Nolan v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

157 S.W. 637, 250 Mo. 602, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 637 (Nolan v. Metropolitan Street Railway 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
Nolan v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 157 S.W. 637, 250 Mo. 602, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 177 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

BROWN, C.

This is a suit for personal injury ah leged to have been suffered by plaintiff through the negligence of the motorman in operating an electric street car on defendant’s street railway in Kansas City. That part of the petition which relates to the issue in this appeal is as follows:

“That on or about the 9th day of September, 1907, plaintiff attempted to board one of defendant’s westbound cars on said Thirty-first street at or near the intersection of said Thirty-first street with Cóllege avenue, for the purpose of becoming a passenger thereon. and that while he was in the act of so doing, de[608]*608fendant so carelessly and negligently ran, operated and managed said car as to canse plaintiff to be thrown therefrom and upon said Thirty-first street and caused him to be run over by said car and thereby caused him to be greatly injured.”

Damages were asked in the amount of thirty-five thousand dollars. The answer was a general denial, and general plea of contributory negligence.

The accident happened oh Thirty-first street, which extended east and west and was occupied by a double track street railway operated by defendant with electric power. The north track was used by the westbound traffic and the south track by eastbound traffic, after the usual manner of American railways. The street was unpaved from Indiana avenue on the east to Bellefontaine avenue on the west, say three or four blocks. For this entire distance, and extending a distance of three city blocks south from Thirty-first street the land was fenced in a single-field which was called at the trial “the pasture” and was in grass, with a few trees. The plaintiff was a landscape gardner, twenty-eight years old, something over six feet in height, weighing about two hundred and fifteen pounds, and was strong and active. He had been examining the sod in the- pasture, had purchased some of it, and wanted to return to his work at Thirty-first street and Woodland avenue, about ten blocks west.- There were no houses on the south side of Thirty-first street between Indiana and Bellefontaine and only one or two on the north side. None of the streets were paved in that vicinity. The plaintiff, who was his own sole witness as to the immediate circumstances of the accident, said he had just come up .to the wire fence along the south side of Thirty-third street opposite to a travelled .road that turned into it both ways on the north side. He pressed down the wire, stepped over the fence, and saw the car coming about a hundred feet to the east, and signaled with his ■ right hand for it to stop. The motorman “just nodded [609]*609his body — just nodded.” He was then about twenty-five feet from the south track. The front vestibule ■where the motorman stood, as well as the rear one, was open, and there were no gates to keep one from getting on or off, and he could see the motorman as plain as he could see anything.; They were looking at each other. He walked over to the north rail of the south track and stood there. When he gave the signal he saw the motorman make a turn like he was turning the motor and reached over with lfis right hand. The power relaxed and gradually died out. He could tell this from the noise or buzz of the car. When the car had got to a point about twenty feet east of him “it had,” in the words of the witness, “slowed down quite a bit; it was not running, I would not say, over a couple of miles an hour. A man could easily get on it if it would keep on slowing.” Continuing the substance of plaintiff’s statement in the first person as it is condensed in the appellant’s brief he said:

“When I reached the north rail of the south track I gave him another signal of the same kind, just in a way to be sure of it. The car came on, and when I gave this signal I stepped across from that rail over to where I could get on the car. The car was running at the same rate of speed. I stepped over there to wMt until where I could get on, and then I would step on; I got hold with both hands and stepped on. I should say the car was running' something like two miles an hour. I stepped my right foot on the step and reached up and caught hold with this hand: I didn’t get a very good hold, but when the car went on, the car just jumped; caught hold of the car with the right hand on the handle of the body of the car; my right foot was on the step.
“My left hand just had caught hold of the other handle, the handhold on the side of the vestibule; did not get a firm hold, just got my fingers on the handle and the car started; it started with a jerk, that is what [610]*610pulled this hand loose'. All those cars start with a jerk; it jerked this-hand loose and I went with my back right around with the" car and I fell under it. ’ ’

The appellant introduced much testimony to the effect that at the time plaintiff undertook to board the car it was running from ten to twelve miles per hour ; that he did) not signal nor communicate with the motorman in any way, but simply stood beside the track and caught it as it passed.

There was no evidence introduced by the defendant as to the character of the plaintiff’s injuries. The testimony of the surgeon who treated him from the day after the accident, when his right leg had already been amputated about midway between the ankle and the knee, up to the time of the trial six months afterwards, was to the effect that “he was generally bruised up in all parts of his body.” Among these injuries, in addition to that which made the amputation necessary, was a compound fracture of the nose which has left a scar and some disfiguration; the fifth metacarpal bone of his right hand was broken and the fourth one bruised, and was bruised about the back, shoulders and chest. He has lost the use of his right hand and forearm to a considerable extent, the muscles supplied by certain nerves seeming to be powerless. He has no use of nor sensation in the ring and little fingers of his right hand. The hand is affected by a form of paralysis. The surgeon thinks the condition is permanent.

At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, and also when all the testimony was in, the defendant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence which was each time refused by the court and defendant excepted. " The court then gave the following instructions for plaintiff.

“1. A carrier of passengers is required to use the highest degree of care reasonably practicable among prudent and skillful men in that kind of business to carry its passengers safely, and its failure, if any, to [611]*611use such, care would constitute negligence on the part of such carrier. A passenger is bound to use ordinary care, that is, such care as would be used by an ordinarily prudent person under the same or similar circumstances, and his failure, if any, to use such care would constitute negligence on the part of such passenger.

"2.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ashby v. Illinois Terminal Railroad
132 S.W.2d 1076 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1939)
State Ex Rel. Burger v. Trimble
55 S.W.2d 422 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1932)
Foster v. Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railroad Co.
14 S.W.2d 561 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1929)
Amos v. Fleming
285 S.W. 134 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1926)
Schwanenfeldt v. Metropolitan Street Ry. Co.
174 S.W. 143 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)
Speaks v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.
166 S.W. 864 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 637, 250 Mo. 602, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nolan-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-mo-1913.