Davidson v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

256 S.W. 169, 301 Mo. 79, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 115
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 20, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 169 (Davidson v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway 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
Davidson v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 256 S.W. 169, 301 Mo. 79, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 115 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*82 GRAVES, J.

This is the second appearance of this case here. The opinion which sets out the facts in the previous hearing will be found in 229 S. W. 786, to which opinion we refer, without going into detail. At the first trial the plaintiff had a verdict, but the trial court granted a rehearing. This order the Springfield Court of Appeals (207 S. W. 277) reversed, but certified the case to this court.after the filing of a motion for rehearing. The certification was upon the ground that their opinion conflicted with Neth v. Delano, 184 Mo. App. 652, from the Kansas City Court of Appeals.

The history of the case is of value upon this hearing. Plaintiff and three others were undertaking to load from a baggage truck an exceedingly heavy steel casket and corpse into a baggage car of one of defendants ’ passenger *83 trains at Monett, Missouri. For details see our previous-opinion, supra. The causal negligence in the original petition reads:

“That the defendant failed to exercise ordinary care to furnish plaintiff and his helpers a sufficient and adequate number of men to handle said steel vault or casket with safety to themselves, and on account thereof, and on account of the failure of plaintiff’s helpers to exercise ordinary cafe to lift and raise the front end of-said casket high enough to clear the sill of said car-door as they attempted to place the same in said car, plaintiff was caused to be injured, as aforesaid, and thereby disabled and crippled for the balance of his natural life.” -

“Plaintiff states that the defendant, its agents, first petition, among other things averred, we find this clause, “as plaintiff moved forward with said vault in order to lift and hold and push it into said car door.”

Upon the first hearing here we ruled that no negligence was shown upon the part of the defendant and we affirmed the order for a new trial. Upon a return of the case to the circuit court an amended petition was filed, in which the word “push” was eliminated, and the causal negligence thus stated:

“Plaintiff states that the defendant, its agents servants and employees failed to exercise ordinary care to lift and raise the front end of said casket high enough to clear the sill of said car door as they attempted to place the same into said car; and that plaintiff’s said co-employees carelessly and negligently pulled and swung said casket forward against the sill of said car before the front end of said casket had been raised high enough to clear the door-sill and thereby caused said casket to strike and violently bump- against said door-sill and injure plaintiff as aforesaid; which said carelessness and negligence directly caused plaintiff’s injuries, and thereby plaintiff was disabled and crippled for the balance of his life. ” .

Instead of the clause containing the word “push” set out, supra, the amended petition avers that plaintiff was injured “as the said casket was so pulled and did *84 forward from the truck.” This act of “pulling” was charged to his co-employees alone. This, in the face of the fact that plaintiff on the former trial had testified that he was pushing the casket at the time of the injury. He swore to that in accordance with the allegations of his petition. Not only so but the “pushing” by plaintiff was submitted in his first instruction at the first trial. In the trial involved in this appeal he swore in accordance with the allegation of the amended .petition, and says that he was not “pushing.” However, one of his witnesses, Bob Hutchins, stuck to the original petition, for upon cross-examination he says:

“Q. And they lifted the south end, then he pushed from the north end, so as to push it on into the car? A. Yes.

“Q. He merely held the north end there until they raised the south end and got it up on the south end, and he would push it in the car — was that the way you did it? A. When we started with it off the truck and the man in the car said 'Ready,’ why Davidson was against it. When we turned the casket two or three feet with the end towards the car, that puts the end of the casket next to the car-door, and when the man said 'Ready,’ Davidson had hold of it and pushed against it; and when the fellows raised it, it bumped while he was pushing against it.”

This appears from the additional abstract filed by respondent, which stands here unchallenged. Prom the same source the following vital testimony appears from the plaintiff.

“Q. And did the casket stop then, too? A. When it bumped the car it did. The boys were about to have to let it down on the truck again, hut they kept struggling with it and got it in the car.”

This is of importance on the question of negligence, when it is borne in mind that the amended petition eliminates the charge that defendant was negligent in failing to furnish help enough for the work to be done. That charge was in the original petition and was a part of the causal negligence then pleaded-

*85 For the details we refer to our former opinion in 229 S. W. 786. For all matters of importance in this hearing the foregoing will suffice for a statement of the case.

I. Much space in the brief is devoted to the question as to the extent our former opinion in this case will bind the court in this hearing. "We shall not review the many cases cited. It suffices to say that such opinion is the law of the cas'e, unless the pleadings have been amended so as to introduce new issues, or the evidence on the re-trial is substantially different, from the evidence considered upon the vital questions at the former hearing here. It should be further stated, however, that even if there is no substantial difference in pleadings and proof upon the re-trial, yet if this court upon second appeal finds that it was in error upon the first hearing, it not only has the power and right to correct such error, but it would be the duty of the court so to do, in the interest of justice. This is true whether we erred in the principles of law declared, or erred in the determination of what were the real facts of the case. This court should not stick in the bark upon such matters. We have corrected such alleged errors upon second appeal. [Mangold v. Bacon, 237 Mo. l. c. 511, paragraph 2 on pages 511 et seq. and cases cited. See also dissenting opinion in the Mangold Case, 237 Mo. l. c. 525.]

II. We have taken the original files in the case when first heard here, and compared them with the files in the present record. At each hearing the petition contained two counts, but at the first hearing the plaintiff abandoned the second count, and submitted his case upon the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. At the second hearing the case was taken from the jury upon a demurrer to the evidence. That the plaintiff “doctored” his testimony for this second trial there can be but little question. At which time he told the truth is another question. Respondent contends that under Steele v. Railroad Co., 265 Mo. 97, the plaintiff should be *86 ent basis from this case. The contradictory statements in Steele’s Case occurred in the same trial and hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 169, 301 Mo. 79, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-mo-1923.