Nagel v. Thompson

170 S.W.2d 416, 237 Mo. App. 1061, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 250
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 170 S.W.2d 416 (Nagel v. Thompson) 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
Nagel v. Thompson, 170 S.W.2d 416, 237 Mo. App. 1061, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 250 (Mo. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

*1067 BLAND, J.

This is an action for damages, founded upon the failure of the defendant to stop, at plaintiff’s destination, a train upon which she was a passenger, and for personal injuries suffered by her while upon said train. There was a judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $2500, and defendant has appealed. Plaintiff has not favored us with a brief.

The facts show that plaintiff, a resident of Hermann, was 72 years of age at the time in’question; that in the early part of January 1941, she was in St. Louis visiting her children; that late in the afternoon of January 5, 1941, in company with her son-in-law, plaintiff went to the Union Station in St. Louis for the purpose of returning to Hermann. The train, leaving St. Louis at 4:01 P. M., for which Hermann was a scheduled stop, had already departed. There was a later train leaving St. Louis at 5:45 P. M., for which Hermann was not a scheduled stop.

Plaintiff’s son-in-law bought a ticket for her to Hermann but when she went to get aboard the 5:45 P. M. train she was informed, by the gate keeper, that it did not stop at Hermann; that she could not take passage thereon unless the “head man” approved it. The son-in-law set out to find the “head man”, who returned with him and told the condiictor to let plaintiff “off at Hermann”. She boarded the train and thereafter the conductor took up her ticket. Later the porter came and told her: “ ‘Now, if I call Hermann, you just wait a few 'seconds, and then .you get out on the platform. I will take your one basket along.out.’ So I did as he said.”

Plaintiff testified that as the train neared Hermann, and, at a point which plaintiff judged to be about three miles therefrom, the porter called “Hermann”; that “I waited a few minutes. The door was closed, I hardly could open it, and I had all of my suitcases and other belongings. I had to carry just as much as I. could hold. And I went out on the platform, and the porter was standing on the steps, and.not saying one word to me. And I found my basket laying on *1068 the side, ready to .roll off of the platform. So I had to keep an eye on that and keep it from falling down. And I put my feet right, hard on it, and braced myself against that closed door of the coach. . . .

The door was closed, and the wind was blowing, and was so cold, my 'ear, I couldn’t hear, and after I got off of the train I couldn’t hear for six months. ’ ’ There was a light in the train. It was about dusk and was not light enough for plaitniff to see Hermann. She stood on the platform for eleven or twelve minutes, all of the time expecting the train to stop at Hermann. When the train finally stopped it was at the town of Gasconade about eight miles beyond Hermann.

Later, in her testimony, plaintiff stated that she had but one suitcase but that her arms were full of small packages, including, her purse; that while she was on the platform the train was running at a high rate of speed and jerked and shook; that the wind was blowing and it was cold; that she became verj^ nervous and excited; that she stood against the door and “I didn’t have no hold, I had to brace, and then I got them cramps so strong in my legs, I didn’t know where to put them; ’ ’ that ‘ ‘ It was pretty cold, pretty cold, my hands they were just stiff, by holding things, and bracing back, and my head was knocked on the door, and oh, it was terrible, I was nearly out, and with all of the excitement, where I landed I don’t remember;” that “it shook me around and jarred me,” and when she had been on the platform for abo.ut ten minutes, ‘ ‘ all of a sudden I got such a pain in the lower region of the bowels, around the bladder and the womb, and I didn’t know what it was, and I felt something sliding down. And nowadays that bladder is out as big as a fist all day long;” that, “Well, as I say, I was hurted all over, my arms, and I think that I got them cramps now. I overstrained my legs pushing that train floor down. I didn’t want to get killed, that train was going fast, and in a wild way.”

Plaintiff alighted from the train at Gasconade. She remained there about forty minutes and was given free passage back to Hermann. She testified that she made no complaint of her injuries to anyone that day.

Plaintiff further testified that, during the time she was on the alighting platform of the train, the porter stood on the steps of the. train with his head out, looking toward the rear; that he was four and one-half or five feet from her; that he said nothing to her and she said nothing to him; that so far as she knew he did not see her; that it appeared to her that he did not now that she was there. She testified afterwards that she was stiff and her bones hurt and “I laid around' for a whole week; ’ ’ that she was sometimes in bed and sometimes she sat up; that she was unable to do any of her housework during the following week; that she was never able to resume her work as she had done it before; that she had help from her sister, her'neighbors and the neighbors’ children, who ran errands for her; *1069 that prior to her injury she kept house for herself and her son; that she .did all of the housework, split wood, laid bricks and tended a garden. There was other testimony that she split all of the wood used in the house; that she would carry a bucket containing three gallons of water in each hand and would spade the garden.

Plaintiff testified: “I could do any work, hard work like a man, and now I am done; ’ ’ that she did her washing before she was injured, but that, now, her sister did it for her; that in September, 194Í, she suffered a hemorrhage from"her womb; that about five minutes before this occurred she became excited about something a neighbor woman told her; that she had never before suffered any hemorrhage or discharge from her womb; that about twenty-three years prior to the occurrence giving rise to this suit, when she was fifty-one years of age, she was operated on' and the ligaments holding her womb were sewn up; that after this operation the doctor told her “You are as perfect as a young one now; ’ ’ that she was always a well woman; that she never had a ‘ ‘ sinking bladder of any kind. ’ ’

There was other testimony that plaintiff was a strong woman, doing most of the -work, such as splitting wood, etc., Up- to the time of the train ride in question; that thereafter she was not seen to do any. heavy work; that she spent most of her time sitting on her porch; that during the months of January and February her sister did most of her housework for her and the children in the neighborhood ran her errands.

When plaintiff suffered the hemorrhage from her womb in September, 1941, she consulted Dr. Workman, who testified that he treated and administered to her professionally; that on examining her he found her condition to be a chronic one of- long standing and that she was suffering from cystocele; that this-“is a condition where the vaginal wall gives way, and allows the bladder, due to pressure from the inside, pushing the uterus down on the bladder, and pushing the bladder out into the vagina;” that, in his opinion, her ride on the alighting platform or vestibule of the train aggravated her condition, and that her condition would get worse. The. doctor concluded that the plaintiff needed surgical attention and caused her to enter a hospital in St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 S.W.2d 416, 237 Mo. App. 1061, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nagel-v-thompson-moctapp-1943.