Dodson v. Gate City Oil Co.

88 S.W.2d 866, 338 Mo. 183, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 560
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 19, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 866 (Dodson v. Gate City Oil 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
Dodson v. Gate City Oil Co., 88 S.W.2d 866, 338 Mo. 183, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 560 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

*189 COOLEY, C.

Action for damages for personal injuries. .Originally there were two defendants, the Kansas City Public Service Company, a corporation operating a street car system in Kansas City and the Gate City Oil Company, a corporation! engaged in the sale and distribution of gasoline, oil and other commodities in said city. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court sustained a demurrer as to the Public Service Company and plaintiff thereafter dismissed as to- that defendant. The case proceeded against the defendant Gate City Oil Company and plaintiff obtained judgment for $27,500 from which that defendant appealed.' Reference hereinafter ' to the defendant will mean said Gate City Oil Company.

Plaintiff was injured while riding as a passenger on a street car of the Public Service Company, January 8, 1929, when a large oil truck of defendant collided with the rear end of the street car. The street car was going south on Summit Street, a north and south 'street, with the truck following it. As it was stopping or had just stopped to discharge passengers at the north side of Thirty-eighth Street, an east and west intersecting street, the truck, which had been following it for two blocks, crashed into the rear end of it. The car was crowded with passengers and plaintiff, unable to find a seat, was, with several others, standing in the rear vestibule of the car when the collision occurred. The vestibule was enclosed -at the rear with sheet metal extending part way from floor to roof, attached to and strengthened by upright iron rods. Above the metal part of the rear enclosure were windows. At the time of the collision plaintiff was leaning, as he had been theretofore, against said rear metal enclosure, a little to the right of the center thereof, with his back toward the truck, which he had 'not seen. The force of the impact of truck against car smashed in the metal part of said rear enclosure a distance variously testified to aA six to ten inches, at the point where plaintiff was leaning against it, breaking the upright irons loose from their floor fastenings and shattering the glass of -the windows. Plaintiff was thrown or knocked forward onto the floor and as he claims, severely injured.

Plaintiff’s petition contained several specifications of negligence, only one of which was submitted to the jury, viz. — that defendant, through its agent, the truck driver, “knew or in-the exercise of the proper degree of care could have known that the street car with the plaintiff therein was in the pathway of said truck in a position of imminent peril in time thereafter for the driver of said truck, acting, as aforesaid, to have stopped said truck, slackened its speed, (or) swerved the same . . . and thereby have prevented said collision, but that he negligently failed to do so.”

*190 The other specifications of negligence charged excessive speed, failure of the driver-to keep a vigilant watch for vehicles ahead of him and to observe the street car as he approached it and failure to give warning of his approach, but plaintiff did not ask to have those specifications submitted. Appellant insists that the evidence did not warrant submission of the case on the charge of negligence above quoted.

■ The evidence, considered as it must be on this issue in its light favorable to plaintiff, tended to prove the following:

The collision occurred at about six o’clock p. m. Summit Street, between Thirty-eighth .and Thirty-seventh streets, an east and west street one block — three hundred feet or more — north of Thirty-eighth, was covered with snow three or four inches deep. The snow had been swept from the part of the street occupied by the car tracks sufficiently to make a traffic lane for street cars and motor vehicles, but tip/ car tracks and pavement were slippery from the snow and ice. From Thirty-seventh to Thirty-eighth streets there is a gradual downward slope. Both Thirty-seventh and Thirty-eighth streets were regular stopping places for street cars as defendant’s driver knew, southbound cars stopping regularly at the north side of each of said streets. The car had made its regular stop at Thirty-seventh Street and'the truck, which had then been following it for a block or two, had stopped or “slowed down to very slow” behind it, safely, going forward behind the car when the latter proceeded. The car was well lighted and defendant’s' driver could see' that it was loaded with passengers and could, see plaintiff and other passengers standing in the rear vestibule. Between Thirty-seventh and Thirty-eighth streets the car ran at the rate of ten or twelve miles an hour until it began slowing down for the Thirty-eighth Street stop. The truck, after the car had. star ted from Thirty-seventh Street and had gotten some distance ahead of it, was running fifteen miles an hour. The car began slackening speed for the Thirty-eighth Street stop when forty or fifty feet from the point where the collision occurred and had just come to a stop when .the truck- struck it. When) the ear began slackening speed for the stop the truck was approximately fifty feet behind it, still running at fifteen miles an hour. The truck did not strike head on. The driver swerved the front end to the right, missing the car, but the rear wheels skidded,— some evidence, especially defendant’s, indicating on account of ruts along the ear track formed by snow and ice, — and the body of the truck struck the car. The truck came to a stop with the front end about even with the doors of the rear vestibule of the car. , Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the truck struck the car with great violence. Defendant’s evidence tended to minimize the force of the .collision.

L. S. Haggard, the driver of the truck, was called as a witness by *191 defendant. He testified that, the truck and its brakes, tires and appliances were in good conditionthat at the-time in question he knew the locus in quo,

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.2d 866, 338 Mo. 183, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodson-v-gate-city-oil-co-mo-1935.