Murphy v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

102 S.W. 64, 125 Mo. App. 269, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 98
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 64 (Murphy v. Metropolitan Street 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
Murphy v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 102 S.W. 64, 125 Mo. App. 269, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 98 (Mo. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. The judgment was for plaintiff in the sum of $1,229 and the cause is here on the appeal of defendant.

The evidence of plaintiff, in substance, shows that on April 30,1904, at about ten o’clock p. m., she became a passenger on an electric car operated by defendant on the Indiana avenue line of its street railway system in Kansas City. ■ She boarded the car at Thirteenth and Main streets and her destination was Nineteenth street and Tracy avenue. The car traveled in an easterly direction while running on Nineteenth street and as it approached Tracy avenue, plaintiff first pushed an electric button to give the signal to stop and, finding that the bell did not ring, turned to a conductor who was standing in the rear part of the car and asked him to give the signal. He gave it, and in response thereto the motorman brought the car to a full stop at Tracy avenue, but on account of the darkness, the witnesses for plaintiff could not say at what particular point on the crossing. Plaintiff waited until the car came to a standstill before leaving her seat and then proceeded with due [272]*272dispatch to depart. She reached the rear vestibule and was in the act of stepping from the platform to the first step when the car started forward suddenly and she was thrown to the street and injured. Just as the car started, someone rang the bell three times, which was the signal for an emergency stop, and the motorman immediately applied the brakes and stopped the car when it had run, perhaps three or four feet. There was no direct evidence offered by plaintiff to the effect that the point at which the car first was stopped was a regular stopping place for the discharge and reception of passengers. The conductor in charge of the car was in the front part thereof collecting fares during the occurrence, and was not the one whom plaintiff requested to give the signal to stop.

On behalf of defendant, the evidence tends to show that as the car approached Tracy avenue, a signal to stop was given and the conductor in charge of the car testifies that he was the person who gave the signal and that it was given for the purpose of permitting passengers to alight. In obedience thereto, the car did come to a full stop at the east line of Tracy avenue, and several passengers alighted from it. One of the witnesses who claims to have observed plaintiff, states that two departing passengers preceded and two followed her. All of the witnesses for defendant agree in the statement that plaintiff attempted to step to the street before the car had come to a stop and while it was going at the rate of two or three miles per hour. The motorman who was called by defendant as a witness, testified, in effect, that he brought the car to a standstill at the east line of Tracy avenue, the usual stopping place.

The negligence charged in the petition is “that on or about April 30, 1904, and at about the hour of 10:30 p. m. of sai'd day, plaintiff was a passenger on an electric car of said defendant, east bound on said East Nineteenth street, and when said car reached a point at or [273]*273near said East Nineteenth street and Tracy street, it came to a stop and plaintiff started to alight therefrom, and while plaintiff was in the act of alighting therefrom to the street or ground, said car was carelessly and negligently started or allowed to move forward by said defendant and its agents, servants and employees in charge of said car, whose names are unknown to plaintiff, although said defendants, its servants, agents and employees knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care should have known that plaintiff was in the act of alighting from said car, and plaintiff-by reason of the said starting or moving forward of said car was -thrown from said car to the street and pavement, whereby she received the following wounds,” etc. The answer, in addition -to a general denial, contains a plea of contributory negligence.

It is urged by defendant that an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence which it asked at the close of the evidence should have been given.- It is claimed that the cause of action pleaded is not- founded on a wrongful act of the defendant in starting a car which had stopped at a regular station for the purpose of receiving and discharging passengers, but is based on negligence in starting a car which had stopped at some point other than such regular stopping place. It must be conceded no specific averment appears in the petition that the place at which the car stopped was á regular station and that the cause pleaded might have been sustained by proof of negligence in starting the car while plaintiff was alighting, though it had been stopped at some place not designated or established as a regular station. But defendant is in error in assuming that the cause pleaded is restricted in its scope to that kind of a cause: The omission of an allegation respecting the character of the place at which the car stopped had no other effect than to expand the limits of the cause pleaded to include, not only negligence involved in an act [274]*274of starting a car, stopped at a place other than a reg: nlar station, bnt also negligence in starting a car stopped at such station. Defendant, by the timely filing of a motion to make the petition more definite and certain, would have been entitled to a more specific pleading. But instead of taking this course, it chose to meet the broad issues tendered, and, if the evidence before us will sustain the charge of negligence embraced in the act of prematurely starting the car after it had stopped at a regular station while plaintiff, a passenger, was in the act of alighting, defendant is in no position to assert that such act is beyond the legitimate scope of the cause of action pleaded.

Not only does the evidence sufficiently show that " the point at which the car stopped was a usual stopping place, but it is admitted by the conductor that the stop was made for the express purpose of permitting passengers to depart. Actual knowledge on his part of this contemplated action of passengers imposed on hi'm the performance of the duty of holding the car stationary until all of them had reached the street in safety, and the extent and character of this duty was in nowise lessened or changed by the fact — had it been a fact — that the car, in obedience to his signal, stopped at a point not designated or used as a regular stopping place. His compliance with the request of passengers to stop the car was an invitation to them to depart at that place and, knowing they were acting on this invitation, he had no right to give the signal for it to start until he had seen that all of them had safely alighted. So that, under the conceded facts before ns, it is really immaterial whether or not the stop was made at a regular station. And, if we believed that the cause of action pleaded embraced no wider scope than that claimed by defendant, nevertheless, Ave would hold the evidence sufficient to sustain the negligence averred.

We give ready sanction to the doctrine that where [275]*275a car is momentarily stopped at a place not used as a regular station and for some purpose not connected with the action of passengers, no invitation to passengers to alight may he implied and, if in such case, a passenger attempts to alight and is injured by the starting of the car, the carrier cannot be charged with negligence unless the person in charge thereof knew that passengers intended to alight or had reason to suspect it. [Jacobson v. Transit Co., 106 Mo. App.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 64, 125 Mo. App. 269, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-moctapp-1907.