Olsen v. Citizens Railway Co.

54 S.W. 470, 152 Mo. 426, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 28, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 54 S.W. 470 (Olsen v. Citizens 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
Olsen v. Citizens Railway Co., 54 S.W. 470, 152 Mo. 426, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 240 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

The plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s cars on its street railway on Morgan street in the [429]*429city of St. Louis, and was injured by a collision between said car and a wagon of tbe fire department of said city on its way to a fire.

No claim is made that the damages she recovered are excessive.

Tbe evidence in brief was to tbe effect that as tbe car on wbicb plaintiff was riding, was moving east on Morgan street,, an engine of tbe fire department was going north to a fire on Ninth street. Tbe engine passed Morgan street safely and was followed by a hooh-and-ladder wagon, wbicb was being driven very rapidly as is usual with such wagons going to a fire. As this wagon proceeded north on Ninth street tbe gong-on it was sounded constantly and tbe evidence for plaintiff tended to show very strongly that it could be beard several blocks anc[ was beard by plaintiff sitting in tbe car when at or near Tenth street. There was also much evidence that tbe people in tbe street and on tbe sidewalks screamed at tbe motorman and made gestures and signs to stop. Whereas defendant’s evidence tended to prove tbe gong was not sounded and tbe people did not halloo to tbe motorman. He did not stop and when be saw tbe wagon approaching be undertook to avoid a collision by running bis car at fu’l speed across tbe intersection of tbe streets ahead of tbe approaching rvagon, and tbe driver of tbe wagon seeing tbe car, undertook to swing around its rear to tbe west but failed and tbe pole of' bis wagon struck tbe car in wbicb plaintiff was seated, ab ut three feet from tbe rear, crashed through tbe sides of tbe car and struck plaintiff as she sat on her seat and seriously injured her. Tbe pole of tbe wagon broke off and one of tbe horses fell doAvn.

Defendant insisted that it was tbe fault of tbe teamster on tbe book-and-ladder wagon, wbicb caused tbe collision. It complains of tbe instructions given and refused, and the examination of these will determine tbe merits of this appeal.

[430]*430I. The following instruction is challenged as serious error:

“1. The court instructs the jury that the defendant by its servants in charge of its cars, in one of which the plaintiff was a passenger, was bound in law to exercise a high degree of care, as defined in the instructions, to watch and listen for any approaching vehicle at the crossing of Ninth street, where defendant’s car crossed such street, and was bound also to use such care to avoid collision with any such vehicle. And if the defendant’s servants in charge of the said cars, failed even in a slight degree, to use such care, and thereby directly contributed to cause plaintiff’s injury, then defendant is liable, .although the jury should find from the evidence that the employees of the city fire department also failed to exercise ordinary care and thereby contributed to cause said collision.”

Under the facts developed before the jury it was clearly a question for the jury to determine whether the motorman of defendant was negligent. If he heard the gong or the shouts of the people warning him of the approach of the fire department’s wagon, the most ordinary care would have dictated to him to approach the crossing of Ninth street with his car well in hand. He must have known that, it was the duty of the driver of the hook-and-ladder wagon to act with the utmost promptness, and regardless of a considerable degree of danger to himself, and that the hook-and-ladder wagon had the right •of way.

The custom of giving these fire engines and hook-and-ladder wagons the right of way, grows out of the necessity in which all good citizens acquiesce. The duty which defendant owed to plaintiff, who was its passenger, was to' use every effort that a very prudent person would have exercised under the circumstances to have averted injury from plaintiff. This duty ■was not restricted solely to the gripman. It devolved upon the conductor also. If the conductorheard as plaintiff heard the fire ..gong and shouts, and his car seemed to be approaching a fire [431]*431it was his duty to cooperate with the motorman in avoiding' the collision.

There is nothing novel in the instruction. It correctly affirms the duty of defendant and its servants and employees. [Bunyan v. Street Ry., 121 Mo. loc. cit. 18.]

II. Complaint is likewise made of the plaintiff’s second instruction, which is in these words:

“2. Although the jury should find from the evidence in this case, that the employees of the city fire department did not exercise ordinary care in driving the hook-and-ladder wagon; and although the jury should find from the evidence that such want of care (if there was such want of care) directly contributed to cause the collision by which the plaintiff was injured; yet if the jury find from the evidence that defendant’s, servants in charge of its car in which plaintiff was such passenger, if they had exercised a high degree of care, such as would have been exercised by very prudent, careful and skillful railroad men under the same or similar circumstances, would have averted said collision and injury, then plaintiff is. entitled to recover.”

It is again insisted that the negligence of defendant can only be predicated on the failure of the motorman to exercise the high degree of care. ‘ Such a rule would make a mere-dummy of the conductor. We find nothing in law or reason to exempt the defendant from responsibility for all its servants in charge of its cars.

Besides the instruction is in the form almost universally-adopted.

The additional objection that it required defendant to-have skillful employees is without merit. The law exacts, that a company using appliances which will naturally prove very dangerous if not handled skillfully, shall have competent, servants in charge thereof.

III. Counsel urges that the court erred in refusing his, first instruction, which reads as follows:

[432]*432“1. The court instructs the jury that there is no liability •on the part of the railway company defendant, to the plaintiff merely because the hook-and-ladder wagon ran into the car, ■and the' plaintiff was injured, and has brought this suit against the company, and the jury must not presume any liability on the part of the company merely on that account, and the court further instructs the jury that the burden of proof is upon the ■plaintiff to prove that the collision was caused by the negligence of the gripman, as defined in the other instructions, and this she must do by a preponderance of evidence, and if the .jury believe that the collision was caused solely by the negligence of the driver of the hookjand-ladder wagon, then your verdict must be for the defendant.”

This instruction very adroitly informs the jury that, ■although this car in which plaintiff was riding was wholly under the control of defendant’s servants and employees and although these cars when carefully managed do not ordinarily collide with other vehicles, yet when a collision did occur with ■the fire department wagon, no presumption of negligence whatever could arise which would devolve upon defendant the duty of explaining that it did not arise from its want of ■care.

The plaintiff being absolutely free from negligence on her part and the collision having occurred and injured her, we think a prima facie

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W. 470, 152 Mo. 426, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olsen-v-citizens-railway-co-mo-1899.