Brown v. Winwood Amusement Co.

34 S.W.2d 149, 225 Mo. App. 1180, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 146
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 34 S.W.2d 149 (Brown v. Winwood Amusement 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
Brown v. Winwood Amusement Co., 34 S.W.2d 149, 225 Mo. App. 1180, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 146 (Mo. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of $2500. Defendants have appealed.

The facts show that plaintiff, who was a telephone operator about twenty-three years of age, was injured on July 14, 1928, while riding upon a roller coaster at Winnwood Beach near Kansas City. At this place defendants operated an amusement park wherein were situated various concessions, including the roller coaster in question. This device consisted of two steel rails laid two and one-half feet apart upon which small cars, or' trains of three cars each, were operated. .These cars each had four seats and seated eight passengers. The cars were coupled together in such a manner as to prevent them “from jamming back and forth into one another.” The track was from a half mile to a mile long and ran up over summits or humps, down dips and around curves. The purpose of the ride was to give “thrills” to the customers. When a train was loaded the cars were pushed down a slight dip, around a curve and were then picked up by an endless chain which hoisted the train to the top of the first summit or hump about seventy-six feet from the ground. After reaching the first summit the train was turned over to the law of gravity. No further mechanical aid in the operation of the train around the track was used. From the first summit the train descended a decline and its speed and momentum carried it *1182 up( the next incline to the top of the next summit when it descended another decline and so it continued to the point of beginning. There were seven summits altogether. Each successive summit was lower than the preceding one so that the last decline was only fifteen or twenty feet from the" ground: The trains, after leaving the last dip would begin to slow down.

The train was headed nórth wheá it started from the first summit, then it' went south, west and east back to the point of beginning. No attendant was stationed upon any of the cars. The last curve, before the train came back to the starting point, was between the latter point and the last hump or dip and was about fifty or sixty feet from the first set of brakes which automatically operated' to stop the train at the end of the journey. Attached to the back of each seat and parallel thereto was a handle consisting of a round piece of metal or steel projecting into the car eight to eleven inches. This was provided for the passengers to hold to during the ride. Each car was equipped underneath with eight steel wheels, four of which ran upon the track and the other two were “underslung” wheels. These latter wheels ran underneath the- track in order to hold the car upon the track when it reached the summits or humps for at that time the car, as it started downward^ had a- tendency to continue its upward climb. The bottom wheels were also spoken of as friction wheels which were also brought into use when the car was making a curve at which time these wheels ran against a third or side track; . . •' .

The cars were stopped at the end of their journey by means of what is known as “squeezer brakes” which were' three in number. None of these was attached to the cars but operated against the brake shoes upon the cars. The first one of these brakes acted automatically to cheek the speed of the train. -The train then proceeded about two feet further when it entered into another braking apparatus controlled by the brakeman there present by the use of levers. -There was a safety rachet- on the upward side of the various inclines to automatically catch a car or train should anything occur to cause' themi to run backward. There was no safety device on the declines'.

Plaintiff and two girl companions and three young men, on the day in question, visited the roller coáster and two of the couples proceeded-to take a ride thereon, the other staying behind because they were afraid. Plaintiff was seated in the center of the middle car 'with one Eddie Burgéss and the other couple, consisting of Mr. Burnett and Miss Keller, were seated behind them in the same ear. Burnett paid the requisite fare for the four. There was another couple on the train not in plaintiff’s party. No untoward circumstances transpired until the train reached the last curve. At this point the car in which plaintiff was séated gave a quick,'sudden and *1183 unexpected jerk, raising her almost to a standing position and throwing hér with her right side against'the iron rod in front to which she had been holding with both hands, striking her right hip. This resulted immediately in her suffering a severe pain in her side, her back hurt and she was sick, nauseated and felt faint: Her side and abdomen became inflamed and later her appendix was removed. When she arrived at the unloading place the attendant gave her the name of a doctor and asked plaintiff her name.

Plaintiff described the movement of the car at the time she was injured as follows: “It gave a quick, sudden, unexpected jerk and threw me .against the car and it raised me almost to a standing position and then it threw me against the rod.” She testified that .when the car gave the unexpected jerk it-sounded like “something 'dragging.” “It sounded like the wheels locked.” “It made kind of a grinding noise.” It was a “loud sound.” On cross-examination she testified that She had never heard a sound made by locked-wheels and did not know what the sound of locked wheels was like but “that’s just the way I thought of it as.” She was asked' whether that was a “figment of her imagination,” and she answered, “yes.” We take her testimony to mean that, while she had never heard a noise made by locked wheels, she imagined the noise thati occurred at this time was of that nature. • She had ridden upon this coaster on one occasion before, or on July 4, 1928. In describing the jerk which occurred when she was injured she said it was a much harder, a more sudden and violent jerk than any she had before experienced while upon the coaster and that when she rode before there was no jerk at the place where the one in question occurred.

Plaintiff further testified that, when she was upon the coaster the first time, she received “certain jerks and certain jars” and that when she went upon it at the time she was injured “I expected to be in jarred a certain amount;” that the reason she held on to the bar in front of her was to reduce the shock to her body caused by the jerks. However, as before stated, she testified that the other jerks she received were nothing to compare with the one at this time and 'that even Burgess and Burnett “got a terrible jar” and that Burgess was hurt slightly but neither was injured like she was.

As to the exact point where the violent jerk occurred plaintiff testified that it happened “about at the last dip or'turn;” that she did not know exactly but thought it was about thirty feet from the unloading platform; that the last dip occurred when the car waé going east, but that when she was hurt it was going north. Taking her testimony as a whole we conclude that she was injured when the car was making its last turn after leaving the last dip.

Plaintiff’s witness, Mildred Womack, testified that she was a friend of plaintiff’s and vfas one ,of six persons who visited the coaster at the time plaintiff was injured but that she and her escort *1184 did not go upon it at that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 S.W.2d 149, 225 Mo. App. 1180, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-winwood-amusement-co-moctapp-1931.