Garner v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

107 S.W. 427, 128 Mo. App. 401, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 58
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 107 S.W. 427 (Garner v. Metropolitan Street Railway 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
Garner v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 107 S.W. 427, 128 Mo. App. 401, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 58 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This is an action brought by a servant against his master to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the master. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $500, and defendant appealed. At the time of the injury, May 8, 1904, plaintiff was in the employment of defendant as a motorman and was operating a car on the Independence line of defendant’s street railway system in Kansas City. The road between the two cities consists of double tracks, but owing to a washout three or four miles east of Kansas City, the two tracks, for a distance of about 425 feet, had been placed temporarily on the same ties and occupied a lateral space a few inches wider than that covered by a single track. Cars could not pass each other in this section and defendant, by an order issued to its employees, had given west-bound cars right of way over those east-bound. Owing to the presence of obstructions to vision, a motorman approaching the sin[403]*403gle track from either end could not see a car at the other end, and the right of way order mentioned provided that a motorman in charge of an east-hound car should proceed over the single track if no car coming from the opposite direction was in sight. Plaintiff, who was in charge of an east-bound car, stopped at the west approach, saw no car ahead and proceeded forward at the rate of four or five miles per hour. When, perhaps 150 feet from the point where the tracks diverge at the east end, a car approaching from the opposite direction appeared in view. Acting under the belief that it was in control of the motorman and would be stopped before it reached the single space, he continued on his way and had almost reached the frog where the tracks separated when he became aware that the motorman of the other car, whom he had observed to be making strenuous efforts to apply the brakes, would not be able to control the car and that a collision was inevitable. Plaintiff, at once, brought his car to a stop and reversed the current in order that the forward end, instead of the side of the car, might receive the force of the blow. The collision which followed was of sufficient force to wreck the front vestibule of plaintiff’s car.

The facts Ave have stated are taken from the testimony of plaintiff. The negligence ^alleged in the petition is, first, the failure of defendant “to maintain a flagman or some other means of signalling, at or near the east end of said single track for the purpose of signalling west-bound cars to stop when an east-bound car was upon said single track;” and, second, “that the brake Avith which said car in charge of said Barnes (the westbound car), and then approaching said single track, was equipped as aforesaid, was in an imperfect, unsafe and defective condition, in this, that the shoes of said brake would not, and could not, by turning said iron wheel to its utmost limit, be made to come into contact Avith the Avheels of said car with sufficient strength, or compact[404]*404ness, to stop said car within a reasonable distance.” And that the “defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care, could have known of the defective and imperfect condition of said brake, a sufficient length of time to have enabled said defendant to repair said brake or to replace the same with a new one before the occurrence of the collision hereinafter described.”

The answer, in addition to a general denial, contains the plea that the injuries received by plaintiff were caused by his own fault and negligence and the further plea that they were “the result of risks and dangers ordinarily incident to the employment and business in which he was at the time engaged and that all said risks and dangers were assumed by plaintiff by his contract of employment, and in accepting employment by the defendant.”

Evidence introduced by plaintiff tends to show that the brake (operated by hand power) on the westbound car was defective in the respect charged in the petition and that the existence of the defect had been brought to the notice of defendant some three days before the injury. Further, it appears from that evidence that the motorman in charge of that car tried very hard to bring' it to a stop at the proper place and would have succeeded had the brake shoes operated properly on the wheels. On behalf of defendant, the evidence tends to show that plaintiff disregarded instructions in not waiting at the west end of the single track for the westbound car to pass, that the brakes of that car were not defective and that plaintiff was guilty of negligence in not bringing his car to an immediate stop as soon as he saw the other car approaching, and, further, was negligent in abandoning his post while he was running over the single track to engage in conversation with passengers seated in the car. Counsel for defendant asked plaintiff, on cross-examination, why he did not stop his car when he saw the other coming. He answered, [405]*405“Well, because I did not — I thought he was going to stop and I could get off of the single track. That is why.” It is contended by defendant that this answer convicts the plaintiff of blindly and 'heedlessly rushing into obvious peril and, of itself, is sufficient to prevent his recovery. Plaintiff denies that he engaged in conversation with passengers in his car, that he left his post at any time, or was inattentive even for a moment to the track ahead of him, or that he proceeded forward after he became aware, or should have known, from the appearances before him, that the other car would not stop.

Defendant asked and the court refused to give an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence and the cause was submitted to the jury on the issues of the negligence of defendant in operating the westbound oar with a defective brake and the contributory negligence of plaintiff. It is insisted that the demurrer should have been sustained on the grounds, first, that the evidence most favorable to plaintiff fails to present an issue of negligence on the part of defendant that directly caused the collision and consequent injury and, second, that in failing to stop his car in time to avert the collision, plaintiff should be pronounced guilty in law of negligence which contributed to his injury.

The first of these positions clearly is untenable. The proof adduced by plaintiff shows that the brake-shoes of the west-bound car were not placed to act on the wheels in a proper manner and that but for the existence of this defect the efforts of the motorman of that car to stop would have been successful. Defendant owed plaintiff, its servant, the duty of exercising reasonable care to avoid increasing the natural and incidental risks of his employment and to continue the use of a brake so defective that it would not properly perform its functions, after receiving notice of the defect in time to withdraw the car from service or to repair it, was, of [406]*406itself, a negligent breach of such duty. That this negligence of defendant was a direct cause of the injury is too plain to call for discussion. Nor was the risk of injury from such cause impliedly assumed by plaintiff. The risks assumed were those natural and incidental to the business, as long as it was conducted by defendant within the limits of reasonable care, and not those which might be caused by defendant’s negligence.

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Related

Bennett v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
99 S.W. 480 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)
McGahan v. St. Louis Transit Co.
100 S.W. 601 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.W. 427, 128 Mo. App. 401, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garner-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-moctapp-1908.