Murphy v. St. Louis Public Service Co.

244 S.W.2d 31, 362 Mo. 772, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 700
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1951
Docket42253
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 244 S.W.2d 31 (Murphy v. St. Louis Public Service 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
Murphy v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 244 S.W.2d 31, 362 Mo. 772, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 700 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

BOPILING, C.

The St. Louis Public Service Company, a corporation, appeals from a judgment for $15,000 (reduced by remittitur from $22,000) in favor of William Murphy for injuries sustained when one of defendant’s streetcars collided with his automobile. Defendant challenges the correctness of two of plaintiff’s instructions and contends the damages are excessive.

The sole charge in plaintiff’s petition was that defendant was negligent under the humanitarian doctrine. Plaintiff’s verdict directing instruction predicated recovery under said doctrine only on defendant’s negligence in failing to stop.

Plaintiff, who was in his forties, was proceeding in his automobile west along Olive street, an east-west public street in' the city of St. Louis, Missouri, having east- and westbound streetcar tracks, at about 1:15 a.m., December 10, 1947. It was snowing and the streets were slippery. As plaintiff neared the Spring avenue intersection a parked automobile pulled out from the curb without any warning and plaintiff applied his brakes to avoid a collision; and his automobile, skidding about 20 feet, went onto the eastbound street-ear tracks on the south side of Olive street, where his motor stalled. Plaintiff then observed an approaching eastbound streetcar and he kept pushing on the starter, attempting to start his motor again, lie estimated he was in this position trying to start his motor for 10 to 15 seconds before the streetcar struck his automobile.

Plaintiff also adduced testimony that no warning was given of the streetcar’s approach; and that the motorman was talking to a *775 young lady sitting directly behind him and in doing so was glancing back over his shoulder, but the witness did not know where the motorman was looking at the time of the accident.

The testimony warranted findings that the streetcar was from 150 to over 350 feet from plaintiff’s automobile when it stalled upon the eastbound track. Plaintiff’s witnesses estimated the speed of the streetcar at 30 miles an hour; that its speed had not slackened at the time of impact; that it moved approximately 20 féet after the impact before stopping; and that the streetcar could be stopped in 115 feet when traveling 25 miles an hour and in 125 feet when traveling 30 miles an hour.

Defendant’s version differs. The motorman first observed plaintiff’s automobile when it was about 300 feet away, proceeding west on the eastbound track, fast and straight towards the streetcar. He applied all the brakes he had when they were about 150 feet apart and had slackened the speed of the streetcar from 25 to about 1 mile an hour at the instant of the impact, the streetcar moving about 2 feet after the impact. There was no change in the speed of the automobile up to the time of collision and the two vehicles collided practically head-on. There was some corroborating testimony.

Defendant says plaintiff’s instruction No. 6 contains abstract propositions of law which are incomplete; that it injected antecedent primary negligence into a humanitarian submission, and is confusing, misleading and erroneous in a case submitted solely under the humanitarian doctrine. We quote the instruction:

“The Court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence that Olive Street, at the point shown to you in the evidence, was an open, public street in and of the City of St. Louis and State of Missouri, then you are instructed that the defendant was not entitled to the exclusive use of that portion of the said public street which lay between the rails of its tracks located thereon, and that it was the duty of the motorman of the streetcar described in the evidence to exercise ordinary care in the operation thereof, and to be on the watch for automobiles on defendant’s eastbound track.”

The instruction does not direct a verdict. Plaintiff states that it was collateral to his main instruction; that it was not strictly necessary and it is doubtful if its refusal would have been error, and contends it did not constitute reversible error. Mo. R. S. 1949, § 512.160(2).

Plaintiff’s main instruction informed the jury that even though plaintiff be guilty of contributory negligence, still the verdict should be for plaintiff if, after plaintiff was in a position of imminent peril, defendant’s motorman “saw, or in the exercise of ordinary care could have seen” plaintiff in said position in time thereafter, and *776 by the exercise of ordinary care, to have, stopped the streetcar and avoided the collision, and the motorman negligently failed so to do, et cetera. Plaintiff’s instruction No. 7 informed the jury that negligence “means a failure, if any, to exercise ordinary care * *

Instruction No. 6 has three parts, to wit: (1st) that defendant was not entitled to the exclusive use of the. street between the rails of its tracks; (2nd) that it was the duty .of defendant’s motorman to exercise ordinary care in the operation of the streetcar, and (3rd) to be on the watch for automobiles on defendant’s eastbound track.

An instruction that a defendant street railway “possessed no rights superior to those” of the driver of a vehicle at a street intersection was expressly held reversible error in a ease submitted solely under the humanitarian doctrine in Grout v. Central El. Ry. Co., 151 Mo. App. 330, 333, 131 S. W. 891, 892. In Bruening v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., 180 Mo. App. 434, 441, 168 S. W. 248 250 [5], the plaintiff predicated a recovery under primary and humanitarian negligence, and the distinction between like instructions not being erroneous in such instances and erroneous in cases submitted solely under the humanitarian doctrine is there developed in the consideration of the Grout case, supra. Such instructions are recognized as germane to the charge of a defendant’s primary negligence and the. defense of a plaintiff’s contributory negligence; but are not germane when the humanitarian doctrine begins to operate, because defendant’s duty to act exists whether plaintiff had any right at the place or not, plaintiff’s contributory negligence being no defense. The Grout case reasoned the purpose and obvious effect of- the instruction was to give the jury the idea that it was an open question whether or not the peril of plaintiff was caused by the assertion of a superior right to the use of the street by defendant, and hence the instruction injected a false issue into the case, was misleading and reversible error.

While like instructions have been held permissible in primary negligence eases, plaintiffs are not entitled to such instructions as a matter of right. See the discussion on instruction D in Schipper v. Brashear Truck Lines, Inc., Mo., 132 S. W. 2d 993, 995 [3, 4] which states: “Such instructions merely tend to confuse and mislead the jury. No one can know how a jury would apply said abstract propositions of law to the case at hand.”

Defendant’s main complaint is that the instruction injected antecedent negligence into a case submitted solely under defendant’s duty to stop under the humanitarian doctrine. If so, the instruction is prejudicially erroneous. Mayfield v. Kansas City So. Ry. Co., 337 Mo. 79, 85 S. W. 2d 116, 123[6], citing cases; and Reiling v. Russell, 348 Mo. 279, 153 S. W. 2d 6, 8[1-3], among other cases.

Reiling v. Russell, supra, involved injuries to a pedestrian when' struck by defendant’s automobile.

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W.2d 31, 362 Mo. 772, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-st-louis-public-service-co-mo-1951.