Edge v. Southwest Missouri Electric Railway Co.

104 S.W. 90, 206 Mo. 471, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 13, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 104 S.W. 90 (Edge v. Southwest Missouri Electric 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
Edge v. Southwest Missouri Electric Railway Co., 104 S.W. 90, 206 Mo. 471, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 164 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This suit was brought in the circuit court of Jasper county by W. A. Edge against the defendant for the recovery of the sum of $25,000 for personal injuries received by him in jumping from a car, caused by the alleged negligence of defendant in permitting a collision to occur on its road between two of its cars.

For his cause of action, the plaintiff states that the defendant is now, and at all times hereinafter mentioned was, a corporation organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Missouri; that as such corporation, it is now, and at all times hereinafter mentioned was, engaged in the operation of an electric railway between the city of Carthage, Missouri, and the city of Galena, Kansas, running through the cities of Joplin, Webb City, and Carterville, Missouri; that the railway of defendant has now, and at all times [477]*477hereinafter mentioned had, a great many short and abrupt curves,' and many of said curves are in deep Juts and around embankments and groves of trees, so that the employees of defendant in charge of and operating its ears can see only a short distance ahead, when about to round, and when rounding said curves with the cars of defendant, and so that cars approaching each other on said track cannot be seen by the men in charge thereof until they get within a very short distance of each other; that the defendant requires its employees in charge of and operating its said cars to make and maintain a certain schedule of time, to-wit, about fifteen or sixteen miles an hour; that in order to make and maintain said schedule, and to make the required stops at railroad crossings, and to allow passengers to embark and disembark from said cars, and to make other necessary stops in the operation of. said cars, it is necessary for the employees of defendant in charge of and operating said cars to run the same at a very rapid rate of speed while rounding the aforesaid curves in the railway track of defendant, as well as when running over a straight track, which facts are well known to the defendant; that on the 17th day of August, 1903, plaintiff was a motorneer, and Burén Moad was a conductor, in the employ of defendant, and in charge of car No. 30 of defendant’s line, in transit from Carthage, Missouri, to Galena, Kansas; that at said time another one of defendant’s cars, in charge of employees of defendant, was bound for the city of Carthage, the Carthage-bound car being known as No. 291; that on August 17,1903, Lawrence Havens was one of the car dispatchers of defendant at its Webb City office; that it was the duty of a car dispatcher to superintend, control and direct the employees of defendant while engaged in the work of moving the cars over the track of defendant’s road, to give orders, by telephone, to employees in charge of and operating cars of defend[478]*478ant, at certain telephone stations along the railway of defendant, directing them as to when and where they should pass, with the cars of which they were in charge, other cars of defendant’s which were running in opposite directions; and the said employees were bound to obey said orders; that it was 'the duty of a car .dispatcher to transmit by telephone to said stations said orders, to the employees of defendant in charge of and operating its cars on its said railway, and to insure the correct transmission it was his duty to have the orders correctly repeated back by the employee receiving them; that said car No. 30' in transit from Carthage, Missouri, to Galena, Kansas, was stopped at Morgan station by the said employees of defendant in charge thereof for the purpose of receiving orders by telephone from the car dispatcher of defendant at its Webb City office; that it was the duty of the conductor in charge of a car of defendant to receive the said orders at the telephone stations, aforesaid, repeat them back, and when approved by the car dispatcher, to transmit the said orders to his motorneer; that pursuant to and in performance of that duty, Conductor Burén Moad of said car No. 30, entered the telephone station of defendant at Morgan station for the purpose of receiving orders; that at said time, Lawrence Havens was acting as the car dispatcher for defendant; that the said Lawrence Havens carelessly and negligently transmitted to the said Burén Moad an order for car No. 30 to pass car No. 29 at Syracuse, look out for car No. 17 at Lakeside, and go to Motley; that at that time, car No. 29 was in transit over the same line of track for Carthage, Missouri, with orders from defendant’s car dispatcher to pass car No. 30 at Morgan station; that because of said' careless, negligent and conflicting orders, said car No. 30 in transit to Motley, pursuant to said orders, when it was about to round one of the curves of defendant’s line about [479]*479a mile west of Morgan station, where it was impossible to see an approaching car more than 150' to 200 feet ahead, and when plaintiff was in the- exercise of due care, collided with said car No. 29; that because of said collision plaintiff was seriously and permanently injured, in that his right knee-cap was split, and in that the muscles and ligaments of his left arm were torn and lacerated to such an extent as to permanently impair its use, and the scapula on the left shoulder broken down to the extent of an inch and a half, and in that several of the processes of the spine at the base of the neck were broken off, and the spinal cord so injured as to seriously impair plaintiff’s ability to turn his head, and in that he received severe scalp wounds above the forehead, and another near the base of the brain, and in that his skull was crushed on the right side near the median line above the nervous center of the brain, thereby necessitating the removal of a piece of the skull two inches in diameter, leaving the brain exposed and unprotected; that because of these injuries plaintiff is partially paralyzed in the left side, and has suffered, and will continue to suffer great pain and has been, and will be for the remainder of his life disabled from the performance of manual labor, his only means of obtaining a livelihood; that by reason of the above injuries, the plaintiff’s sanity is greatly endangered, and total paralysis is a constant menace.

Plaintiff further states that his time on and prior to August 17, 1903,. was worth not less than fifty dollars a month, and that by reason of his injuries, as aforesaid, he has lost the value of his time from August 17, 1903.

Wherefore, in consideration of the premises, plaintiff is damaged in the sum of twenty-five thous- and dollars, for which he prays judgment.

At the close of plaintiff’s case, defendant offered a demurrer to the evidence, which was, by the court [480]*480refused, and defendant excepted. Plaintiff, thereupon, asked leave to file an amended petition. Defendant objected to the filing of the amended petition, for the mason that it stated a different cause of action from the cause of action alleged in the original petition, and because defendant was not prepared to meet the allegations of the petition as amended, which objection was, by the court, overruled, and defendant excepted. The plaintiff was permitted to file an amended petition, which was in all respects the same as the original, with the exception that instead of stating that car No. 30 collided with car No. 29, and because of said collision he was seriously and permanently injured, he alleges, “That said collision was imminent and pending, and plaintiff had reasonable cause to believe said collision was inevitable, and having cause to apprehend great personal harm by reason thereof, jumped and was injured,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.W. 90, 206 Mo. 471, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edge-v-southwest-missouri-electric-railway-co-mo-1907.