Crawford v. Southern Kansas Stage Lines Co.

66 P.2d 601, 145 Kan. 580, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 10, 1937
DocketNo. 33,265
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 P.2d 601 (Crawford v. Southern Kansas Stage Lines Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Southern Kansas Stage Lines Co., 66 P.2d 601, 145 Kan. 580, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 183 (kan 1937).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This was an action for damages for injuries sustained in a motor bus in which plaintiff was a passenger, on a journey between Kansas City, Mo., and Richmond, Mo.

Plaintiff recovered judgment, and defendant appeals, assigning various errors, the first of which pertains to the overruling of defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence.

The principal defense to this action was that the bus on which plaintiff was a passenger was one which defendant had leased or loaned to another corporation, the Blue Motor Coach Lines, Inc., and that defendant did not operate a bus line between Kansas City and Richmond or elsewhere east of Kansas City, Mo. That contention and the evidence supporting it are involved in defendant’s argument touching the propriety of the trial court’s ruling on the demurrer; but we must consider plaintiff’s evidence in its most favorable light, since the trial court and jury gave it full credence, and without regard to defendant’s evidence to the contrary. (Feighley v. Milling Co., 100 Kan. 430, 165 Pac. 276; Rosenfeld Co. v. Gleed, 110 Kan. 75, 81, 202 Pac. 611; Hill v. Southern Kansas Stage Lines Co., 143 Kan. 44, 49, 53 P. 2d 923.)

The evidence for plaintiff tended to show that on the morning of August 21, 1935, she went to a union bus station in Kansas City and purchased a round-trip ticket to Richmond. The ticket bore the name of the “Southern Kansas Stage Lines Company.” It had three coupons, one for the outward journey, one for the return journey, and one which served as the passenger’s receipt. In a few minutes a porter employed in the depot told plaintiff her bus was ready. On the side of the bus appeared the words “Southern Kansas Stage Lines,” and also the words “Santa Fe Trail.”

At the entrance to the bus the motorman detached and retained the coupon for the outward journey and permitted plaintiff to [582]*582enter the bus, which shortly thereafter left the depot. The bus stopped at another bus station and five other passengers entered it. The bus then proceeded on its journey. While it was running at 40 or 45 miles pej; hour near Excelsior Springs, Mo., the left rear wheel of the bus came off, which let the bus drop a few inches. Plaintiff was thrown to the floor, her head was bumped and her body was bruised and twisted. She telephoned to friends, who came for her and took her to Richmond. During that day a lump grew' on her head; she began to have pains in her stomach, and her menstruation developed to the extent of a hemorrhage. That evening she returned to Kansas City on another bus, the motorman of which accepted the return coupon of her ticket for her passage. On reaching Kansas City, she took a cab to her home, where she was confined to her bed for about a month.

In this action which followed the jury returned a general verdict for plaintiff and answered special questions thus:

“1. Was plaintiff sold a ticket to Richmond, Mo., and return on the Southern Kansas Stage Lines on the day in question? A. Yes.
“2. Did the ticket seller at 13th and Main on the day in question advise plaintiff, after selling her a ticket, when her bus would leave such station for Richmond, Mo.? A. Yes.
“3. If you answer question 1 in the affirmative, state if said ticket was presented by plaintiff for passage to the driver of the bus upon which plaintiff rode on the day in question and was thereafter accepted as a passenger on said bus. A. Yes.
“4. State what bus company’s name, if any, was painted on said bus upon which plaintiff rode on the day in question. A’. The Southern Kansas Stage Lines Company, a corporation.
“5. Did the company operating the bus depot at 13th and Main on the day in question sell Southern Kansas Stage Lines bus tickets? A. Yes.
“6. If you answer question No. 5 ‘Yes,’ did the company operating the bus depot receive a commission from the sale of such tickets? A. Yes.
“7. If you answer question 5 in the affirmative, state if the defendant company received 90 percent of the proceeds of such sale of the tickets sold plaintiff. A. Yes.
“8. What bus company do you find was operating the bus plaintiff was riding in at the time of the accident? A. The Southern Kansas Stage Lines Company, a corporation.
“9. What company operated the depot at 13th and Main at the time the ticket was purchased there? A. Union Pacific Bus Depot, and was owned by Interstate Transit Lines.
“10. Aside from the commission for selling the ticket at 13th and Main, what bus company got the rest of the price of the ticket? A. The Southern Kansas Stage Lines Company, a corporation.
“11. What bus company was paying the wages of the driver of the bus in [583]*583question the day of the accident in question? A. The Southern Kansas Stage Lines Company, a corporation.
“12. Did the Southern Kansas Stage Lines operate farther east than Kansas City on August 21, 1935? A. Yes.”

Judgment was entered on the verdict, and defendant appeals.

Counsel for defendant first contend that the evidence briefly summarized as above “can at best make out only a prima facie showing of (defendant’s) ownership in operation, but fails in any way to answer or overcome the verified allegation and statements in appellant’s (defendant’s) answer.” Plaintiff’s amended petition had alleged—

“That defendant, the Santa Fe Trail Stages, Inc., is a subsidiary of the Southern Kansas Stage Lines Company, being either owned or controlled by said Southern Kansas Stage Lines Company, and said defendant companies were and are engaged in conducting said bus line and ticket station as partners.”

This allegation was not an important fact in the statement of plaintiff’s cause of action. Let it be granted that her evidence did not overcome the effect of defendant’s verified answer, the result would merely be a failure of proof of the alleged relationship of the defendant to the “Santa Ee Trail Stages, Inc.” — an inconsequential matter so far as plaintiff’s cause of action was concerned. Moreover, if the point was otherwise important, its potency evaporated when defendant itself supplied the evidence touching the relationship of the companies. (Railway Co. v. Bentley, 78 Kan. 221, 93 Pac. 150; Hospital Co. v. Odd Fellows, 99 Kan. 488, 162 Pac. 302; Shideler v. Capital Gas and Electric Co., 126 Kan. 33, 35, 266 Pac. 741.)

The next error urged is based on the overruling of defendant’s motion for a directed verdict “interposed at the close of all the testimony.”

In support of this point, defendant stresses the evidence of its witness, the motorman, who testified that he was an employee of the “Blue Motor Coach Lines” at the time of the accident; that his employer honored tickets of the defendant company; that there was no other bus service over the route between Kansas City and Richmond than that supplied by the “Blue Motor Coach Lines”; and that he did not know whether the defendant, the Southern Kansas Stage Lines Company, owned the bus he was driving on the day of the accident.

The manager of the bus depot also testified that the depot where

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P.2d 601, 145 Kan. 580, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-southern-kansas-stage-lines-co-kan-1937.