Byars v. St. Louis Public Service Co.

66 S.W.2d 891, 66 S.W.2d 894, 334 Mo. 278, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 760
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 20, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 891 (Byars v. St. Louis Public Service 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
Byars v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 66 S.W.2d 891, 66 S.W.2d 894, 334 Mo. 278, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 760 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

Plaintiff in the St. Louis County Circuit Court obtained judgment in the sum of $10,000 damages for personal injuries, against both defendants, St. Louis Public Service Company and Fehlig-Ferrenbach, Inc. From this judgment both defendants took separate appeals which we will consider together.

Appellant, St. Louis Public Service Company at the time of respondent's injury, October 24, 1929, operated an electric street railway system. Part of this system was a westbound single track on Washington Avenue, in Kirkwood, St. Louis County, over which track ran cars of the Kirkwood-Ferguson and Manchester lines. Appellant, Fehlig-Ferrenbach, Inc., was a construction company, and, at the time mentioned, was engaged in the work of laying a concrete surface on the south side of Washington Avenue, between Fillmore Street at the east and Kirkwood Road at the west. Taylor Avenue, a north and south street, intersected Washington Avenue midway between Fillmore Street and Kirkwood Road. Appellant, Fehlig-Ferrenbach, Inc., put up guards, or barricades at the intersection in order to keep vehicles from entering upon or traveling over the freshly laid concrete on Washington Avenue, and also from passing along Taylor Avenue over the intersection. The most westerly of these barricades was immediately east of the west cross-walk of Taylor Avenue at its intersection with Washington Avenue. This barricade consisted of a metal drum or barrel, standing upright near the car track, and of a plank, one end of which lay upon the top or the rim of the barrel and the other end rested in the street near the curb of the intersecting streets. The west cross-walk of Taylor Avenue at the Washington Avenue intersection was open to persons on foot going north or south, and the westbound track on Washington Avenue was being used by the street cars of the service company. Respondent, in his amended petition, describing the circumstances of his injury, states that, on the day in question, "he walked south across said Washington Avenue, on the west side of Taylor Avenue, on that part of said Washington Avenue commonly used by pedestrians in crossing said street, at said place, and within close proximity to said barricade, and when he had reached a point, at or near the south curb of said Washington Avenue, about ten or twelve feet south of said street car track, a street car of said Public Service Company, in charge of its agents and servants, was run into and against the ends of the aforesaid planks forming said barricade, as aforesaid, with such force and violence as to cause said planks to be thrown against and to strike the body and legs of plaintiff, with great force and violence, then and there inflicting upon plaintiff the injuries hereinafter set forth."

Respondent charges that his injuries were caused by the "joint and concurring carelessness and negligence" of appellants in the following particulars: "That the agents and servants of defendant, *Page 283 Public Service Company, in charge of said street car, either saw, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen said barricade placed across said street, as aforesaid, and the danger of collision therewith and injury to plaintiff in time to have avoided said collision, and injury to plaintiff, by the exercise of ordinary care, in the operation of said street car while approaching and passing said barricade, but negligently and carelessly failed and neglected to exercise such care, and by reason thereof caused said street car to run into and collide with said barricade, and to injure plaintiff, as aforesaid. That defendant, Fehlig-Ferrenbach, Inc., negligently and carelessly placed the planks, constituting the aforesaid barricade, so close to said street car track as to cause said collision of said street car with said barricade and the injury of plaintiff as aforesaid."

Each appellant forcibly urges that its separate demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. Mr. Byars, the respondent, very soon after eight o'clock on the morning of October 24, 1929, left his Kirkwood home on the west side of Taylor Avenue and north of Washington Avenue and walked southwardly to and nearly across Washington Avenue. When he reached Washington Avenue he looked east and saw a service company electric car of the Kirkwood-Ferguson line turn west into that avenue at Fillmore Street, a block east of Taylor. He crossed the street, passed over the car track and was about to step upon the curb to the sidewalk on the south side of Washington Avenue, when he was struck with a heavy plank from behind, upon the right leg between the ankle and the knee. He was thrown backward into a sitting position upon the plank, with his right leg beneath the plank. The street car, which he had observed turn westwardly into Washington Avenue at Fillmore, was immediately behind him and passing over the west cross-walk at Taylor Avenue, when he first felt the impact of the plank. This plank had been part of the barricade next to which he was walking when struck. He was carried to his home and thence he was moved to a hospital.

The street car which was passing when Mr. Byars was struck continued westward, turned at a loop, and, over another Kirkwood street, went its way toward Ferguson, its other terminal. Kirkwood police learned from other street car men the scheduled time for the return of that car. At the appointed time of return, they examined a Kirkwood-Ferguson car at the loop and found that twelve inches of moulding on the left side of the vestibule had been freshly broken off. The moulding was estimated to be about four feet above the surface of the street. Other witnesses testified that the end of the plank which rested upon the upright barrel and projected toward the car track was about four feet high. The moulding was painted yellow with a red stripe. Mr. Werthmueller, superintendent of appellant *Page 284 Fehlig-Ferrenbach, Inc., testified that he examined the plank, immediately after Mr. Byars had been injured, and he observed on the edge of it some paint which was "yellow with red."

The steel barrel and the plank, which together formed the street barricade close to which Mr. Byars was walking southwardly when hit, were, in their normal fixed position, in alignment with and, as it were, an extension of the west curb of Taylor Avenue. And this barricade was east of Mr. Byars. But after the accident, the barrel lay about fifteen feet (one witness said twenty feet) west of the west cross-walk of Taylor Avenue. And what had been the north end of the plank in its normal position was about ten feet west of where it formerly had been. This was the testimony of a policeman. Mr. Werthmueller, superintendent of appellant Fehlig-Ferrenbach, Inc., testified that the north end of the plank had been thrown to the west about twelve feet beyond its first position, and the barrel or drum was "a little past the plank." Mr. Werthmueller also testified that the steel barrel or drum weighed about twenty-five or thirty pounds and was about twenty-four inches in diameter. The plank was eleven inches wide, three inches thick and twelve feet long and was what Mr. Werthmueller called heavy oak. It is clear that the barrel and the plank had moved in the same direction in which the passing street car was going, namely west, and that, in their passage, the barrel and plank went behind Mr. Byars, the plank in its passage hitting him on the back part of the lower right leg.

Testimony touching on the speed of the car at or about the place and time in question was as follows: Mr. Byars, the respondent, testified that, as he was passing over the track in the middle of Washington Avenue, he looked eastwardly toward the approaching street car.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 891, 66 S.W.2d 894, 334 Mo. 278, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byars-v-st-louis-public-service-co-mo-1933.