Huelsenkamp v. Citizens' Railway Co.

34 Mo. 45
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 Mo. 45 (Huelsenkamp v. Citizens' Railway 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
Huelsenkamp v. Citizens' Railway Co., 34 Mo. 45 (Mo. 1863).

Opinion

Bates, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought under the second section of the “ Act for the better security of life, property and character,” (1 R. C. 647.) The petition states the plaintiff to have been the wife of Charles Huelsenkamp, and the defendant was a corporation engaged in the business of carrying persons as passengers from one point to another in the city of St. Louis, and that the defendant undertook to carry Charles Huelsenkamp safely, for hire, in one of its cars, from one point to another in the city of St. Louis, and while he was so being conveyed, the defendant,by its agents, servants and employees, so carelessly, negligently and unskilfully managed, conducted and controlled the said car, and also one other car on said railroad, that in passing each other in said road they were brought into contact with the body of said Charles Huelsenkamp, without any fault on his part, whereby he was killed, and asks judgment for the forfeited sum of five thousand dollars.

The answer put in issue only the allegations of carelessness, negligence and unskilfulness of the defendant, and of the absence of fault on the part of Charles Huelsenkamp.

At the trial, it appeared that Huelsenkamp was killed during the holding of a fair in the outskirts of the city of St. Louis; that it was after dark, and a great number of persons [50]*50were going in from the fair grounds to the city, and crowded upon the car so that it was entirely filled inside, and on the platforms at each end of the car, and on the steps leading down from the platforms, and that deceased was standing on a step and holding on to the car with his hands, and having his body leaning out laterally from the car, and that in passing by another car, which was stationary upon a turn-out, the cars approached so near together that the body of deceased was crushed between them so that he died almost immediately.

At the instance of the plaintiff, the court gave the following instructions:

1. If you find that deceased was, at the time of his death, the husband of plaintiff, and that defendant was a corporation and a common carrier, and that deceased was a passenger on a car of defendant for hire, and the deceased was carried as a passenger upon the steps of a car of defendant, by its agents because there was no room elsewhere for him in or about the car; and if, while the car upon which deceased was being carried was passing another car of defendant upon a turnout in the road the two cars came in collision with each other, or approached each other so near as to kill deceased by jamming or crushing him between the said cars, and such catastrophe was caused by the least negligence, want of skill, or prudence, on the part of defendant’s agents in managing said cars, or either of them, and that deceased then and there exercised ordinary care and prudénce, as a passenger, then the jury should find for plaintiff, and assess the damages at five thousand dollars. And under the circumstances above stated, although the jury may believe that if the deceased had used extraordinary care, and had been on the alert, and had been looking out ahead for danger, he might have avoided injury, yet his failure so to do furnishes no excuse for defendant, and its liability is not affected thereby.

2. If the jury find the agents of defendant were guilty of negligence in the management of the cars of the defendant, by reason of which two of defendant’s cars came in collision [51]*51with each other, or came so near each other on the road at a place provided for the cars on the road to pass each other, by reason of which the deceased was injured and killed, and that deceased was then a passenger on defendant’s road, and that the deceased was not guilty of any want of ordinary care and prudence which directly contributed to the injury, then the defendant is liable in this suit.'

3. Although the deceased may have been guilty of misconduct, or failed to exercise ordinary care and prudence while a passenger on defendant’s cars, which may have contributed remotely to the injury or death of deceased, yet if the agents of defendant were guilty of misconduct in the management of said cars, which was the immediate cause of deceased’s injury and death, and with the exercise of prudence by said agents said injury and death might have been prevented, the defendant is liable in this suit.

4. If the deceased (Huelsenkamp) was killed while being carried as a passenger, for hire, upon the defendant’s road, and that deceased, while being so carried, was permitted by the agents of defendant to stand on the platform or steps of one of defendant’s cars, and to be carried as a passenger in that way, and that while standing on said platform or steps the deceased was injured or killed by reason of the car upon which deceased was being carried colliding with another of defendant’s cars, then deceased was guilty of no misconduct or negligence in standing on said steps.

5. The court is asked to instruct the jury that the following facts are admitted by the pleadings in the case: 1. That the defendant is a railroad corporation, and is a common carrier ; 2. That the plaintiff (Bertha Huelsenkamp) was the wife of Charles Huelsenkamp at the time of his death; 3. That the deceased (Charles Huelsenkamp) was a passenger being conveyed upon the road of the defendant, in or upon one of its cars, at the time of his death; 4. That deceased (Charles Huelsenkamp) was killed at, near or about the cars of the defendant.

And the court, at its own instance, instructed as follows :

[52]*521. If the deceased (Huelsenkamp) was killed by reason of his voluntarily taking a dangerous or improper place or position on the ear when it was practicable to get into a safe and secure place or position, then the defendant is not liable in this action.

The court gave an instruction asked by the defendant, after interlining the words' “ and directly,” having refused to give it without those words. It is as follows:

1. Unless the jury find from the evidence that the injury and death of Charles Huelsenkamp was occasioned by the negligence, unskilfulness or criminal intent of the agent, servant or employee of defendant, and without any fault or carelessness of said Huelsenkamp, materially and directly” contributing thereto, they will find for defendant.

The court also refused the following eight instructions asked by the defendant:

1. If the jury believe from the evidence that Huelsenkamp came to his death from injuries occasioned by his occupying a position manifestly dangerous and improper, and voluntarily assumed and retained by him, they should find for defendant.

2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the driver of the railway company was not guilty of any “ negligence, unskilfulness or criminal intent,” whilst in charge of the same as a driver, they must find for defendant.

3. That the fact of negligence must be inferred from the circumstances of the case, and the jury are at liberty to consider the unusual crowd and attendant confusion at the time of the accident in determining the question of negligence.

4.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Mo. 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huelsenkamp-v-citizens-railway-co-mo-1863.