Levels v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Co.

94 S.W. 275, 196 Mo. 606, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 231
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 275 (Levels v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railway 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
Levels v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Co., 94 S.W. 275, 196 Mo. 606, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 231 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

—Plaintiffs sue under section 2864, Revised Statutes 1899, to recover damages for the death of their daughter, Hattie Levels, who, they say, was a minor at the time of her death and lost her life while a passenger in defendant’s car through negligent defect in the equipment.

The petition states that plaintiff Powhatan Levels, the father pf the deceased Hattie, had been adjudged insane by the probate court and that the public administrator has taken charge of his estate and represents him in this suit. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. During the trial, after the plaintiffs had introduced the most of their evidence, the defendant asked leave to file an amendment to its answer denying that Powhatan was insane or that he had been adjudged insane or that the Public Administrator had been lawfully authorized to take [614]*614charge of his estate. On objection of tbe plaintiffs, tbe conrt refused to allow tbe amendment, for tbe reason, as stated by tbe court, that it would not be in furtherance of justice. That ruling is assigned as error.

I. Tbe ruling óf tbe court in that respect was right. If tbe defendant intended to deny tbe capacity in which the plaintiff sued, it should have made a specific denial of tbe allegations of tbe petition-in that respect in the nature of a plea in abatement. Tbe general denial is addressed to tbe merits of tbe case and does not put in issue those facts which are raised only by a plea in abatement. Plaintiffs were not put to tbe proof of those facts to maintain their case as tbe pleadings stood when tbe trial began and tbe trial court wisely ruled that it would not further the ends of justice under tbe circumstances of tbe case to allow tbe issue to be raised after.tbe trial bad progressed.

II, Tbe main pivot on which the case turned was the age of plaintiffs’ deceased daughter; if she were a minor, tbe plaintiffs were entitled to recover, if she was eighteen years of age, tbe plaintiffs could not recover. Tbe plaintiffs’ testimony tended to prove that her age was seventeen years and ten days; defendant’s, that it was nineteen years and ten days. Tbe jury found for tbe plaintiffs and a judgment for $5,000 in their favor was rendered, from which defendant appealed.

Appellant in its brief concedes that tbe deceased was a passenger and lost her life through tbe negligence of tbe carrier and that defendant is liable if, in a fair trial, it is found that tbe deceased was under eighteen years of age at tbe time of her death.

Tbe general character of tbe plaintiffs’ testimony was that of witnesses who remembered tbe occasion of tbe birth of Hattie and undertook to fix tbe date in reference to some collateral event that was of sufficient importance to fix it on tbe mind of tbe witness; for in[615]*615stance, one witness who was present at the birth remembered that it was abont one month after the birth of her own child whose age was recorded and well remembered; another remembered that she stopped at the plaintiffs’ home on that occasion when she was on her way to see her grandmother who was ill and who died shortly afterwards and the date of whose death was proven; other witnesses remembered the occasion in connection with the time a man was hanged for mnrder, the date of the execution being shown by the court records. The plaintiffs’ evidence also tended to show that the Levels kept a family Bible in which the ages of their children were recorded and that Hattie’s age was there recorded; this Bible was shown to be in the custody of the plaintiffs, but was not introduced in •evidence. One of the plaintiffs, the mother of Hattie, testified that she and her husband were married in September,, 1882; that they had three children, Hattie the eldest, born in July, 1885, Blanche the second, born June, 1887, and "William in 1889. The testimony on the part of the defendant was derived chiefly from the records •of the school enumerations, the United States census enumeration and Hattie’s school record. These enumerations showed that Hattie was born in July, 1883, Blanche, June, 1885, and William in 1887.

Defendant also introduced testimony of the same character as that of plaintiffs; for example, one witness for defendant testified that in the summer of 1884 she called at the house of plaintiff on a matter of business early in the morning and found the family seated at the breakfast table, their child sitting in a baby’s high chair to the table; some conversation ensued between the mother and the visitor about the child, and in the same conversation mention was made of the death of the witness’s mother which had recently occurred, the date of which was August 29, 1884. The defendant’s testimony tended to show that Hattie was a teacher in the public schools; she received her first cer[616]*616tificate as a school teacher in August, 1900, just two years before her death; if she was born in August, 1885, as the plaintiffs claim, she was only fifteen years old when* she became a teacher in the public school. The school commissioner who issued the certificate testified that he knew nothing of her age when he issued it except as he judged by her appearance, and so judging it he would say she was at that date, August, 1900, eighteen years old. In November, 1901, she applied for an advanced certificate, and was again examined by the then school commissioner, who testified that she then told him that she was nineteen years old, and he made a memorandum of the fact at the time, which memorandum was on the stub in the book from which the certificate was taken. There was also in evidence an application for a life insurance policy signed by Hattie, for insurance on her own life in favor of her mother, dated July 3, 1899', in which she stated that she was born July 24, 1883; and there was proof of her death made to collect the insurance, which was signed by the plaintiff Hattie’s mother in which she stated that Hattie’s birth was July 24,1883. The insurance agent who took that proof testified that he wrote the date of the birth at the dictation of Mrs. Levels who, before answering his questions as to the date, examined some book which to the witness looked-like a Testament and then gave the date and he wrote it as she gave it, and she collected the money. That proof of death was dated August 6, 1902, three davs after the death. This suit was filed January 24, 1903.

Our purpose in thus stating the general character of this evidence is not to weigh it to see if the jury’s estimate of it was correct, because an appellate court has no right to do that; the same authority that gives the court the right to say what the law is, gives the jury the right to say what the facts are, and the court [617]*617has no more right to set at naught the jury’s finding of the facts than the jury has to disregard the court’s declaration of the law. To relieve against a flagrant wrong that might be committed, the law has wisely given the trial court the power and imposed on it the duty of setting aside a verdict if it is against the great preponderance of the evidence and it is often a cause for regret that trial courts are not as apt to exercise that power or perform that duty as they should be, but even then when the case comes to an appellate court, whatever opinion may be had of the fairness of the verdict, if there is substantial evidence to sustain it, the appellate court violates the law if it undertakes to substitute its judgment for that of the jury or to perform a duty that the law has imposed on the trial judge alone, and which it may be feared he has neglected to perform.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 275, 196 Mo. 606, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levels-v-st-louis-hannibal-railway-co-mo-1906.