MacDonald v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

118 S.W. 78, 219 Mo. 468, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 234
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 78 (MacDonald v. Metropolitan Street 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
MacDonald v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 118 S.W. 78, 219 Mo. 468, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 234 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

LAMM, P. J. —

Defendant appeals from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor for $5,000. She is the widow of John L. Macdonald, injured while a passenger on defendant’s car on defendant’s cable road, October 26, 1902, while running round a curve. In about eight months and a half afterwards he died. There is no question but that he was injured and by defendant’s •negligence. Plaintiff’s theory is that such injuries caused his death. Defendant’s is contra. The trial was long. The issues were threshed out below closely and with ability. The briefs take a wide range. The instructions were many. However laborious a task, we shall undertake to condense the voluminous record without omitting vital matter.

After allegations immaterial to any question made here, the petition alleges:

“That in rounding said curve the car aforesaid in which the said John L. Macdonald was riding came to a sudden and violent stop, which was caused either by. the negligent and careless condition in which the appliances used by said defendant for going- around said curve were allowed to remain, or by the negligent and careless manner in which the gripman discharged his duty in managing and controlling said car, but it was either one or the other, or both, as plaintiff believes and alleges, and she is ignorant whether it was the one or the other. By said sudden and violent stoppage of [475]*475said car, said John L. -Macdonald was thrown violently forward and down, by which he was greatly injured, and which injuries so received by him caused his death, which occurred on the 13th day of July, 1903.”

The abstracted answer is a general denial. Plaintiff contends the trial answer had a plea of contributory negligence, but she files no counter or additional abstract. Not only so, but no issue of contributory negligence was submitted to the jury, and that feature, on any view of the case, is by-matter.

Save on the medical testimony, there is little or no dispute about the facts. The case made is this:

Judge Macdonald was between sixty-five and sixty-six years old when he died. He came to Kansas City from St. Paul, Minnesota. In St. Paul (as in Kansas City) his profession was that of a lawyer in full practice, though he had served in Congress and on the bench. The winter before moving from St. Paul, he was bothered with lumbago. Lumbago is an ailment of a rheumatic kind, indicated by pain in the small of the back. The occasion of his change from St. Paul to Kansas City, was, primarily, to find a milder climate to rid himself of lumbago or prevent its becoming chronic, if lurking; secondly, to better his business outlook. With these ends in view, he visited the South, seeking a location in Louisiana, Texas, and Arkansas. About a year prior, he had gone to Hot Springs and spent a few days at the baths there. In his exploring trip south, he again visited Hot Springs and took a few baths. This was in 1897, and in the fall of that year he settled in Kansas City. Prom that time until his injury, five years later, he was apparently free from lumbago or any other rheumatic trouble. He is described in the record as leading an active life, as being “a rugged, strong man,” an “industrious man,” weighing about one hundred and eighty pounds, about five feet ten inches in height,- “broad shouldered,” “muscular,” of an “athletic type,” temperate, with a [476]*476good appetite but restraining it, “a vigorous, strong man,” “a very temperate man,” “a well man,” positive but of a jolly turn and a bard worker. This, up to tbe time of bis injury.

On tbe 26th of October, 1902 (in prime health to all appearance), be, with bis wife, Mary, was returning from church. Suddenly, while bis car was going without check at, presumably, ordinary speed around a curve, the gripcar in the train was thrown from the track, the “trailer” on which he was riding was partly derailed, its front end thrown from the track, and he was violently projected ahead two or three feet, sidewise, against the immovable framework of the car stove. The cause of all this is left quite dark. One witness, speaking of the suddenness and force of the stop, said it was the same as if the car “had struck a house,” another (after the accident) saw a broken rail. Judge Macdonald was on a seat running lengthwise of the car, with the stove on his side. He evidently was thrown against it with whatever force would be given him from the momentum of a car having the speed of that one; and the force is described by the inflamed but pardonable metaphor of one witness as the same as if he was ‘ shot out of a cannon. ’ ’ Just what parts of his body struck the framework of the stove is not entirely clear. The visible sign of the blow was in the neighborhood of the left ear and side of the face, and covered a place the size of your hand. Other parts of his left shoulder and chest, evidently affected by- the blow, must be got at by his pains ensuing at once and those developing hard on his injuries. That he was badly hurt is put beyond all question. Being in a dazed condition, presently, on recovering, he complained of his shoulder, neck and head. He was assisted out of the car and into a near-by drugstore.

One witness, helping him from the car to the drugstore, noticed he put his hand to the left side of his chest, and we may say, in passing, that this involuntary [477]*477and significant motion of putting his hand to his chest was noticed by his friends as time went on. Failing to reach his family physician from that drugstore, he was helped to another. There he communicated with him and then was assisted home. The record shows him apparently unable to walk without assistance. For two or three weeks he was confined to his bed under his physician’s care. Hot appliances were put to his neck, shoulder and head and medicine administered to relieve his pain.

It would serve no useful or obvious purpose to go over the long history of his case. There was testimony put in by plaintiff strongly tending to prove that, from being a well man at the time of his injury, he became at once a sick man and continued a sick man until he died. Although he soon recovered from the visible wound in his head, yet he continued to have pain in his neck, shoulder and chest. He could not bear or wear a suspender on his left shoulder after that. He could not put on his overcoat without help and generally wore it with his left arm out of its sleeve. He lost appetite, pais sleep was broken, he had “less vim and snap,” became less assertive in his views and from that day his physical strength declined. The witnesses describe him as “growing gradually weaker,” he looked “haggard,” he seemed “worried and worn out,” and was easily exhausted by physical effort. He never again walked with the springing and rising step he had before. His weight, beginning with that time, gradually fell off and he had that in his countenance, gait and demeanor making him a marked man to his near friends and acquaintances — some of them physicians of excellent standing. Soiñe four weeks after his injury he began to go down town to his business office, but went later and came home earlier than was his wont. He complained of oppression in his breathing and, when walking with an acquaintance, he not infrequently took hold of his arm because of shortness of breath or pain [478]*478in Ms heart. He could no longer lie down with comfort, and his harher shaved him seated holt upright.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 78, 219 Mo. 468, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-mo-1909.