Levelsmeier v. St. Louis & Suburban Railway Co.

90 S.W. 104, 114 Mo. App. 412, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 319
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 90 S.W. 104 (Levelsmeier v. St. Louis & Suburban Railway 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
Levelsmeier v. St. Louis & Suburban Railway Co., 90 S.W. 104, 114 Mo. App. 412, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 319 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

On August 20, 1903, plaintiff’s eight-year-old son, near the crossing of Ella avenue over [414]*414defendant’s private right of way, in the city of St. Louis, was struck by one of defendant’s cars traveling north, and severely injured. Plaintiff sued to recover for loss of the services of his boy and for nursing and caring for him, alleged to have been made necessary by the injury. The jury found for plaintiff and assessed his-damages at twenty-five hundred dollars.

The evidence is that plaintiff’s son and another boy, on the morning of August 20, 1903, were walking in single file, about twenty-five feet apart, on the end of the cross-ties of defendant’s track and private right of way, and a car traveling north struck plaintiff’s -son, hurling him from the track. He was picked up unconscious with a deep gash cut in the back of his head from which blood was flowing copiously, and his hip and back were bruised. The other boy stepped off the track and escaped injury, though he testified he neither saw nor heard the car until it had knocked the other boy off and passed him a considerable distance; that he did not step off the ties to avoid the car but to pick up a stick of wood he saw near the track.

In respect to the injuries, plaintiff stated that before the accident his boy was a healthy and well-appearing boy, and had never been sick, but that since the accident he had not had a well day; that formerly his color had been rosy and ruddy, but since the accident his complexion had been yellow.

“Q. Speaking about his appearance, how does he hold his head these days? A. He always goes with his head down, first one way and then the other, keeps his head first one way and then the other all the time.

“Q. Unless his attention is called to it, is that true? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. What troubles has he had? A. Well, he has epileptic fits.

“Q. State what you have noticed concerning his physical condition from the day of this accident? A. Just by his acts, is that the question?

[415]*415“Q. Yes. A. He takes spells that he gets unconscious.

“Q. He gets what? A. Gets unconscious, and especially at night he wets all over himself, we have to keep a special bed for him, and dress him sometimes as high as three or four times a night. These things occur every night and he takes them lots of times during the day.

“Q. What does he do? A. He gets unconscious and foams at the mouth and he is perfectly unconscious, bites his teeth, it is sometimes all that I or my wife can do to hold him.

“Q. How often do these spells come? A. Sometimes they come on two or three times a night and sometimes they come on during the day; of course sometimes they are much lighter than at other times; sometimes a wet towel and a basin of cold water that we have always there will revive him; other times it takes thirty minutes to three quarters of an hour.

“Q. Now, have these spells become more frequent as the time goes on from the time of the accident? A. They have become more frequent.

“Q. Did you notice them soon after the accident or not? A. Not right away, but I suppose it was a month or six weeks that he had the first spell like that.

“Q. And have they been continuous from then on? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Besides the injury on his head what other injury, if any, did he receive? A. He had an injury in his back near the — just above the hip or the waist.

“Q. What kind of an injury was that? A. It was a big blue place there about as big as the palm of my hand with the skin knocked off just enough for it to bleed and the rest of it about the hip like and toward the back was black-blue, you might say.”

Dr. R. H. Barnes testified that he examined the boy on August 29,1903, and found a scalp wound, unhealed, on the back of his head, bruises on his body and his [416]*416general health seemed to be impaired. Witness further testified as follows:

“Q. When did you next examine him? A. I saw him some time in November, I believe that was the next .time, they complained of his having some spells and I didn’t make a diagnosis, but at once suspected epilepsy from the description of them; since that time I have learned they were epilepsy.
“Q. What have you learned about it, state fully about the condition of this boy? A. To-day the boy has what is known as the Jacksonian form of epilepsy.
“Q. What is that? A. That is a form of epilepsy from some irritation to the brain, most commonly caused from injuries.
“Q. How serious is that? A. The chances of recovery are very little, in fact, it is a progressive disease, and the man generally degenerates into a worse condition, into some form of insanity, or into idiocy more commonly, and it generally affects the life of the party, in fact, an epileptic that lives over forty or fifty years is not common, generally their lives are shortened to a very great extent.”

Witness also testified that trephining the skull and removing the pressure would be the proper treatment for the boy, and that this operation would cost from three to five hundred dollars.

Dr. Otto F. Claus testified, substantially, as did Dr. Barnes, in respect to the injury, only he stated that the cost of the trephining operation would be from three hundred and fifty to seven hundred dollars, and that probably years of treatment would be required after the operation. He very judiciously added that most of the patients who submitted to this operation did not recover.

Mrs. Mary Denton, the only eyewitness to the accident, testified that she heard one tap of the car bell when the car was eighty or ninety feet south of where the boys were on the track; that her view of the track [417]*417at that particular moment was obstructed by a building and she did not see the car until it was within about fifty feet of the boys; that' it was running at a speed of about seven miles an hour and did not increase or lessen its speed before or after hitting the boy but kept right on at the same speed as though nothing had happened.

Plaintiff’s evidence is that a car running at a speed of seven miles an hour could be stopped in from twenty-five to thirty feet. The evidence shows that the two boys were walking along with their heads down as though they were looking for something on the ground. The evidence for plaintiff further tends to show that on account of the bad condition of the street running along defendant’s right of way, the people in the neighborhood of where the accident occurred were, at the time of the accident, and had been for a long time before, in the habit of walking on the defendant’s track, and that there were no signs up at that time warning people to keep off the track; that such signs had been up but were torn down in the previous spring and were not replaced until after the accident.

Defendant’s evidence is that signs were up at the time of the accident, warning all people to keep off the track and that it Avas a private right of way. Its evidence also tends to show that the right of way is the private property of the defendant company and that pedestrians have never been in the habit of traveling on it, and never did travel on it by the consent of the defendant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Aviation Enterprises, Inc. Ex Rel. Jones v. Cline
395 S.W.2d 306 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1965)
State Ex Rel. Bush v. Elliott
363 S.W.2d 631 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1963)
State v. Goodrich
176 P. 813 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1918)
Butler v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
136 S.W. 729 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 S.W. 104, 114 Mo. App. 412, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levelsmeier-v-st-louis-suburban-railway-co-moctapp-1905.