Mertens v. St. Louis Transit Co.

99 S.W. 512, 122 Mo. App. 304, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 563
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 S.W. 512 (Mertens v. St. Louis Transit 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
Mertens v. St. Louis Transit Co., 99 S.W. 512, 122 Mo. App. 304, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 563 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

On December 2, 1902, between seven and eight o’clock in the evening, plaintiff’s wagon, which he was driving east on Natural Bridge road, in [306]*306the city of St. Louis, was struck in the rear by one of defendant’s street cars, traveling in the same direction, causing injuries to plaintiff and damaging’ his wagon. The action wa,s to recover for plaintiff’s personal injuries and for the damage to his wagon. The negligence alleged and relied on at the trial was a failure of the motorman in charge of the car to exercise ordinary care in the management and operation of the car, and a violation of what is commonly called the “Vigilant Watch” ordinance of the city of St. Louis.

The answer was a general denial and an affirmative allegation that “plaintiff’s damages, if any, were caused by his own negligence in unnecessarily driving on and remaining on, or dangerously near, defendant’s track after dark with an unlighted Avagon.” The affirmative defense was put in issue by a reply. The trial resulted in a A^erdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor for thirty-five hundred dollars, from Avhich defendant duly appealed.

The collision occurred about seventy-five or eighty feet east of the west line of the baseball park and the old fair grounds, Avhere the grounds on either side of the street are inclosed by high board fences. Plaintiff had delivered a load of lumber at the Lucas farm, in St. Louis county, and Avas returning’ to his home in the city over Natural Bridge road. After unloading the lumber, plaintiff coupled his wagon up short so the coupling pole projected ten or twelve feet to the rear. The wagon Avas drawn by tAVO large white or gray horses,- and plaintiff sat on the hounds to ride and drive, there being no bed on the wagon. The evidence shows the street was muddy and there was no gutter on the south side except a plank one which had been put in by the Baseball Association. The space between the south track and this wooden gutter was about eight feet. Plaintiff testified that he heard “car bells ringing,” looked back and saw the car that collided Avith his [307]*307wagon, about one .hundred and fifty feet west of him; that he had turned near the track on account of some iron sewer pipe lying in the gutter, and when he saw the car, realizing that it would strike his wagon, if he did not pull away from the track, he pulled his team to the south and hurried them up to get out of the way of the car, but before he could get far enough from the track the car struck the end of the coupling pole, breaking it off, hurling bim into the street and burying him in the mud, resulting in severe and, according to the expert evidence, permanent injuries to his head and one knee. Plaintiff also testified that for a moment he was rendered unconscious by the fall; that he was not driving on the track and had not been on the track, but was forced to drive near it on account of the iron pipes in the gutter. According to the evidence of witnesses introduced by plaintiff, and also that of defendant’s witnesses, the situation right after the collision was this: the horses were at the gutter on the south side of the street, the front wheels of the wagon were south of the track, the right hind wheel was flat on the track, the left one in the air, and plaintiff was lying in the center of the track. It had been raining during the day and was cloudy; a mist was in the air and it was dark, not extremely dark, but much darker than it would have been had the heavens been clear and the air free of mist. There were Welsbach gas lights burning along the street, one about seventy-five or eighty feet west, one opposite the place of the accident and others east at intervals of seventy-five or eighty feet.

John Homfeldt, a saloon-keeper, living two hundred feet west of the scene, on the Natural Bridge road, testified he heard the noise of the collision, ran out and saw the wagon and went to- the scene; that the car was brilliantly lighted and he was enabled to see the wagon by the combined light from the car and the street lamp, but that he could not have seen it but for the street [308]*308lamp. Another disinterested witness, who was elose by and on the scene in a moment after the collision, testified that while the night was dark and one would perhaps not be able to make out Avhat an object was, the bulk of a wagon and team could have been seen one hundred feet Avest of the place of the accident by aid of the street lamp.

The car was not only brilliantly lighted but had a headlight. An experienced motorman testified that a headlight would throw light from thirty to forty feet ahead of the car, and that a car running at a speed of six or seven miles an hour could be stopped in thirty-five or forty feet. The conductor and motorman testified the car was running at a speed of about six or seven miles an hour. The motorman testified the headlight did not enable him to see more than twenty or twenty-five feet ahead of the car. Both the motorman and conductor testified the bell was sounded continuously on account of the darkness, and the motorman said he was keeping a sharp lookout ahead, but did not see the wagon until the car was Avithin fifteen or twenty feet of it; that he immediately reversed the power and did all he could to stop the car to prevent a collision. The evidence shows the car stopped immediately after striking the coupling pole of the wagon. The motorman also' testified the Avagon Avas in the middle of the track. Plaintiff testified the car was running at a speed of fifteen miles per hour, but his examination shows that he came to this conclusion from having previously seen cars running on this road aud not from any estimate he made, or could have made, under the circumstances,- as. to the speed of this particular car.

The vigilant Avatch ordinance was read in evidence by plaintiff. Defendant offered an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. The refusal to grant this request is assigned as error. It is insisted that plaintiff’s own evidence shows he was guilty of neg[309]*309ligence, which directly contributed to his injury. We have failed to find such evidence in the record. Plaintiff’s testimony was that he heard the car bell, looked west and saw the car coming toward him, one hundred and fifty feet away; that he immediately turned his horses out from the track to avoid the car and if he had been given a moment’s more time he would have been out of the way. Plaintiff was on the proper side of the street and testified that on account of the iron pipes lying in the gutter he was forced to drive near the track, so near as to be in the way of a passing car. If this evidence is to be believed (and the jury believed it), plaintiff was not guilty of negligence, but did the best he could, in the circumstances, to avoid a collision with the car.

It is also insisted that the evidence fails to show any negligence on the part of the motorman. The evidence may preponderate in favor of this contention, yet it is not our province to pass upon the weight of the evidence but to determine whether or not there is substantial evidence to warrant the submission of the issue of fact to the jury. The evidence is, the horses drawing the wagon were large white or gray horses, the night not exceedingly dark, and there was-not sufficient mist in the air to seriously obstruct the rays of light thrown out by the street lamps, one of which was within fifteen or twenty feet of the point of collision. A saloon-keeper two hundred feet to the west saw the horses and wagon immediately after the collision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 S.W. 512, 122 Mo. App. 304, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mertens-v-st-louis-transit-co-moctapp-1906.