Lee ex rel. Gilbert v. Kansas City Public Service Co.

22 P.2d 942, 137 Kan. 759, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 330
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 10, 1933
DocketNo. 30,958
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 22 P.2d 942 (Lee ex rel. Gilbert v. Kansas City Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee ex rel. Gilbert v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 22 P.2d 942, 137 Kan. 759, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 330 (kan 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The plaintiff, a minor, brought this action by next friends to recover damages for injuries sustained in a collision between a street car and a milk wagon which occurred at a street intersection in Kansas City on a wintry morning before daylight in January, 1931.

The defendant the Meyer Sanitary Milk Company was engaged in the distribution of milk. It owned teams and milk wagons and hired drivers to deliver milk throughout the city. With the knowledge and acquiescence of the milk company these drivers had a custom of hiring boys to accompany them on their routes to assist in the delivery of milk to customers. One of these drivers was Clinton Smith. The milk company furnished him with a team of mules and a wagon equipped to hold 600 bottles of milk. The wagon had a door on each side, and there were small panels of glass all around it, and a lantern was lit and hung inside. Smith’s milk route was in the northwest part of the city, where Twenty-sixth street, which runs north and south, intersects the street railway of defendant the Kansas City Public Service Company, which runs east and west adjacent to and parallel with New Jersey avenue.

Immediately north of this intersection Twenty-sixth street slopes toward the south. On approaching this intersection from the north the view of a street car coming from the east is somewhat shortened owing to the contour of the intervening ground.

The plaintiff, who was about thirteen years and four months old, had resided with his grandfather since babyhood a short distance from this intersection. For several months he had been employed by Clinton Smith to help in distributing milk. Smith paid him fifty cents for each trip. Sometimes Smith also employed Bernie Bray, a boy of sixteen years. The latter was present on the occasion of present concern. The two boys arose about midnight and arrived at the milk company’s plant about one o’clock. Plaintiff ■helped Clinton Smith hitch up-the mules and load milk cases into the wagon. Smith and the two boys then set out to deliver milk. [761]*761The mules were well broken and taught to stop when the brake was set and to start when it was released. Smith delivered milk on the left side of the street and the two boys on the right. Coming south on Twenty-sixth street the team was stopped about twenty feet from the tracks of the street railway while Smith delivered milk on the east side of the street and the two boys on the west. Bernie Bray first returned to the wagon. About that time the brake was released and the mules started. Smith got in on the left side of the wagon, shutting the door with one hand and seizing the reins which hung overhead with the other. About the same time plaintiff reached the right side of the wagon and put one foot on the step as the team started to cross the railway track. About that time a street car which came from the east struck and up§et the milk wagon. Plaintiff fell under it and was severely and permanently injured.

Plaintiff’s petition recited the pertinent facts and charged both street-car company and milk company with negligence in various specified particulars.

The street-car company answered with a general denial and á plea of contributory negligence. It also alleged that plaintiff was engaged in a joint enterprise with the other occupants of the milk wagon and that the negligence of any of them was the negligence of all.

The milk company’s answer contained a general denial and alleged that Clinton Smith had no authority to employ plaintiff, and—

“That any injuries plaintiff may have received were because of his own fault and neglect; that he climbed on the outside of defendant’s wagon without the knowledge or consent of defendant, and assumed whatever risk might be incident to the position in which he was riding; that he could have alighted from the wagon in plenty of time to have avoided the injuries he complained of; that he loosened the brakes of the wagon which caused it to start before the driver was in place thereon, and thereby caused and directly contributed to any injuries he sustained.”

In plaintiff’s reply it was alleged—

“That if the driver had no specific authority to employ plaintiff, such employment was tacitly consented to by defendant milk company, and that the employment by said driver and others of various boys to assist in the delivery of milk for defendant was such a common practice that the milk company had actual or constructive knowledge and notice of such employment, and is estopped to deny the authority of its agent to employ plaintiff; that plaintiff had worked for Clinton Smith many times, and also for other drivers, all with full knowledge and consent of the milk company, and was so working at the time he was injured.”

[762]*762Jury trial.

The main features of the evidence were as outlined above. Other testimony, more or less controverted, was given by various witnesses. Curtis Kuhn was permitted to testify over objection that he arrived at the scene of the accident a very few minutes after it happened and that he heard the motorman say, “I didn’t see the wagon until we hit.” The driver of the milk wagon testified that plaintiff himself had released the brakes, which started the mules before he (Smith) had entered the wagon.

[Counsel for the Milk Company] : “Was the wagon or the mules, or what part of it, was on the tracks when you got on it there, after they started up from this point forty feet back? A. The mules were on the tracks.
“Q. Now, when you got on it, what did you do, if.anything, by way of closing these doors? "A. I shut the door on the left side; that is, the one on the east side of the wagon.
“Q. Now at that time did you do anything by way of looking to see if there was a street car coming? A. At that time when I shut the door I saw the street car.
“Q. Did you say anything then? A. I said, ‘Look out! Here comes a street, car.’
“Q. Now, how far were you away from it at that time? A. ... I should judge about thirty, forty feet, something like that.
“Q. I believe you said that you caught it just as the mules were on the track? A. Yes.
“Q. Now, when you saw the brakes released, who was it released them? A. Jackie. (Plaintiff.)
“Q. How did he release them? A. With his foot.
“Q. Now, did you get across that track? A. We did not. We got knocked across. We were not quite across, no.”
“Cross-examination:
[Counsel for Plaintiff] : “Now, you stated that after you got in the left-hand side of the wagon and shut the door, then you saw the street car? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. How far away was the street car at that time? A. The street car was about forty or fifty feet away.
“Q. Could you see the motorman? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Could you observe what he was doing? A. He was looking south.
“Q. Did you see anyone there in the front of the car besides the motorman? A. Yes.
“Q. Yes. Was he looking towards the other man? A. He was looking south on Twenty-sixth street. ^

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 P.2d 942, 137 Kan. 759, 1933 Kan. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-ex-rel-gilbert-v-kansas-city-public-service-co-kan-1933.