Craine v. Metropolitan Street Railway

152 S.W. 24, 246 Mo. 393, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 24 (Craine v. Metropolitan Street Railway) 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
Craine v. Metropolitan Street Railway, 152 S.W. 24, 246 Mo. 393, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 192 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

KENNISH, J.

This is an appeal from the circuit court of Jackson county, in an action brought by Bichard H. Craine against the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, David Wilson and Kansas City. The petition is in two counts, in the first of which plaintiff seeks to recover damages in the sum of $15,000 for personal injuries received by him while driving across a bridge in said city, and in the second to recover the sum of $175 for the loss of his horse and damage done to his buggy at the time he received his said injuries. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the • court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of each of the defendants, whereupon plaintiff took a nonsuit, with leave to move to set the same aside. Plaintiff filed a motion to set aside the nonsuit, which was overruled, and he appealed to this court.

The two counts of the petition are the same except that the first is based on plaintiff’s personal injuries, while the second is based on the loss of his horse and damage to his buggy. Each count of the petition, so far as the allegations therein are material to a decision of the questions before us, alleges in substance the following facts:

That the defendant Metropolitan Street Railway Company runs and operates a line of its street railway upon and over Southwest boulevard, a public street and thoroughfare of defendant Kansas City, within the corporate limits of said city; that on November 29, 1907, and prior thereto, there was a bridge on and along said Southwest boulevard where the said boulevard crosses the tracks of the Kansas City Belt Line Railway Company, and that on said date said bridge was in a defective, unsafe and dangerous condition, in this, that said defendants had torn out planks and timbers between the street car tracks running over said bridge, and between the tracks and the trusses on one side of said bridge, leaving large openings there[399]*399in, and. had “carelessly and negligently failed to gnard the same in any manner to prevent teams and persons from being precipitated down therein, and had carelessly and negligently made said openings without providing material or timbers and planks to pnt in place of the old timbers and planks torn from said bridge by them as aforesaid;” that defendants knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care conld have known, of the dangerous and unsafe condition of said bridge, a sufficient length of time before said November 29 to have repaired the same; that defendants failed and neglected to repair said bridge, and “wrongfully and negligently maintained and permitted said bridge to be and remain in said dangerous and unsafe condition, and carelessly and negligently failed and neglected to close the same to public travel;” that on said November 29, at about 11:30 o’clock a. m., while plaintiff was driving a horse and buggy across said bridge, and while an engine was passing beneath said bridge and throwing out immense volumes of smoke and steam, thereby frightening said horse, the passing of engines beneath said bridge and the throwing out of smoke and steam being a common occurrence, as the defendants well knew or by the exercise of ordinary care and caution would have known, plaintiff and his horse and buggy, by reason of the. defective, dangerous and unsafe condition of said bridge, were precipitated and thrown down through said opening in said bridge, with great force and violence, whereby, etc. *

The answer of defendant Metropolitan Street Railway Company was a general denial. Defendants David Wilson and Kansas City each filed an answer containing a general denial and a defense of contributory negligence.

The evidence introduced by the plaintiff tended to show the following facts:

[400]*400The bridge in question was bnilt fifteen or twenty years before the date of plaintiff’s injury. The defendant street railway company maintained double tracks across it, and the public used it as a thoroughfare for vehicles and pedestrians. As it was constructed and used it was merely a continuation of Southwest boulevard across and twenty or twenty-five feet above the tracks of the Kansas City Belt Line Railway Company. There was a space of twenty-seven feet between the trusses on the east side and those on the west side which was used by street cars and vehicles, and outside of the trusses were walks used by pedestrians. Between the inside rails of the two street car tracks there was a space of six feet. On either side of the double tracks was a narrow driveway for vehicles, the distance between the outside rails and the trusses being six feet. At the time of the accident, and for two months prior thereto, defendant David Wilson, under a contract with the defendant city, was engaged in repairing the bridge. The city and the street railway company had an agreement to divide the cost of the repairs between them. In making the repairs the plank flooring between the inside rails of the two tracks had been torn out, leaving an unguarded opening about five feet wide and extending the entire length of the bridge. The flooring between the outside rail and the trusses on the west side had also been torn out, leaving an opening ■six feet wide, which also extended the full length of the bridge. When these openings were made in the •floor there was placed at each end' of the bridge a -sign three feet wide and six feet long on which was printed in large letters a warning to the public that the bridge was unsafe and was closed to traffic. Notwithstanding these signs and the opening in the floor, ■the public continued to use the bridge to a considerable extent as a public thoroughfare for vehicles. During a part of the time the floor was in this condition an [401]*401employee of the street railway company was stationed on the bridge and “flagged” cars and vehicles across. With the floor between the tracks and in the driveway on the west side torn out, vehicles conld cross the bridge only on the east side, and as there' was not room for a car and a vehicle or for two vehicles to pass on that side, this flagman wonld signal cars and vehicles to wait at one end of the bridge until a car or vehicle coming from the other direction had crossed, and wonld then signal the waiting car or vehicle to proceed.

Plaintiff, a building contractor, sixty-three years of age, lived in Eosedale, a small town near Kansas City, and on the morning of the accident started to drive from his home into the city in a one-horse buggy. He had driven across the bridge frequently while the floor was in the same condition as it was that morning. When he had made these former trips he was sometimes flagged across, and at other times when the flagman was not in sight he would cross without waiting for a signal. He had observed the openings in the floor and was fully aware of the exact condition of the bridge. When he reached the bridge that morning he did not see the flagman and started to drive across without waiting for a signal. The six foot driveway on the east side of the bridge was so narrow that it was difficult to drive between the outside rail of the street car track and the trusses of the bridge and for that reason he drove with the left wheels of the buggy about a foot inside of the east rail, which brought the left wheels within four feet of the opening in the center of the bridge. When he was about half way across, an engine passing along the railway tracks beneath emitted a large cloud of smoke which came up through the opening just to the left and in front of the horse. The horse became frightened, either at the smoke or the noise of the engine, and [402]*402attempted to wheel around.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 24, 246 Mo. 393, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craine-v-metropolitan-street-railway-mo-1912.