Ferdente v. St. Louis Public Service Co.

247 S.W.2d 773
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 14, 1952
Docket42513
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 247 S.W.2d 773 (Ferdente v. St. Louis Public Service 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
Ferdente v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 247 S.W.2d 773 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

247 S.W.2d 773 (1952)

FERDENTE
v.
ST. LOUIS PUBLIC SERVICE CO.

No. 42513.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 2.

April 14, 1952.

*774 Mattingly, Boas & Richards and Lloyd E. Boas, all of St. Louis, for appellant.

Albright & McKeown, St. Louis, for respondent.

BARRETT, Commissioner.

This is an appeal by the St. Louis Public Service Company from Sam Ferdente's judgment for $20,000 for personal injuries. It is first claimed that the trial court erred in overruling the company's motions for a directed verdict for the reasons that Sam's evidence shows, as a matter of law, that his injuries were brought about and caused by his own contributory negligence, that the evidence fails to prove any negligence on the part of the company which could have been the proximate cause of his injuries, and that all the evidence, in so far as the company is concerned, leaves the cause of his injury to speculation, conjecture, guesswork and surmise.

In general, the circumstances of Sam's injuries were these: The vehicular space of Delmar Boulevard, an east and west street, is fifty-seven feet six inches from curb to curb. From the north curb line to the westbound streetcar tracks there is a space of nineteen feet nine inches. The streetcar tracks, both the eastbound and the westbound tracks, are four feet ten inches wide and the space between the tracks is five feet four inches wide. The space between the eastbound tracks and the south curb line of Delmar is nineteen feet ten inches. The Tivoli Theatre, 6348-6350 Delmar, is on the south side of the street. On December 3, 1949, Sam and his girl friend, now his wife, Rosemary Lay, and Rosemary's mother and father were going to the Tivoli Theatre. It was about six-thirty and dark and some said that it was raining and some said that the rain had stopped. Rosemary's brother let all of them out of a car on the north side of the street, almost directly opposite the Tivoli Theatre, probably in front of 6317 Delmar. The four of them started across the street obliquely abreast, Sam to the right or west, then Rosemary and then the father and mother. When they were about two feet from the north curb line Sam looked to the east and saw vehicular traffic about 400 feet away. To the west they saw a bus stopped for a traffic light at Westgate. When they reached the center of the street, the five foot four inch space between the streetcar tracks, the father said, "Let's let the bus go by." Sam said that he stopped about six inches north of the north rail of the eastbound track, he was holding Rosemary's hand and she was back of him, just a little, about a half foot, and the mother was back of her a little and the father was back still farther from his wife. When the father spoke the bus was forty feet from them traveling at a speed of eight to ten miles an hour in the traffic lane south of the eastbound track. As the bus approached the Tivoli Theatre automobiles were double parked and the bus pulled over onto the eastbound track proceeding east. Sam said, "The left side of the bus seemed to be over the north rail of the eastbound streetcar tracks." He looked to the east and there was an automobile passing another, riding the north rail of the westbound tracks, about 120 feet away traveling at a speed of thirty-five to forty miles an hour. The automobile was bearing down on them Sam said, "right smack in the middle" of Delmar. Both the bus and the automobile *775 continued in their respective directions and it is certain that the automobile hit the father and mother and probably Rosemary and threw one or more of them into the bus. The father and mother were killed. The rear vision mirror on the bus was smashed flat and there was a small dent, near the ventilator, about eighteen inches back from the front of the bus. Sam was struck on the left side of the face and head and one of the disputed issues and questions is whether he was hit by the automobile or by the bus.

When Sam saw the automobile bearing down on them at a speed of thirty-five to forty miles an hour, 120 feet away, he said, "the best thing I could do was to turn to my left to grab my girl by the arm and I looked to the west and at the same time I seen this bus on top of me," five to eight feet away, continuing at an angle northeast at a speed of eight to ten miles an hour. He said that he veered to his left, bending over, and pivoted to his left, and as he did so Rosemary was knocked or pulled from his grasp to the west. At one point in his cross-examination he said that he did not know how close he was to the rail when he pivoted, it was a short pivot and he did not look. "Q. The chances are, unless you disagree with me, the chances are you stepped out into that rail? A. Yes, on to it or over it." The appellant seizes upon these circumstances and says, "From the above testimony it clearly appears that plaintiff was fully aware of the fact that a bus was approaching him from the west and that he deliberately pivoted around across the north rail of the eastbound track in front of the bus when it was 5 to 8 feet from him," with the automobile then 120 feet away, and, therefore, he was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. In support of its position the appellant relies upon the instances of a pedestrian's failure to again look after first seeing a vehicle 100 or 200 feet away. Epstein v. Kansas City Public Service Co., Mo. App., 78 S.W.2d 534; Thomas v. Wells, Mo.App., 299 S.W. 72. Or upon the instance of a pedestrian's stepping back upon a track to avoid an automobile when he had not looked in the direction from which the automobile approached. Thomas v. Wells, Mo.App., 299 S.W. 72, 73. In the latter case the court said, "He was confronted with the very situation which every pedestrian upon the streets of our large cities is forced to meet many times every day, and the conclusion to our minds is inescapable that, in failing to look towards the west, plaintiff failed to exercise the degree of care for his own safety required by the dictates of common prudence, thus rendering him guilty, as a matter of law, of negligence directly contributing to his injury." But in this case when the plaintiff started across the street it was apparently safe to do so, the bus was then stopped half a block away to the west and the traffic to the east was 400 feet away. When he stopped for the bus to pass the bus was traveling in the southernmost traffic lane but about forty feet away the bus passed "double" parked cars and drove onto the eastbound tracks, in a northeasterly direction at an undiminished speed. But the essence of the appellant's argument, the precise point upon which the appellant seizes as demonstrating contributory negligence, is that Sam pivoted to the left and over the north rail of the eastbound track. The difficulty with this argument is that it assumes that Sam was previously in a place of safety and that he was in no danger until he pivoted. But, as we have previously noted, Sam said that he stopped within six inches of the north rail of the eastbound track and when the bus was forty feet away, "The left side of the bus seemed to be over the north rail of the eastbound streetcar tracks," he did not know just how much. The point is that, according to him, he was in the path of the bus, in danger of being struck by it if the bus proceeded on its course, even when the bus was forty feet away. He looked and saw the bus forty feet away. When he pivoted it was but five to eight feet away. The pivot may have put him onto the track and farther into the path of the bus but by his evidence he was already in the path of the bus.

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W.2d 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferdente-v-st-louis-public-service-co-mo-1952.