Noah v. L. B. Price Mercantile Co.

231 S.W. 300, 208 Mo. App. 149, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 90
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 300 (Noah v. L. B. Price Mercantile 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
Noah v. L. B. Price Mercantile Co., 231 S.W. 300, 208 Mo. App. 149, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 90 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, P. J.

— Plaintiff, claiming to have been injured through being run over by a wagon negligently driven by defendant’s servant while in the prosecution of the master’s business, brought suit to recover damages therefor. In his first action he suffered a nonsuit and thereafter he brought this action, recovering therein a verdict and judgment for $6000 from which the defendant has appealed,

*152 Defendant is in the business of selling merchandise at retail throughout Kansas City, and perhaps adjacent towns, by means of solicitors who canvass from house to house working under foremen who are each in charge of a group of solicitors. Each of these foremen is furnished with a wagon and horse by which the goods to be sold are hauled by the foreman to the locality intended to be canvassed, and there the goods are distributed to the solicitors of that group who thereupon proceed to canvass that locality, make sales and account to the foremen therefor.

, Defendant kept its horses at a livery barn in Kansas City. It was a two-story structure 70 feet wide north and south, and 50 feet deep east and west, and faced west on an alley 15 feet wide running north and south. The barn office, 12 feet square, was in the northwest corner of the bam, and the north side of the bam entrance, 12 feet wide, was 7 feet south of the south side of the barn office. A driveway, 12 feet wide, ran from the entrance east, apparently the full depth of the barn. This driveway had no partitions marking its boundaries, they being merely imaginary lines, and the driveway was, therefore, merely a 12-foot space used in driving vehicles into the barn.

Cust'omarilv, a number of chairs stood in the seven-foot space between the drivewaj7- and the office, and here those about the barn were accustomed to sit when not engaged in their work.

Plaintiff was one of defendant’s solicitors who worked under a foreman named Woods. As he was on a commission he worked when he chose, and on the day of the alleged injury he was not working but had come to the bam to tell his foreman that he had been absent' on account of his brother’s death. It was while .seated in one of the chairs in the 7-foot space above referred to, waiting to see his foreman, that'plaintiff claims to have received the alleged injury sometime about noon of August 5, 1916.

*153 Plaintiff’s evidence, as to the occurrence of the injury, consisted of his testimony and that of a man by the name of McBreen, a saloon keeper; and according to their evidence, the facts are as follows:

Plaintiff was seated about halfway between the office and the driveway at a point nearly opposite but perhaps slightly east of the door in the south side of the office not far from the southeast corner thereof. He had been sitting there about 15 minutes, with his back to the north and his face to the south, talking to a negro who was sitting in a chair a foot-and-a-half or two feet west of him, when McBreen, in a single buggy with an attractive horse, drove into the bam and east along the driveway until the rear of his buggy was from 1.2 to 16 feet east of the entrance. McBreen got out of the buggy and began unhitching the horse from the south side thereof. Plaintiff, attracted by the horse, sat with his face to* the southeast looking at him. While in this position, Himan a foreman of defendant, and in charge of one of its wagons, drove rapidly into the barn and driveway, but instead of keeping the horse and wagon confined thereto they were allowed to veer out of the driveway to the north until they struck and rah over plaintiff and then the horse and vehicle curved back southeast into the driveway again, striking the buggy standing there, and at this point the horse was caught by Roll, the proprietor of the stable, who was helping McBreen unhitch. A,s the horse and wagon made this curved course out of the driveway the wagon struck the negro and plaintiff, turning them in their chairs over on the cement floor, the negro falling upon plaintiff and the left wheel of the wagon passin over plaintiff’s leg, injuring his shin, and bruising him in various places about the body.

Plaintiff says he did not see the horse and wagon enter the barn, as his attention was fixed on the McBreen horse. He says the first thing he knew he was knocked over, the negro was thrown on top of him and he was run over. He says he saw the wheels as it ran over his *154 leg and the horse was going at that time “pretty fast” and that the horse and wagon continued on for 15 or 16 feet past him.

Plaintiff’s evidence, as to the entrance of the wagon into the barn and what occurred just before and at the • moment plaintiff was struck, was given’by McBreen. Pie testified that his buggy had been driven along the driveway until its rear end was 14 or 15 feet east of the entrance, that his own horse was about 20 feet east of the entrance and about 5 feet south of the center of the driveway, and his buggy was south of the center of the driveway; that he was standing on the south side of his horse, helping to unhitch it, and was about 18 to 20 feet east of the entrance when Himan drove in “awfully fast-because I heard a noise and I just "happened to look around and saw the horse coming in pretty fast.” “It looked as though he was coming in at a trot. ” McBreen also said that as the horse came in, the driver was not guiding him aright, the horse’s head was turned to the north over toward the office instead of straight east along the driveway; that he heard “some of the boys” holler and he looked around, and plaintiff and the negro were knocked over by the wagon, the chairs were upset, the two men were on the floor, and they and the chairs were all “mixed up. there and scrambled;’-’ that the horse, after passing plaintiff, continued east and south until he reached a point near the south side of the driveway close to his buggy where it stopped, the end of a shaft knocking a piece of the rubber out of the tire on the hind wheel of witness’s buggy.

McBreen further testified that he heard the holler and looked around before the accident, and saw what occurred; that, judging from the way the horse entered the barn, Pliman must have driven up the alley from the south; that the hollering began before the horse came into the barn, and when he looked around, the horse and vehicle were coming into the barn faster than they ought -and completely out of their direction; that part of the *155 horse was in the barn and the wagon was still in the alley when he looked around; that he saw the wagon come in the door and saw it strike the negro and plaintiff; that while his horse was between him and them he could easily see over the horse, and when he heard the racket he quit unhitching and looked around; that as he drove into the barn himself he had no difficulty whatever in going along the driveway past the plaintiff and the negro sitting where they were and that he noticed plaintiff sitting there as he drove in. He denied positively having testified on the former trial that he did not see the wagon hit plaintiff or anybody and did not know anything about it until after the alleged occurrence.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 300, 208 Mo. App. 149, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noah-v-l-b-price-mercantile-co-moctapp-1921.