Killinger v. Kansas City Public Service Co.

259 S.W.2d 391
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 13, 1953
Docket43026
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 259 S.W.2d 391 (Killinger v. Kansas City 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
Killinger v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 259 S.W.2d 391 (Mo. 1953).

Opinion

259 S.W.2d 391 (1953)

KILLINGER
v.
KANSAS CITY PUBLIC SERVICE CO.

No. 43026.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 1.

June 8, 1953.
Motion for Rehearing or to Transfer to Denied July 13, 1953.
Opinion Modified on Motion July 13, 1953.

*392 Charles L. Carr, Kansas City, E. E. Thompson, Sam Mandell, Kansas City, Popham, Thompson, Popham, Mandell & Trusty, Kansas City, of counsel, for appellant.

Clarence C. Chilcott, Kansas City, for respondent.

Motion for Rehearing or to Transfer to Court en Banc Denied July 13, 1953.

Opinion Modified on Court's Own Motion July 13, 1953.

LOZIER, Commissioner.

Action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff-respondent had a verdict and judgment for $18,000. Upon this appeal, defendant-appellant assigns error in the giving of plaintiff's requested Instructions Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6.

On September 13, 1947, plaintiff sustained injuries while a passenger on one of defendant's southbound Troost Avenue streetcars. Between 41st and 42nd Streets, Troost is 65 feet wide, curb to curb, and defendant's right of way in the center is 18.3 feet. The outer limits of the right of way varies from 1.3 feet to 1.8 feet from the outer rails.

Plaintiff and her daughter boarded the streetcar at 39th and Troost. The car was crowded. Plaintiff was standing in the aisle between the front and center doors. She faced west and, with her right hand, grasped firmly a stanchion (a vertical rod or pole for standing passengers to hold to). The car started. "It seemed the motorman was driving awfully fast, at a high rate of speed. * * * All of a sudden—a sudden jerk, and it threw me around." She lost her grip, was thrown backwards and to the floor. About the time she fell, she screamed. Plaintiff had often ridden the streetcars and had observed their "usual jerks and lurches * * *; this was unusual." She "had never experienced a shock like that." The "jerk" was a "sudden stop or whatever you call it; * * * it was just a sudden jerk * * * just a sudden, violent stop." She was on the floor before any stop was made. Before the jerk, the car "just kept kind of moving along" and then *393 came to a sudden stop. There was no slackening or diminution of its speed prior to the time she fell. As she was standing in the aisle, she had a view to the front and to the west and no automobile or truck passed the streetcar on that (the streetcar's right) side.

Plaintiff's daughter stood in the aisle back of the center door, facing east. She placed her mother's position as her mother had described it. She observed her mother after the car started moving. "The streetcar was moving pretty fast * * * and all of a sudden I heard someone scream. * * Then I heard a thud on the floor * * *. Q. Well, what happened to the streetcar? A. Well, when he heard that thud he brought the streetcar to a halt. * * *" She heard her mother scream before the streetcar stopped. "After the thud on the floor, it came to a halt." The streetcar made a "quick stop."

Spencer, a passenger, noticed nothing special about the car's speed. He was looking toward the west "and there was a shock to the car * * * as if there had been an impact or sudden stop." He did not notice an excess of speed or "anything above normal." He "looked around to see what had caused the impact and there was a car ahead of the streetcar but" there was no "impact" between the streetcar and the automobile. "As I looked up to see, he had practically straightened out parallel to the track. * * *" Spencer "thought" that the automobile had "pulled out of parking or had been in the process of passing the streetcar. There had been some movement, I didn't see, it didn't register." He did not think the wheels of the motorcar were on the tracks. The automobile, still moving, was "not over 20 feet" from the streetcar when the streetcar came to a stop. However, he could not say positively whether he had seen the automobile prior to the time the streetcar stopped. A complete setting of the brakes was the way to stop the streetcar—"that would mean absolutely that there was some cause for an emergency stop; * * * an emergency stop isn't normal." However, he did not recall ever having been on a streetcar before when "an emergency stop was made to keep from hitting something on the track."

Mrs. Seibert was sitting "exactly behind the motorman." She heard plaintiff scream. "At the time the lady fell he slammed the brakes on, I wouldn't know for any particular reason. Q. How do you know he slammed the brakes on? A. Well, I was sitting behind him and we were in the middle of the block and the [streetcar] stopped abruptly." On cross-examination, she was asked: "Q. Did I understand you to say you saw him apply the brakes or felt the application? A. Well, perhaps I said it wrong. I felt it in the middle of the block." She was not paying any attention to "the outside of the car, the track or the street and didn't see the automobile." She couldn't recall whether the streetcar stop began before or after the scream.

Olsen, standing in the aisle and facing west, saw an automobile pull out close to the car. "It seemed like he was parking and that is why the operator had to stop his car. I imagine the operator was afraid he was going to hit the car. * * * He was headed toward the track and the driver [streetcar operator?] probably didn't know where he was going. * * * Q. And you noticed when this car started out suddenly the operator applied his brakes? A. Yes, I did. Q. And brought the car to a stop? Yes, there was a stop. * * * A. It seemed like an abrupt stop." He did not notice or know what happened to the automobile. The automobile driver gave no signal. "I just saw the automobile."

Mrs. Closser, seated next to the aisle on the first seat on the west side, "was dreaming, I suppose, gazing out and saw a car and the [street] car stopped suddenly, it stopped not suddenly enough to throw me out of the seat, but it was sudden." She "wasn't paying any attention." She didn't know whether the automobile was going about the same speed or faster than the streetcar. The stop "was a sudden stop, not like a stop coming to a corner, it was an emergency stop." On cross-examination, Mrs. Closser had the "impression" that *394 the automobile was going to run into the streetcar. She didn't know where the automobile came from, "I just remember it as a blur at the side as I sat. I wasn't paying a lot of attention. * * * Q. At that time you saw it headed at a point in front of the streetcar and that is when the operator applied the brakes? A. Yes." Upon re-direct examination, she stated that she did not know "how long the car ran along beside this streetcar, or whether it was running parallel with the streetcar or whether the automobile was out of her sight when the streetcar stopped." She did not see the motorman apply the brakes and "the only thing she knew is that the streetcar stopped with a jerk."

Plaintiff introduced the deposition of Roberts, the motorman. He described the breaking equipment as consisting of a series of brakes—the dynamic (operating upon the motor), the shaft (operating upon the shafts) and the track (a magnetic brake operating upon the brake shoes). All three are operated successively by pressure on the foot pedal. For a regular service stop, the pedal is pushed "just down lightly," applying only the dynamic brake; "the other two brakes are not brought into the operation." Additional pressure, applying the dynamic and shaft brakes, is used for "just sort of a semi-emergency stop." The pedal is pushed all the way down (applying also the track brake) for an emergency stop.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W.2d 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/killinger-v-kansas-city-public-service-co-mo-1953.