Meeker v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

77 S.W. 58, 178 Mo. 173, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 25, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 77 S.W. 58 (Meeker 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
Meeker v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 77 S.W. 58, 178 Mo. 173, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 351 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is an action, under the statute, by the parents, to recover five thousand dollars damages for the death of their four-year- old daughter, Herrietta, caused by being run over by one of the defendant’s cable cars, at the corner of Summitt avenue and Twenty-third street, in Kansas City, on July 9, [176]*1761900, at about 9 o’clock a. m. There was a judgment below for the plaintiffs for the amount claimed, and the defendant appealed.

The negligence charged in the petition is that the defendant’s servants “saw the child upon the tracks of said defendant and approaching there at said crossing of said Summitt and Twenty-third streets in a position of imminent peril, or when by the exercise of ordinary care they might have seen said child upon said traeks and approaching thereto in such position of imminent peril in time to have stopped said train of cars and avoided the injury complained of.” And further, that the operatives of the cars failed to ring the bell or to give any notice or warning to the plaintiff’s daughter of the approach of the car.

The trial developed the facts to be as follows: Summitt avenue runs north and south. Twenty-third street runs east and west and is sixty feet wide. Sum-mitt avenue slopes downward from the north towards Twenty-third street, on a two per cent grade, and is level where it intersects Twenty-third street. Beginning at the south line of Twenty-third street Summitt avenue again slopes towards the south, on a grade of six and four-tenths feet to the hundred. The defendant has a double-track, standard-gauge, cable road on Sum-mitt avenue. The south-bound cars run on the west side of Summitt avenue. The train consisted of two cars, a gripcar and a trailer, and together the train was forty-six feet long. From the curb line on the west side of Summitt avenue at the south side of Twenty-third street, it is fourteen feet to the east rail of the southbound track. The curb is six inches thick. In the sidewalk there is a water plug which stands ten and a half feet west of the curb. So that from the water plug to the east rail of the south-bound track it is twenty-five feet. The cars run at the rate of nine miles an hour, or thirteen and one-half feet a second. The day was clear and the tracks and street were dry. The locality [177]*177is near the southwest'terminus of the defendant’s road. The plaintiffs live on Twenty-third street, two and a half blocks west of Summitt avenue. The father is a barber and was agent for a laundry, and his place of business was on the west side of Summitt avenue about •a block south of Twenty-third street.

About nine o’clock on July 9, 1900, the mother started with her little daughter to go down town. When she reached the southwest corner of Summitt avenue and Twenty-third street, she sent the child along the west side of Summitt avenue, to take a bundle of laundry to her father’s shop, and told her when she returned ~to wait on that corner for her, and she went across Sum-mitt avenue and a half block east thereof, on the north /side of Twenty-third street to a grocery store, to make some purchases. The child took the bundle to her’ father and returned in safety to the southwest comer •of Summitt avenue and Twenty-third'street, /and stood •or was “lifting her little skirts and dancing” at or near the water plug above described. The mother completed her purchases at the grocery store and proceeded to return for the child. She walked westwardly along "the north side of Twenty-third street, • and when she reached the car tracks on Summitt avenue, on the north line of Twenty-third street, she saw her child dancing •on the sidewalk at the southwest corner as aforesaid; at that time a train of cars came along and she had.to stop east of the track to let it pass. It ran across Twenty-third street and the next thing she knew the car had run over her child and killed her. She did not see her child leave the sidewalk and go into the street, for the train of cars was then between her and the child so she could not see her. She says that no bell was rung •or warning given when the car approached Twenty-third street, and that the gripman was sitting on the rail on the left-hand side of his box in the gripcar, with one .hand resting on the rail on each side of him, and his [178]*178back towards the east, and was looking towards the rear of the car and talking to some one who was back there.

All the witnesses for both the plaintiff and the defendant, who saw the child, say she was on the southwest corner of said streets, and all who saw her move say she walked from the water plug across the sidewalk and stepped from the curb into the street, and walked directly eastwardly across Summitt avenue on a line with the south line of Twenty-third street. The grip-man says he rang his bell when he was opposite the Chadwick Flats, which was north of ■ Twenty-third street and where Twenty-second street would intersect Summitt avenue if it was cut through, and that he did not ring it any more.

The gripman then testified as follows: “I was going south, and just as I entered the street I saw a little girl standing on the corner of the curbing about five or six feet south of the street line running east and west. She was standing on the curb on the west side of the street running south, and a little south of the curb that' went east and west. She was standing there just apparently quiet, and as I approached, my car got very near opposite and she gave a jump and started all at once, and I pulled my brakes as suddenly as possible, and brought my car to a stop as quick as I could make it. I had my car very nearly opposite her, well, it lacked probably five or six feet of being opposite when she made the jump and started across the track, so I stopped my car as quick as possible. I think I stopped my car within twelve or fifteen feet. ’ ’

He further said he hollered to her just as she was running across the street, and could not remember what he said. He further testified:

“Q. You anticipated that she would go in front of the car? A. That she would go in front of the car, I knew the way she started she was going in front of the car the way it was going; she had a very short distance to go and I had a very short distance to go and [179]*179it was impossible to stop before I hit her, and the way she was going "the car would about meet her, hit her right in the center of the track. I know I made a. quick stop; I think I never made a quicker stop than there; with the pitch of the hill the rule is twenty to twenty-five feet in stopping these cars, and I know I didn’t go over half the space, and it was right on the pitch of the viaduct where I went down and stopped my car. ’ ’

He further testified that it was not over ten feet after he struck the child before he stopped the car. The other testimony in the case, however, showed that the child was taken out from under the rear wheel on the east side of the gripcar at a point fifty to sixty feet south of the south line of Twenty-third street, and all the testimony is to the effect that her body lay across the east rail of the south-bound track.

The conductor testified: “We were going south on Summitt avenue just'at Twenty-third street and we were almost or just at Twenty-third street, at the north side, when I noticed a little girl standing on the sidewalk; I can’t, say just exactly where we were, but I noticed her standing there, and we were almost to her when I saw her make a bound across the street east, and I saw Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 S.W. 58, 178 Mo. 173, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meeker-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-mo-1903.