Childress v. Southwest Missouri Railroad

126 S.W. 169, 141 Mo. App. 667, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 136
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 3, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 169 (Childress v. Southwest Missouri Railroad) 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
Childress v. Southwest Missouri Railroad, 126 S.W. 169, 141 Mo. App. 667, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 136 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

GRAY, J.

About four o’clock p. m. on the 11th day of December, 1908, Edward Childress, the eight-year-old son of the respondents, was struck and killed by a street car of the defendant on Twentieth street, in the city of Joplin, and this action was instituted by respondents to recover from the appellant the penalty or damages provided under section 2864, Revised Statutes 1899, as amended by the Session Acts of 1905. The cause was tried before a jury resulting in a verdict in favor of the respondents for the sum of four thousand dollars, and the defendant appealed therefrom.

The petition alleged that the appellant was engaged in operating a street railroad, with double tracks, on Twentieth street in the city of Joplin; that said street was used by a large number of people, women and chil[672]*672dren, for the purpose of traveling on foot and that such fact was well known by the appellant and its servants in charge of its cars; that it became and was the duty of the appellant to keep a vigilant lookout for persons, and particularly children of tender years who might be upon and approaching said tracks; that on the 11th day of December, while respondents’ infant son was upon said Twentieth street, exercising reasonable care for his own safety, he was run over and killed by one of the appellant’s cars, by reason of the carelessness and negligence of appellant’s. servants in managing-said car, and in failing to keep a proper lookout for children, and particularly their infant son, who was approaching or on appellant’s tracks. It was further alleged that the servants of defendants who were in charge of the car, by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence in keeping a lookout for children on or near the track, could and would have seen respondents’ son in time to stop, said car, and thereby prevented his death, but although they knew, or could have known, that said child was in a perilous situation, they failed to observe said infant, and carelessly and negligently failed to stop said car after observing him, and that on account thereof, he was run over and killed.

The answer admitted that appellant was operating its cars on the streets, and alleged that the accident was caused solely by the negligence and carelessness of said infant suddenly darting in front of one of appellant’s cars when the same was so near him that it was impossible for appellant’s motorman to stop the car. The reply was a general denial.

The appellant concedes that the evidence on behalf of the respondents tended to support the theory of their petition, and that the case was one for the jury. In fact, there are only three reasons urged for the reversal of the judgment, and they are as follows: First, the court erred in overruling appellant’s application for a continuance made during the trial; second, that the [673]*673court erred in giving respondents’ instructions No. 1 and 2; and third, the court erred in refusing appellant’s instruction No. 1.

The application for continuance was filed because appellants claimed to have been surprised during the trial by the testimony of A. C. Ford, Mrs. A. J. Water-house, and Calvin Steltz. The evidence showed that Twentieth street runs east and west, and that Bird street runs north and south across said street, and that the nest street east of Bird street is Ivy street, which also runs north and south across said Twentieth street; and that there is an alley running north and south aross Twentieth street between Bird and Ivy streets.

Ford was placed upon the stand by the respondents, and testified, on direct examination, that he was standing on Ivy street at the intersection of Twentieth street, waiting for a car which wag- coming from the west, going east; that he first, saw the car at Bird street, and when he first saw the boy, he was leaving the alley from the north, and that after leaving the alley he started towards the tracks and got over one track and on to the other when he was struck by the eastbound car; he also testified that he did not notice that the speed of the car was slackened in any manner before it struck the boy.

On cross-examination, the witness testified that the boy was traveling in a trot and in a southeasterly direction, and was in about eight or ten feet of the car when he stepped in front of it, and that signals were given about Bird street and after. It was also shown on cross-examination that the witness made a written statement and signed it the next day after the accident, and that the same was made at the request of the appellant’s representative. This written statement was offered in evidence by the appellant after the respondents had closed their case in chief, and in this state[674]*674ment the witness stated that the car came down the street, slowly, with the bell ringing; that he did not know which side of the street the boy came from, but thought he came across the north track in front of the car.

This cause had been tried once before, but the witness Ford, was not called by either party to testify.. After the introduction of this statement to contradict the witness Ford, the appellant proceeded with the trial, and called the said Mrs. Waterhouse and Calvin Steltz, and after they had testified, also called four other witnesses and examined them upon the issues in the case. After they had all been examined, an application for continuance was filed, supported by affidavit, and to which was attached the testimony of said Calvin Steltz and Mrs. Waterhouse given at the former trial. The application státed that appellant had been surprised by the testimony of Ford, Mrs. Waterhouse and Calvin Steltz; that it had in its possession the said prior statement of Ford, and relied upon him testifying as set forth in said statement; that Mrs. Waterhouse was put on the stand at the former trial by the appellant, and her testimony at said trial was in contradiction- to her testimony given at the present trial, and alleging that at the former trial she testified that she heard the car whistle and saw the boy on the north side, of Twentieth-street, and that when the car was about even with him, he suddenly darted in front of it and was struck by the corner of the car.

The application further stated that Calvin Steltz was also a witness on behalf of the appellant at the former trial, and that his testimony then was in contradiction with that given at the time the application Avas made; that on the former trial, said Steltz testified that the boy ran some distance along the north track before starting across the south track.

It was further alleged that the appellant placed said witnesses upon the stand, relying upon their testi[675]*675mony given at the former trial and conversations had with them just before placing them upon the stand, and that appellant was surprised by the evidence given by said witnesses, and asked that the jury be discharged and the cause continued, and stating' that if the same Avas done, appellant believed it “will be able to place its defense in this cause in such shape as to avoid the bad effects upon the defendant of the testimony given by said witnesses at this trial; that said witnesses were placed upon the stand in good faith by appellant, believing that their testimony would be the same as at the former trial.”

The court overruled the application for continuance, and appellant proceeded with its testimony, after properly saving its exceptions tó the ruling of the court on said application.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 169, 141 Mo. App. 667, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childress-v-southwest-missouri-railroad-moctapp-1910.