Fornoff v. Columbia Taxicab Co.

162 S.W. 699, 179 Mo. App. 620, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 282
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 699 (Fornoff v. Columbia Taxicab 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
Fornoff v. Columbia Taxicab Co., 162 S.W. 699, 179 Mo. App. 620, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 282 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit for damages said to have accrued to plaintiff through an assault upon him by defendant’s chauffeur. Plaintiff recovered .and defendant prosecutes the appeal.

■ The suit proceeds against defendant on the theory that it is a common carrier of passengers and as though plaintiff was a passenger at the time the assault was made upon him by the chauffeur. The important question for consideration in the case relates to this matter. There is no evidence in the record tending to prove the nature of defendant’s calling. Neither is’ it admitted to be a common carrier of passengers. However, as the case proceeded to judgment as if defendant were such a carrier and is argued and presented here by both parties on that theory, we will dispose of it accordingly.

[624]*624It appears that plaintiff and his companion, O’Shea, spent the evening in a saloon at the corner of Euclid and McPherson avenues in St. Louis and were drinking more or less during the time. Near or about midnight, plaintiff telephoned for a taxicab to call there for him and his companion. Upon the arrival of the cab, plaintiff and O’Shea entered it,'instructing the chauffeur, according to the evidence of plaintiff, to transport them from that point — that is, Euclid and McPherson avenues — to 4261 Page avenue, where O’Shea resided, and from thence to 4222 McPherson avenue, the residence of plaintiff. Plaintiff, it appears, called the taxicab into service and instructed the chauffeur with respect to their destination. According to plaintiff’s evidence, the purpose was to transport his companion, O’Shea, to his residence at 4261 Page avenue and from thence transport plaintiff to his home at 4222 McPherson avenue. Such is the contract of carriage set forth in the petition and that relied upon at the trial by plaintiff. However, defendant’s chauffeur says no such instructions were given; that, on the contrary, the transportation was-engaged to “some good saloon” over about Del mar avenue, which was some four or five blocks distant, from the point of starting. ' At any rate, the chauffeur transported plaintiff and his companion to Allen’s saloon on the northeast corner of Delmar and Eüclid avenues, only a few blocks from the starting point. Upon arriving there, plaintiff says the chauffeur stopped the cab, alighted therefrom and opened the door thereof, requesting payment of the cab fare, fifty cents. Plaintiff testifies that he insisted the-chauffeur should complete the journey to 4261 Page-avenue and from thence to 4222 McPherson avenue, when the fare would be fully paid. The chauffeur insisted the fare of fifty cents must be then paid and that he would not further proceed until it was. Thereupon, plaintiff offered the chauffeur either a ten or [625]*625twenty dollar bill, of the exact denomination he is not certain, and the chauffeur was unable to make the-change. Because of this fact, plaintiff alighted from the cab and with the chauffeur entered Allen’s saloon at the northeast corner of Delmar and Euclid avenues with a view of procuring change for the bill, paying" the cab fare and proceeding on the journey. The hour of midnight had arrived and the saloon was being closed. Both the proprietor and the bartender declined to make change for plaintiff or to sell him a drink through which transaction the change might be-procured.. Thereupon plaintiff went out of the saloon and crossed the street with a view of procuring the change in Cieardi’s saloon, on the opposite corner— that is, the northwest corner of Delmar and Euclid avenues. Defendant’s chauffeur followed plaintiff' from Allen’s saloon across the street and,' it is said, was insisting on the payment of the fare in the meantime. Just before plaintiff reached Cicardi’s saloon and while he was yet in the street and about to step upon the sidewalk, the chauffeur assaulted plaintiff,, leveling a blow upon the back of his head with such force as to render him unconscious. The damages sued for result from the injury thus received,, and the relation of passenger and carrier is both counted upon in the petition and carried into the instructions throughout the case, as if defendant failed in its duty to protect plaintiff, its passenger, from the-assault of its servant during the transit.

On the part of defendant, the chauffeur testifies that plaintiff took passage in the taxicab to be transported only from the corner of Euclid and McPherson avenues to “some good saloon” over about Delmar avenue and that he was so transported and discharged there at Allen’s saloon; that, though he struck him thereafter, he did so because plaintiff was intoxicated and rude and repeatedly suggested that he had' [626]*626never paid a taxicab fare in Ms life and did not intend to do so, and furthermore because plaintiff first .assaulted him. The chauffeur says that, upon arriving at Allen’s saloon, plaintiff and "his companion alighted from the cab, and he immediately demanded the fare of fifty cents, but plaintiff parleyed with him .about it, told him to collect it from O’Shea, saying’, substantially, that he never had paid, and never would pay, a cab fare. In seeMng to collect the fare, the ■chauffeur says he followed plaintiff into Allen’s saloon and, when he applied for a drink, heard the bartender tell him, “Nothing doing,” whereupon plaintiff and his companion departed and crossed the ¡street to Cicardi’s saloon. After having repeatedly ■demanded the fare, and its payment being as often declined or deferred, at least, as if plaintiff had no intention of paying it, and this too, with rude remarks ■on the part of plaintiff, the assault was made.

By the instructions given at the instance of plaintiff, the court authorized a verdict for him against defendant as if it is a common carrier of passengers and as if plaintiff was a passenger and within its care and protection at the time the assault was made. The court instructed that if plaintiff engaged one of defendant’s taxicabs to convey him to a certain point of ■destination and defendant’s chauffeur in charge of ■such taxicab, without sufficient cause or provocation therefor, in attempting to collect plaintiff’s fare, assaulted and struck Mm, then a recovery might be had against defendant on account of such assault. This instruction proceeds as though the mere fact that plaintiff engaged the taxicab to transport him to a “certain point of destination,” without naming it, not only created the relation of passenger and carrier between the parties so as to place plaintiff within its ■protection, but continued that relation even when plaintiff was assaulted by the chauffeur in the street, and it omits entirely to reckon with the testimony of [627]*627the chauffeur that he had transported plaintiff and discharged him at the end of his journey where he declined to pay the fare. Obviously this and other instructions for plaintiff which so treat with the facts in judgment inhere with error, for if plaintiff had no intention of paying the fare when he entered the cab, or thereafter, then the relation of passenger and carrier did not obtain at all between the parties. If the contract of carriage is as plaintiff asserts it to be— that is, from the corner of McPherson and Euclid avenues to 4261 Page avenue and from thence to 4222 McPherson avenue — then plaintiff was a passenger at the time he was assaulted, for the transportation was not nearly completed at Euclid and Delmar avenues where the cab was stopped, the controversy arose, and the assault made.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 699, 179 Mo. App. 620, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fornoff-v-columbia-taxicab-co-moctapp-1913.