Kube v. St. Louis Transit Co.

78 S.W. 55, 103 Mo. App. 582, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 338
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 55 (Kube v. St. Louis Transit 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
Kube v. St. Louis Transit Co., 78 S.W. 55, 103 Mo. App. 582, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 338 (Mo. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

GrOODE, J.

(after stating the facts as above).— The point pressed on our attention is that on the whole evidence a nonsuit should have been ordered. The argument made in support of this proposition is based on the assumption that plaintiff was crossing the track far-enough ahead of the car to have passed over -safely if he had not fallen; hence, the fall or stumble was the-proximate cause of the accident; not negligence on the part of the motorman in running at too high speed or failing to stop the car as quickly as possible after he discovered the danger of running over the boy. Several cases are cited in support of this point. Barkley v. Railroad, 96 Mo. 367; Boland v. Railroad, 36 Mo. 484; Kennedy v. Railroad, 43 Mo. App. 1; Kline v. Railroad, 2 Am. Neg. Rep. 644; Stabenau v. Railroad, 4 Am. Neg. Rep. 206; Fenton v. Railroad, 126 N. Y. 625.

We do not consider it so absolutely certain that plaintiff would have crossed the track safely if. he had not stumbled as to preclude the possibility of a reasonable inference to the contrary. The testimony of the eyewitnesses is consistent with the theory that the boy was struck on the leg after he stumbled, but before he fell to the ground. One witness said the car first hit him on the leg, then he took a -summersault and when the car ran over him, he was lying in the street. The-other witness gave about the same version, saying the ear hit him on the leg first and he went under the car. True, this witness swore he fell on the track before the car struck him; but the entire evidence allows the inference that plaintiff stumbled and before he could recover himself was hit and fell to the ground. He could hardly [591]*591have been thrown a summersault, if he was prostrate when first struck.

What is controverted is the sufficiency of the evidence as a whole to raise an issue of fact for the jury’s decision as to whether the plaintiff, despite his stumble or fall, could have been saved from harm if the car had been moving at what was a reasonable speed considering the likelihood of children being in the street.

If an individual by some involuntary mischance, precipitates a casualty resulting in injury to himself, but was exposed to danger of the casualty by another’s negligence, the law does not always construe his own mischance, instead of the prior negligence of the other party, to be the proximate cause of the injury, and shut him off from damages. Whether the injured party will be denied relief depends on whether he. himself was guilty of negligence that proximately caused the harmful accident. There are numerous negligences that only result in mishaps because of some incident like the fall of this boy; but in which the negligence itself and not the mishap which made it potent to do harm, was the proximate cause of the harm.

In Lore v. Mfg. Co., 160 Mo. 608, the plaintiff, a girl of sixteen, slipped on a greasy floor of a factory and as she fell thrust her arm into some insufficiently guarded cogwheels and gearing machinery, whereby it was crushed. The negligence of the defendant consisted in working the machinery without having the guards in good repair, as the statute required it to have. The contention was advanced that the girl assumed the risk of slipping on the floor and could not recover; for although the machinery was unguarded, she would not have been .hurt but for her fall. In dealing with this contention the Supreme Court said the slipping was not .the sole cause of the injury; which would not and could not have happened but for another cause — the insufficient guard around the gearing; and that as plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care at the time she [592]*592accidentally slipped and would not have been hurt except for the unguarded machinery, she had a good case.

A similar instance was Musick v. Dold Packing Co., 58 Mo. App. 322. The plaintiff therein slipped on a piece of ice, or a slippery floor, and was thereby caused to fall into a vat of hot water negligently left uncovered. The defendant complained of error because the court had refused an instruction that if the plaintiff was injured by slipping there could be no recovery; as to which the court said:

“Besides this, the negligence charged in the petition was that the defendant had maintained said vat in an unfinished and incomplete condition, etc. The facts embraced within the assumption of the instruction, if true, would not excuse the defendant from its liability to plaintiff for the injuries alleged to have resulted to plaintiff in consequence of the defendant’s breach of duty. It is true that if the plaintiff had not slipped his limb would not have been plunged into the hot water tank. It is equally true, that though he slipped, the disaster would not have overtaken him had not the tank been uncovered. The slipping was not the sole cause of the injury. The latter would not have occurred except for the presence and co-existence of both causes. The cause of the plaintiff’s slipping was altogether accidental. If it was the sole cause of the injury the defendant is not liable. But the injury would not have resulted had not another cause combined with the accidental cause. If the plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care and prudence at the time he slipped, and the injury is attributable to the absence of the cover over the tank, together with the slipping, then the plaintiff should recover. If the direct and proximate cause of the injury was the uncovered and unprotected condition of the tank, then plaintiff would* be entitled to recover though the slipping of the plaintiff contributed to the injury.”

The cases dealing with accidents to children on car tracks which we have cited from the defendant’s brief, [593]*593are unlike this one; since the several casualties which gave rise to them occurred at points on streets where the carmen had no reason to anticipate the presence of a crowd of children, and, therefore, no reason to run their cars at less than the speed permissible elsewhere. In some of them the injured child had fallen on the track before the car reached it; but whether that happened or not, the decision exonerating the railway company was based, in every instance, on testimony proving the child darted suddenly on the track when a car was approaching at a considerable speed, and so near that it could not be stopped before reaching the victim.

The vigilance and activity obligatory on the defendant’s servants to avoid hurting the plaintiff were the same in degree as rest on it generally to avoid harm to persons in city streets, that is, ordinary vigilance and activity ; not extraordinary. Although less care for their own safety is exacted of young children than of individuals of full capacity, the general rule for measuring the care to be observed by others in such instances is not raised in favor of children. Stanley v. Railroad, 114 Mo. 606.

But while only ordinary care must be taken by the servants of railway companies to avoid hurting pedestrians in streets, whether the pedestrians be children or adults, greater precautions are necessary in order to fulfill the rule in some instances than in others. The obligation imposed by the law is to take the care that men of common prudence take when confronted by similar situations and conditions; not what men of extreme prudence might take. Frick v. Railroad Company, 75 Mo. 595.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 55, 103 Mo. App. 582, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kube-v-st-louis-transit-co-moctapp-1903.