Kelley v. St. Louis Public Service Co.

248 S.W.2d 597
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 14, 1952
Docket42533
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 248 S.W.2d 597 (Kelley v. St. Louis Public Service 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
Kelley v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 248 S.W.2d 597 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

248 S.W.2d 597 (1952)

KELLEY
v.
ST. LOUIS PUBLIC SERVICE CO.

No. 42533.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 2.

April 14, 1952.
Motion for Rehearing or to Transfer to Denied May 12, 1952.

Mattingly, Boas & Richards and Lloyd E. Boas, St. Louis, for appellant.

Michael B. Gershenson, St. Louis, for respondent.

Motion for Rehearing or to Transfer to Court en Banc Denied May 12, 1952.

BOHLING, Commissioner.

The St. Louis Public Service Company, a corporation (defendant), appeals from a judgment for $8,000 in favor of Pearl M. *598 Kelley (plaintiff) for personal injuries sustained while standing on the sidewalk near a curve in defendant's tracks when struck by the left rear side of one of defendant's streetcars which extended over onto the sidewalk in going around the curve. Plaintiff charged defendant was guilty of primary negligence and negligence under the humanitarian doctrine. She predicated a recovery solely on defendant's humanitarian duty to warn or to stop. Defendant contends that plaintiff failed to make a submissible humanitarian case; that error was committed in the giving and refusing of instructions, in the admission of evidence, and in overruling defendant's objections to prejudicial argument; and that the judgment is grossly excessive.

The accident happened at defendant's "South Side Loop" for its Broadway cars, located about 8600 South Broadway, St. Louis, Missouri, at about 6:07 p. m. on July 20, 1949. It was daylight and the weather was dry. Defendant's southbound Broadway streetcars turn left into the loop, entering at the south, travel east for a short distance, thence north, thence back west to Broadway, where they turn right and proceed north on Broadway. The curve or turn to the north for a car coming out of the loop was at the sidewalk and caused the rear end of an old type car, known as the Peter Witt streetcar, to swing out from the south rail of the track approximately five feet to the south and over the sidewalk.

Plaintiff, a woman 41 years old, worked about one-half block south and lived about one-half block north of the loop. Plaintiff was walking home on the east sidewalk of Broadway after work on the evening in question. She passed the tracks at the south end of the loop and, as she came to the north tracks, she noticed a streetcar, practically around the bend, proceeding west on the north tracks toward her. The car was a Peter Witt streetcar and had no passengers. She stopped on the sidewalk about 3½ feet from the south rail of said north tracks and waited for the streetcar to pass. It was approximately 78 feet along the track westwardly from the curve at the back of the loop to where plaintiff was standing on the sidewalk. She did not walk up there after the front end of the streetcar had passed. She was facing north, with her head turned toward the east, watching the streetcar. She was standing looking north before she was struck. The front end and the biggest part of the streetcar had passed her (we understand the front end of the streetcar was out in the street approximately 50 feet) when the left rear side of the streetcar as it passed over the curve in the tracks at the sidewalk swung out from the rail and struck and injured her. There was no warning by gong or otherwise from the streetcar and it proceeded around the curve and north on Broadway without slackening speed or stopping.

Defendant had painted "yellow warning" lines along the sidewalk marking the overswing of the streetcars as they rounded the curve. Plaintiff passed over the place of the accident frequently, had seen these markings, and knew that the back end of the streetcars would swing out as they went around the loop. Plaintiff testified that, if there were any marks there the day she was injured, she did not see them, and that she did not realize she was in danger. There was testimony that the marks had been repainted about two days before plaintiff was injured, but there was other testimony that on the night of the accident the marks were covered with dust and dirt and the repainting occurred after plaintiff was injured.

Plaintiff proved that the streetcar was traveling 8 to 10 miles an hour and could have been stopped in 25 to 30 feet at 10 miles an hour. A motorman testified that in going out of the loop the speed would not exceed 3 to 5 miles an hour.

Plaintiff's charge of primary negligence was a violation of the vigilant watch ordinance of St. Louis which requires motormen to maintain a vigilant watch and to stop in the shortest time and space possible upon the first appearance of danger. A number of defendant's motormen testified that had they seen a woman in plaintiff's position as they approached on the westbound track they would have warned her by sounding a gong, "hollering" at her, *599 waving or chasing her out of the way, or would have stopped the car in time to have avoided striking her.

The testimony for defendant was that no motorman saw plaintiff at the time and place in question.

Defendant claims error in the overruling of its motion for a directed verdict. Defendant says there was no showing that plaintiff's demeanor was such as to indicate she was in a position of imminent peril in time for the motorman to have stopped or warned plaintiff and avoided the collision; and, in the circumstances, that the motorman was entitled to assume plaintiff was paying reasonable attention to her surroundings and, having the present ability (by stepping back) to easily avoid the danger if cognizant of it, would avoid the danger, until the motorman had reason to suspect the contrary, and that he had no reason to realize plaintiff was inattentive and, therefore, in peril. Womack v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 337 Mo. 1160, 88 S.W. 2d 368, 371[6]; Wilkerson v. St. Louis Pub. Service Co., Mo.Sup., 243 S.W.2d 953, 955; Clark v. Atchison T. & S. F. R. Co., 319 Mo. 865, 6 S.W.2d 954, 960[16]; Bean v. St. Louis Pub. Service Co., Mo. App., 233 S.W.2d 782, 787[10]; Butler v. United Rys. Co., 293 Mo. 259, 238 S.W. 1077, 1081[4]. Defendant's cases involved factual situations of apparent and known danger to a reasonably attentive plaintiff. The Restatement of Law of Torts, § 480, p. 1259, quoted in the Womack case, states that a reasonable chance "that the plaintiff will not discover his peril is enough to require the defendant to make a reasonable effort to avoid injuring him."

The facts of defendant's cases and of the instant case differ. We have said the danger from the outward swing of the rear end of a streetcar rounding a curve is a lurking or hidden danger and "the motorman has no right to assume * * * that in the presence of a hidden danger a person of ordinary prudence would be presumed to step back to avoid injury." State ex rel. Siegel v. Daues, Banc, 318 Mo. 256, 300 S.W. 272, 274, quashing Siegel v. Wells, Mo.App., 287 S.W. 775, 776, which applied the principle here urged by defendant in similar circumstances. For other humanitarian submissions see Robinson v. Kansas City Pub. Serv. Co., 345 Mo. 764, 137 S.W.2d 548; Flynn v. Kansas City Rys. Co., Mo.App., 226 S.W. 974; and for submissions of primary negligence see Laurent v. United Rys. Co., Banc, Mo.Sup., 191 S.W. 992; Rabushka v. Wells, Mo.App., 22 S.W.2d 870.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.2d 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-v-st-louis-public-service-co-mo-1952.