Elliot v. United Railways Co.

214 S.W. 234, 201 Mo. App. 662, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 87
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 214 S.W. 234 (Elliot v. United Railways Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliot v. United Railways Co., 214 S.W. 234, 201 Mo. App. 662, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 87 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

— This is an action for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff through the negligence of the defendant while plaintiff was attempting to take passage upon a street car operated by the defendant in the city of St. Louis. The trial, before the court and a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $3000, and the case is here on defendant’s appeal.

The petition, after charging that defendant is a common carrier of passengers for hire by street railway, alleges that on December 26, 1914, the defendant’s servants in charge of an eastbound street car on Delmar avenue, stopped the same near and west of the west crossing of Delmar and Hamilton avenues, in the city of St. Louis, for the purpose of receiving persons, including plaintiff, as passengers thereupon,- that while the car was so stopped for said purpose, plaintiff proceeded to get upon it as a passenger, the door of the rear platform thereof being open to enable passengers to board the car; and that while plaintiff was in the act of stepping upon the step of the car, for the purpose of entering it and becoming a passenger thereon, and before she had reasonable time and opportunity to do so, defendant’s servants in charge of the car negligently caused and permitted it to start into motion, causing the car door to close upon the hand and arm of plaintiff’s son, who was in the act of stepping upon the step of the car to become a passenger thereon, whereby plaintiff’s son was caused to fall against plaintiff, and “by the motion of said car and being so struck by her son in his fall, the plaintiff was thrown and caused to fall from said car to the street,” whereby she was injured, as described in the petition.

[666]*666The answer is a general denial.

Delmar avenue extends east and west and is intersected by Hamilton avenue, extending north and south. On Delmar avenue the defendant, at the time involved, maintained double car tracks upon which it operated street cars for the conveyance of passengers for hire as a common carrier. Plaintiff testified that she left the Park Theatre, situated on the north side of Delmar avenue, a short distance west of Hamilton avenue, about five o’clock P. M. on December 26, 1914, accompanied by her son, a hoy then about eleven years of age; that she went to the southwest of Delmar and Hamilton avenues for the purpose of taking passage on one of defendant’s east-bound “Delmar-Olive” cars; that an east-bound car on that line was then standing on Delmar avenue immediately west of the west Hamilton avenue crossing, but that finding this car crowded she and her son, together with “an overflow of passengers” consisting of “about seven or eight, or nine possibly,” proceeded west to a car standing in the rear thereof. The testimony shows that the entrance at the rear of this second car was about one hundred forty-five feet ■ west of the west crossing on Hamilton avenue, and that the cars were about forty-five feet in length. Consequently these cars were separated by more than .a car length. According to plaintiff’s testimony a damaged automobile that had been struck by a west-bound car had been “switched” from the north track to the south or east-bound track, and was then immediately behind the car standing at the crossing.

Plaintiff’s testimony is to the effect that this rear car was empty, and that when she and her son went to the rear entrance thereof for the purpose of taking passage thereon, they were preceded by a number of persons, “about seven or eight,” who entered the car; that she and her son “stood there a while,”' waiting for those in front of them to get within the car, and then attempted to enter; she had her left’ foot upon the [667]*667car step and was reaching for the hand-rail, while her son, who was at her right, was trying to assist her, when the car suddenly started forward and the door closed; and that by reason of the movement of the car her son fell against her and she fell to the ground and was injured; that as she fell her son called to the conductor of the car but' did not succeed in attracting his attention; that she was unconscious for a short time, and when she recovered consciousness she was at the south curb of Delmar avenue; that two men, Mr. Wyman and Mr. Chapman, then assisted her, took her to a nearby store, and later took her to her home in an automobile. She further testified that she had' “frequently taken the second car back and even the third car back during these matinees;” that there was some ice upon the street at the time, but that it was “ice and dirt ground up together — was more like mud.”

One Parker, janitor of a building at the southwest corner of Delmar and Hamilton avenues, testified that upon the occasion in question he “saw a lady in a falling attitude;” that he “got a glance, of a woman falling;” but that his attention was attracted elsewhere and he paid no further attention to the matter. He further testified: “The regular stopping place is almost immediately in front of my Delmar entrance, a little to the east, and at the time I remember, which is customary on matinee days especially, or sometimes the crowd wants the car and another car comes up behind and at that time it was the case, and it was the rear car upon which I saw the lady in the falling attitude. I don’t want to say I saw her falling from the car. I just'got a kind of angle glance at her.”

The testimony of plaintiff’s son closely corroborates that of plaintiff. He said: “Well, we walked back with some other people; we all walked back to this car. . . . We all started to get on. We waited a second for the people to get on, and after they got on I took' hold of the hand-rail with my right hand, and I had my left hand on my mother’s right arm, and as I was boosting her up the car started into motion, broke [668]*668my hold, and I fell against my mother and knocked her to the ground.” He testified that his mother had had one foot upon the car step, when the car started forward; that after she fell he called to the conductor but the latter “didn’t pay any attention;” that thereupon he caught his mother beneath her arms and dragged her over to the south curb of the street.

This, in substance, is the testimony in chief for plaintiff, aside from that bearing alone upon the extent of her injuries, a matter not involved upon the appeal.

Wyman, called as defendant’s witness, testified that when he and his companion, Chapman, went to plaintiff’s assistance, she told him that she had slipped and fallen on the ice, and said nothing “about having fallen from a street car.” On cross-examination he said that he did not remember “directly” that, plaintiff said that she slipped on the ice; but later said that she told him this, saying that she fell at the gutter.

The witness Chapman testified that plaintiff told him that she “slipped and fell,” and that he drew the inference that she slipped on the ice.

Further testimony for defendant tends to show that the automobile mentioned in the testimony for plaintiff was struck about five o’clock by a west-bound car and slightly damaged; that it was moved from the westbound track to the north side of the street, and was never pushed south across the east-bound track.

Defendant put on as witnesses fourteen conductors shown by testimony for defendant to have been all of its conductors “who operated that day between the hours of 4:45 and 5:20,” on this car line. Each testified that no one fell while attempting to board - his car that afternoon at the place mentioned.

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Related

Hays v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
170 S.W. 414 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)
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80 S.W. 7 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1904)
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80 S.W. 309 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1904)
Flannigan v. Nash
176 S.W. 248 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 S.W. 234, 201 Mo. App. 662, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliot-v-united-railways-co-moctapp-1919.