been stopped within fifteen feet; that when he first saw the trailer it was about five feet ahead of him and there was nothing to prevent his seeing it; the bell was ringing all the time and the headlight was shining. He had slowed down for the crossing. The street car continued running for about fifteen feet after hitting the trailer and stopped in Newstead Avenue. There were no lights on the trailer.

Harold Ross was working in a grocery store at the southeast corner of the intersection. He heard the crash of the collision, went *Page 413 out and saw the trailer backed up against the curbing in front of the store. The trailer was facing south in Newstead Avenue and the street car had stopped. Boston was unconscious and lying on the tracks, six or eight feet in front of the street car. The end-gate of the trailer was lying in the street. The conductor and motorman had got off by this time and Boston was carried into the store. The ambulance came for him in fifteen or twenty minutes.

Leslie Boston, the plaintiff, testified: I was hired by Mr. Pheedler to help the driver and told to do what the driver told me to do. My work was delivering groceries to retail stores; the driver and I would unload the groceries at the stores, and reload anything to be taken back to the warehouse. I did most of the reloading. I was told to ride at the rear end when there was room there; the driver told me to watch the groceries. The driver was at the front end to drive. I did not work for the same driver all the time, but worked for different drivers. I worked with Shields about one week before the collision. Shields did not tell me anything I was to do; I had been told by other drivers, I remember going to work the morning of the day I was hurt, but I remember nothing after going out. The driver would every time tell me what the next store was, and tell me to work the stuff back towards the gate to have it handy for the next stop. The goods were loaded in the trailer in the order of delivery and were separated by dividers.

Plaintiff read in evidence the Vigilant Watch Ordinance requiring the motorman in charge of a street car to keep a vigilant watch for vehicles and persons on the track or moving towards it, and on the first appearance of danger to such persons or vehicles to stop the car in the shortest time and space possible.

Plaintiff offered evidence as to the nature and extent of his injuries, but as appellant is making no point on that feature of the case it will be omitted.

At the close of plaintiff's evidence and again at the close of the whole case, each of the defendants offered an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. They were refused.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W.2d 1006, 320 Mo. 408, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-v-kroger-grocery-baking-co-mo-1928.