Dorman v. East St. Louis Railway Co.

75 S.W.2d 854, 335 Mo. 1082, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 13, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 75 S.W.2d 854 (Dorman v. East St. Louis 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
Dorman v. East St. Louis Railway Co., 75 S.W.2d 854, 335 Mo. 1082, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 316 (Mo. 1934).

Opinion

*1085 ATWOOD, P. J.

— This is an action for damages on account of personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by Emma Dorman while alighting from a street car of the East St. Louis Railway Company. Plaintiff obtained judgment for $10,250 from which defendant has appealed.

Plaintiff went to trial on her amended petition which contained the following specifications of negligence:

“1. That said street car was carelessly and negligently started forward before plaintiff had been allowed a reasonable opportunity to alight from same.

“2. That defendant carelessly and negligently failed and omitted to warn the plaintiff or to give her any signal of it’s intention to start the said ear forward, in time to have permitted her to have restrained her movements and thus and thereby have saved herself from being thrown and injured as aforesaid.

“3. That defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care on its part, could and should have known, that to start the said car forward without giving plaintiff a reasonable opportunity to alight from same was likely to cause her to be thrown and injured as aforesaid. ’ ’

Defendant’s answer consisted of a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. Appropriate reference to the evidence ivill be made on consideration of the assignments of error urged by appellant.

Appellant’s first assignment of error is to the action of the trial court “permitting the case to go to the jury over the objection of defendant after plaintiff had failed to submit any instructions other than the measure of damage instruction.”

More than twenty years ago in Eversole v. Wabash Railroad Company, 249 Mo. 523, 529, 155 S. W. 419, we said that “the idea possessed by some lawyers that an instruction on the measure of damages in a personal injury case is all that they should attempt to write for fear of getting error in the record is an idea which when put into practice should be promptly condemned. There should in all cases be at least one principal instruction outlining to the jury the theory under the petition upon which recovery is sought. The jury should not be left to gather the theory of recovery from the petition, aided solely by a formal instruction upon the measure of damages. Nor should counsel cast the burden upon a trial judge to draw such an instruction.” These words of admonition apparently fell on deaf ears because subsequent complaints that plaintiff’s submission on a measure of damages instruction only was prejudicial error were *1086 generally in effect met with the aphorism announced in Morgan v. Mulhall, 214 Mo. 451, 463, 114 S. W. 4, and drawn from earlier cases, that “mere non-direction is not misdirection.” [Sullivan v. St. L. S. F. Ry. Co., 321 Mo. 697, 12 S. W. (2d) 735, 740; Barr v. Nafziger Baking Co., 328 Mo. 423, 41 S. W. (2d) 559, 563; Luikart v. Miller (Mo.), 48 S. W. (2d) 867, 870.] However, frequent resort to this character of submission in recent years has evoked fresh criticism and sharp judicial condemnation (Shumate v. Wells, 9 S. W. (2d) 632, 320 Mo. 536; Barr v. Nafziger Baking Co., 328 Mo. 423, 41 S. W. (2d) 559, 562; Bello v. Stuever (Mo.), 44 S. W. (2d) 619; Imart v. Walter Freund Bread Co., 332 Mo. 461, 58 S. W. (2d) 477; Freeman v. Berberich, 332 Mo. 831, 60 S. W. (2d) 393; Young v. Wheelock, 333 Mo. 992, 64 S. W. (2d) 950, 956, 957), although for various reasons we have not yet reversed a judgment solely on that account. The bar is entitled as soon as possible to a clarification of the nature of this complaint and to he advised what, if anything, can be done about it.

The assumption that mere failure of the trial court to instruct the jury is not error in a civil case apparently rests on inferences drawn from some of our early decisions rendered when courts were deemed to have exclusive power to make and promulgate rules of practice, and other decisions rendered after the General Assembly began to treat this as a legislative function.

Harking back to the Territorial Laws of Missouri, we find that Chapter I of the Organic Laws embraces an Act of Congress approved March 26, 1804, providing for the temporary government of the territories ceded by France to the United States by treaty concluded at Paris on the thirtieth of April, 1803. Section 12 thereof, providing for the organization and administration of the government of “the district of Louisiana” from which the State of Missouri was afterwards carved, extended the executive power then vested in the Governor of the Indiana Territory thereto, and further provided that “the governor and judges of the Indiana territory shall have power to establish, in the said district of Louisiana, inferior courts, and prescribe their jurisdiction and duties, and to make all laws which they maj1- deem conducive to the good government of the inhabitants thereof.” [Missouri Territorial Laws, p. 5.] Among the courts created pursuant thereto was a “supreme court of record” styled “the general court” (Sec. 8, Chap. 13, p. 60, Mo. Ter. Laws), which was empowered “to direct, the writs, summons, process, forms and modes of proceedings to be issued, observed and pursued by the said general court.” [Sec. 3, Chap. 11, p. 55, Mo. Ter. Laws.] Section 1, Chapter 30, pages 89, 90, Missouri Territorial Laws, provided for a jury trial in any suit pending in any court of record if requested by either party before the trial. Section 28, Chapter 38, page 116, of *1087 the same laws provided that “rules-of practice adopted by the general court, shall be adopted -by the several courts of common pleas, and quarter sessions as far as the same may be practicable.”.

Section 1 of Article V of the first Constitution of Missouri established in 1820, vested the judicial power as to matters of law and equity “in a ‘Supreme Court,’ in a ‘Chancellor,’ in'‘Circuit Courts,’ and in such inferior tribunals as the general assembly may, from time to time, ordain and establish.” [Laws 1925, p. 53.] Section 3 of the same article provided that “the supreme court shall have general. superintending.control over all inferior courts of law.” Section 8, Article XIII of this Constitution also provided that “the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate,” and the above-noted territorial provision with reference to jury trial became a part of the statutory law. [Sec. 35, Chap. II, p. 630, Laws 1825.] Section 15, Article IV, page 463, Eevised Statutes 1835, provided that all issues of fact joined in any suit in any court of record should be tried by a jury “when either party shall demand such trial and the cause is not referred.” This statute, as subsequently amended (See. 6, p. 89, Laws 1848-9; Sec. 12, p. 1261, E. S. 1855), is now Section 948, Eevised Statutes 1929, as follows: “An issue of fact in an action for the recovery of money only, or of specific real or personal property, must be tried by a jury, unless a jury trial be waived or a reference ordered as hereinafter provided.” The constitutional provisions mentioned in this paragraph now appear, with some changes, in the Constitution of 1875 as Section 1, Article VI, Section 3, Article VI and Section 28, Article II, respectively.

The first legislative reference to instructions by the court to the jury that has come to our attention is Section 28, Article V, Chapter 138, page 882, Eevised Statutes 1845.

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75 S.W.2d 854, 335 Mo. 1082, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorman-v-east-st-louis-railway-co-mo-1934.