Hesemann v. May Department Stores Co.

39 S.W.2d 797, 225 Mo. App. 584, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 223
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 797 (Hesemann v. May Department Stores 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
Hesemann v. May Department Stores Co., 39 S.W.2d 797, 225 Mo. App. 584, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 223 (Mo. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

*587 SUTTON, C.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff while riding as a passenger on an escalator in defendant’s department store in the City of St. Louis. The trial of the cause, with a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $3,000, and defendant appeals.

The accident which resulted in plaintiff’s injury occurred on March 22, 1927. Plaintiff went to defendant’s store to assist her son, Edwin Hesemann, to select some clothing. She also intended to make some purchases for herself. She met her son at about 11 o’clock in the clothing department on the second floor of the store. The son pur chased two suits and a top coat, which he left to be altered. When this business was completed plaintiff and' her son walked to the escalator which runs from the second to the first floor. There was an attendant at the top of the escalator.. The *588 son stepped on the escalator first and plaintiff followed. She grasped the railings on each side with her hands and rode to a point about midway between the second and first floor. At this point the escalator stopped with a sudden and unusual jerk. She testified that, the jerk threw her forward, and her hands were jerked loose from the railing, but she retained her foothold on the step; that the escalator then started up with a second jerk and threw her backward and to her right side and against the railing.' She illustrated to the jury the way she was thrown and how she struck the railing.' She testified that when she struck the railing it hurt her all the way down on her right side, from her neck down to her hip, and that she became sick and felt like vomiting; that she was so weak she couldn’t talk; that as soon as she reached the first floor she went out of the building and vomited in the gutter; that her son then accompanied her to a street car, and she rode to her home, and her son returned to his place of work; that she had ridden on that particular escalator many times over a period of years; that she had never experienced any such movements before; that when the escalator worked in the ordinary manner it did not jerk or jolt at all.

Edwin Hesemann, plaintiff’s son, testified that he was thirty-two years of age, and had been ■ employed for twelve years by'the Main Street Warehouse Company, as a bookkeeper. Describing the accident,' he testified that the escalator stopped suddenly with an unusual jolt, remaining- stopped for a fraction of a second, and then started again with a'violent jerk; that the stopping of the escalator threw him forward and jerked his one hand loose from the railing; that before he could regain his balance the escalator started again and threw him backward; that the jerk was so severe that he was thrown to his left side and his knee struck the wooden railing at the side of the escalator; that as soon as he reached the bottom of the escalator he turned around and saw that his mother was white and pale, and that he helped her off the escalator and out into the street; that she vomited in the street and he .held her with his arm around her while she vomited; that he then accompanied her to the street car.

John Truhe, a witness for defendant, testified that he was defendant’s maintenance electrician, and had charge of the escalator; that the escalator was inspected every Sunday, and was looked over every twenty-four hours during the week; that the escalator was operated by a thirteen horse-power motor; that there were a number of cogwheels, one attached to the motor and the other to a ■ drive sháft; that there was a chain running from one of these cogwheels to the other; that the chain was kept tight all the time so that it would not slip or jump; that at the time of the accident none of the cogs on any of the wheels were broken; that there was one switch at the *589 top and one, at the bottom of the escalator; that the attendant in charge at the • top, or any one else, could operate the switches and stop the escalator; that sometimes children would throw.the switch; that if the operator turns the switch right quick the escalator stops and starts again, but that it will blow a fuse and then stop-for good, that is,, it does not continue to operate; that he did not know any way in which the escalator could stop right quick and start right quick and then continue; that the escalator moves at a speed of ninety-six feet per minute; that when the power is switched off the escalator moves pretty close to five feet; that the switch can be turned off at any time while the escalator is moving, and can then.be turned on again without blowing a fuse, within a period of three seconds; that one could be on the escalator, standing at an angle, and have it stop with a jerk, thus knocking his hands from the railing and causing him to loose his balance, and that if it started up again before he regained his balance he would be jerked backward; that over a period of years he had watched persons riding on the escalator; that if a person is going down and the operator throws the power off.it would not affect the passenger if the passenger was standing straight; that in the normal operation of the escalator there was no jerking or jolting.

Relative to the nature and extent of her injuries, plaintiff testified that, when she reached her home after the accident shelay down; that she was in misery; that her entire right side bothered her and she was vomiting; that she did not feel much better the next day; that her husband rubbed her right side with liniment; that the accident occurred on Tuesday.; that on Friday Dr.. Coffman, her regular family physician, was called; that when he came to her , home she was in bed and was still suffering with her right side; that she was suffering pain in her spine from her neck to her hip; that a rib on the right side was injured; that she suffered discomfiture in her kidneys ; that the doctor saw her every day for a, while and that after that he saw her frequently; that she was in bed for four weeks; that the doctor gave her hot applications for her neck, and bandaged her right side with adhesive tape; that she had this tape on her side.or back for., about six or eight- weeks; that at the time of. the trial she still suffered from spells of vomiting; that she still had a gagging sensation; that she never had any such condition before the. accident; that her) side and back continued to hurt her from her .neck down to her hip; that the pain varied; that it was worse -at some times than at others; that she suffered the more severe pains several times a week, and that when these spells: came on, if they got too bad, she went to the doctor and obtained medicine.

It appears that plaintiff’s husband and her four children lived with her ;■ that before the accident her health was good; that it was *590 a long time after the accident, at least six weeks, before she could do any housework; that since that time she has been able to do only the lighter household-duties; that she is unable to do anything like washing and ironing.

Dr. George W.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 797, 225 Mo. App. 584, 1931 Mo. App. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hesemann-v-may-department-stores-co-moctapp-1931.