Ferguson v. Kansas City Public Service Co.

156 P.2d 869, 159 Kan. 520, 1945 Kan. LEXIS 176
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 10, 1945
DocketNo. 36,238
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 156 P.2d 869 (Ferguson v. Kansas City Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferguson v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 156 P.2d 869, 159 Kan. 520, 1945 Kan. LEXIS 176 (kan 1945).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, C. J.:

This was an action for damages for personal injuries. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for $1,000 and answered special questions, which found that plaintiff caused or contributed to his injury. Plaintiff moved to set aside the special questions as not supported by the evidence. This motion was not [522]*522presented to the court. Plaintiff also filed a motion for a new trial on formal statutory ground. Defendant filed a motion for judgment on the answers to the special questions notwithstanding the-general verdict. These two motions came on for hearing together. The trial court took the view that the answers to the special questions were in conflict with the general verdict and that this indicated the jury was confused, and for that reason concluded the fair thing to do was to grant a new trial. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was sustained and defendant’s motion for judgment on the answers to the special questions was overruled. Defendant has appealed and contends that the court erred (1) in overruling its demurrer to^ plaintiff’s evidence, (2) in overruling its motion for judgment on the answers to the special questions notwithstanding the general verdict, and (3) in granting a new trial.

In his petition plaintiff alleged that on a day stated he was a passenger on defendant’s streetcar, its route being in a westerly direction on Minnesota avenue in Kansas City; that he alighted from the front end of the car and stepped into a safety zone at Third street and Minnesota avenue; that the safety zone was marked and designated as a place for passengers from the streetcar and pedestrians to stand in order to be safe from being struck by streetcar or automobile traffic; that plaintiff stepped from the front door of the car into the safety zone, and while standing in the north end of the safety zone the streetcar from which he had alighted was so negligently operated by defendant that the rear end of the streetcar swung around and struck him, knocking him down to the pavement, and that by reason of the negligence of defendant and its employees plaintiff received injuries, which were stated, to his damage in a sum named. In its answer defendant admitted its corporate existence and that it operates a transportation system in Kansas City and denied all other allegations of the petition; and further alleged that if plaintiff received injuries at the time and place alleged, such injuries were caused by plaintiff’s negligence, or that his negligence directly contributed thereto. The reply was a general denial.

There is surprisingly little controverted evidence in the case. The locale of the alleged injury may be described as follows: Minnesota avenue in Kansas City is the main east-and-west street, a traffic thoroughfare. It is intersected at right angles by Third street. Each street is paved. Minnesota avenue is paved 68 feet wide west of Third street and 56 feet wide east of Third. East of Third street [523]*523Minnesota avenue continues east to the Fairfax industrial district; also a short distance east of Third street a paved street veers from Minnesota avenue to the southeast and becomes the entrance to the intercity viaduct between Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, Missouri. Third street is paved 52 feet wide north of Minnesota avenue and 56 feet wide south of Minnesota. About 200 feet south of Minnesota a street, paved 44 feet wide, veers to the northeast, connecting with the approach to the intercity viaduct. There is a triangular area northwest of the 44-foot street last mentioned, east of Third street and south of Minnesota avenue, the north and west lines of which are about 40 feet long. This is curbed and has around the outer edge of it a cement sidewalk 3% feet wide. It is spoken of as an island. Defendant’s street railway tracks are double on Third street south of Minnesota avenue and turn west at the intersection of Minnesota and Third street. The east track on Third street is for northbound cars, which at the intersection turn west on Minnesota avenue. Adjoining the east rail of this track, beginning about 10 feet south of Minnesota avenue and extending south 49 feet on Third street, is a marked safety zone about five feet wide abutting the east rail of the track on its west side and marked on the east with a white painted line eight inches wide, with a similar line at each end of the safety zone. At the north end of the safety zone are metal buttons five inches high and eighteen inches in diameter. The distance between the east edge of the white line of the safety zone and the curb of the island to the east of it is 16 feet, 4 inches. On Third street south of Minnesota avenue the northbound vehicular traffic moves on the east side of Third street and the southbound vehicular traffic on the west side. There are stop signs on Third street at Minnesota avenue. The street railway’s line above described is known as the “City Park” line. The rails of the track on this line are 4% feet apart. The streetcars used on it are about 44 feet long, with a door at each end for ingress and egress and are 8% feet wide but narrowed at the rear vestibule to 7% feet wide. The overhang of the car over the tracks on the street is two feet on each side of a straight track, but in making a turn the rear overhang is almost four feet near the north end of the safety zone. The greatest overhang would leave 14 inches of the safety zone clear at the north end of the safety zone and for perhaps 'four feet south of that, and a greater distance farther to the south.

Plaintiff was about seventy years of age at the time of his injury. [524]*524His testimony may be summarized as follows: He had resided in Kansas City 23 years. His business was manufacturing and selling a line of medical preparations for the treatment of the feet, also for the treatment of colds and sinus trouble in the head. He had these on sale at various places in the city. It was his custom to go to the industrial centers at the noon hour to sell his preparations to the workmen, and later in the day he would make the business places. He “was a perfect specimen of manhood,” strong, able-bodied, worked seven or eight hours a day and could have worked that much longer. He had ridden the streetcars ever since he had lived in Kansas City, more frequently on the city park line than on any other. He was familiar with the type of streetcar then in use and which had been used on that line for about ten years, and had ridden them many times; was familiar with the doors and steps of the cars and the method used by the operator in opening and closing the door when a passenger alighted. He had alighted from the car many times — from the front or rear door, whichever was the most convenient — but had not previously alighted at the front door at the stop in question. On the day in question he boarded the car at Tenth and Main in Kansas City, Mo., and reached Third and Minnesota at 10:45 a. m. He indicated his desire to get off and the operator stopped the car at the usual stopping place, the front door being a few feet south of the north end of the safety zone. The operator opened the door and plaintiff got out and stepped down on the pavement. He was clear of the car. The operator closed the door and started to move on. Plaintiff started to go across the street to the island to catch a bus to go to the Fairfax industrial district.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 P.2d 869, 159 Kan. 520, 1945 Kan. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-kansas-city-public-service-co-kan-1945.