Lampe v. United Railways Co.

232 S.W. 249, 209 Mo. App. 357, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 240
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 30, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 249 (Lampe v. United Railways 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
Lampe v. United Railways Co., 232 S.W. 249, 209 Mo. App. 357, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 240 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

PEE CUBIAM:

This is an action for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff by reason of the wrongful act of one of defendant’s conductors in striking at plaintiff with a “metal punch” while plaintiff was riding in a position of danger at the rear of a rapidly moving street car operated by defend *362 ant, whereby plaintiff was caused to fall to the street, sustaining injuries. The trial below resulted in a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $1000 actual damages and $750 punitive damages. The trial court required plaintiff to remit $500 of the amount assessed as actual damages, and, upon such remittitur being made, judgment was entered for plaintiff in the total sum of $1250. Prom this judgment the defendant prosecutes the appeal now before us.

This is not the first appearanee of the case in this court. On the first appeal a judgment for the defendant was reversed, for reasons which will appear in the opinion, and the cause remanded for a new trial. [See Lampe v. United Rys. Co., 177 Mo. App. 652, 160 S. W. 899.] A retrial resulted in the judgment first mentioned above, and which is now before us for review. On this last appeal we have previously handed down an opinion (see Lampe v. United Railways Co., 202 S. W. 438), in which, following the ruling of Division No. 2 of the Supreme Court in Kansas City Disinfecting & Mfg. Co., v. Bates County, 201 S. W. 92, we held that the assignments in the motion for a new trial were insufficient to permit a review of the rulings of the court below upon the instructions given and refused. Thereafter the Supreme Court, upon certiorari, quashed the judgment of this court in the cause, .holding that the decision of the Supreme Court in Wampler v. Railroad, 269 Mo. 462, 190 S. W. 908, a decision en Banc prior to that in the Kansas City Disinfecting & Mfg. Co. case, was controlling upon us; and that the opinion in the last-mentioned case, in Division No. 2 of that court, though citing the Wampler case as authority for the ruling therein, was not in harmony therewith. [See State ex rel. United Rys. Co. v. Reynolds, et al., 213 S. W. 783.]

Since the said decision of the Supreme Court in the case on certiorari, the cause has been reargued and resubmitted for our determination.

*363 The petition, after making certain formal allegations, proceeds as follows: •

“That on October 6, 1909, plaintiff was at the south crossing of Broadway and Montgomery streets, two streets in said city of St. Louis, intending to become a passenger upon defendant’s southbound car then approaching said Montgomery street from the north on tracks of defendant’s street railway line on said Broadway;

“That while plaintiff was so at said crossing, said car stopped at said crossing for the purpose of receiving passengers and while it was so stopped plaintiff, for the purpose of being carried as a passenger on said car from said Montgomery street to the business part of said city of St. Louis south of Franklin avenue in said city, stepped on the step of the rear platform of said car and an iron bar of said car located at its rear, and said car shortly thereafter was caused by defendant to proceed southward on said tracks on said Broadway with plaintiff standing on said step and said bar;

“That plaintiff while on said car stood on said step and bar and he so stood because the platforms and inside of said car were filled with passengers, and^ plaintiff at all times while so on said car was ready, able, willing and intending to pay his fare to defendant for riding on said car and was waiting for an opportunity to pay defendant his said fare;

“That said car was not a car commonly known as a ‘pay as yon enter car’ but was a car on which defendant’s conductor in charge thereof usually and habitually proceeded from passenger to passenger to collect their fares;

“That at the time plaintiff was injured as hereinafter mentioned and for a long space of time next prior thereto defendant usually and habitually, when the platforms and inside of its cars on said Broadway line were filled with passengers, permitted passengers to at all times stand on the steps of the platforms of such crowded cars and on the bars of such cars similar to the bar plaintiff stood on as aforesaid;

*364 ‘ ‘ That on October 6, 1909, while said c'ar was so proceeding southward with plaintiff thereon as aforesaid, and as a passenger, and was in rapid motion and before plaintiff had had an opportunity to pay his fare, defendant’s conductor then in charge of said car, did willfully, wrongfully, unlawfully, maliciously, and without provocation, cause or excuse, attempt to strike plaintiff with a metal object, known as conductor’s punch, and in so attempting did willfully, wrongfully, unlawfully, maliciously, and without provocation, cause or excuse strike at plaintiff with said object whereby plaintiff was caused to lose his footing and to fall and be thrown from said car while it was so in rapid motion to and upon the street in the vicinity of Cass avenue in said City, whereby he was jarred and shocked and was cut and bruised about his head, limbs and body and one of the bones of his left forearm was broken and he was-caused to sustain severe nervous injuries and shock;

“That said acts of said conductor were within the scope of his employment and authority under defendant and were done while he was undertaking to serve defendant as such conductor and while he was in the course of his employment under defendant;

“That by his injuries so sustained plaintiff has suffered and will suffer great pain of body and mind and his left arm is permanently crippled, disabled and injured, and he has sustained permanent nervous injuries and shock to his damage in the sum of two thousand dollars;

“That as said attempt of said conductor to strike plaintiff and his act. in striking at plaintiff were unlawful, malicious, wrongful, willful and without provocation, cause or excuse, plaintiff asks damages by way of punishment in the sum of one thousand dollars.

“Wherefore, plaintiff asks judgment against defendant for two thousand dollars actual damages and one thousand dollars punitive damages, a total of three thousand dollars.”

*365 The answer is a general denial.

The evidence in plaintiff’s behalf is to the effect that between 7:30 and 8:00 o’clock on the evening of October 6,1909, while certain festivities were in progress in the city of St. Lonis, plaintiff, who was then sixteen years of age, in company with some boys of about his own age, undertook to ride upon one of defendant’s southbound street cars on Broadway, in said city, from the intersection of Montgomery street and Broadway to the business portion of the city. The cars were all crowded with passengers and, according to plaintiff’s evidence, he and his companion, after several cars had passed them, got upon a car and stood upon the steps and other portions thereof about .the rear platform which was filled with passengers.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 249, 209 Mo. App. 357, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lampe-v-united-railways-co-moctapp-1920.