O'Neill v. Blase

68 S.W. 764, 94 Mo. App. 648, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 610
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 68 S.W. 764 (O'Neill v. Blase) 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
O'Neill v. Blase, 68 S.W. 764, 94 Mo. App. 648, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 610 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BARCLAY, J.

This action is for personal injuries caused by an attack upon the plaintiff by a cow.

Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the defendant, Mr. Blase, was engaged in business as a butcher on- North Broadway in St. Louis. His two sons, Herman and William, Jr., had the general management of his business. In May, 1900, Herman Blase bought eight cows of Mr. Gerhart (one of the defendants). The cow in question was one of the lot. Gerhart was a dairyman, who lived in the north part of the city, some blocks distant from the place of business of defendant, Mr. Blase. ■ Herman Blase saw the cows before he pur[652]*652chased them from Mr. Gerhart. They were in a stable on the premises of the latter. Mr. Blase had not seen the cows before, nor did he see them again until they were brought to his father’s slaughterhouse. The defendant Blase took no active part in the business carried on by his sons for him. He had no personal knowledge of the facts out of which this case arose, until after the plaintiff was hurt. Some days before that event, Herman Blase sent a colored man, and a boy by the name of Spieser, to get three of the cows, giving the colored man a written order to Gerhart for them. The boy Speiser was about fifteen years old. Gerhart delivered the cows into the charge of the colored man and the boy. They started with the cows towards Blase’s slaughterhouse. One of the cows was a muley cow, the one which caused the damage in this ease. She persisted in turning back towards Gerhart’s. After several attempts to drive her with the others, the colored man and his assistant left her in a neighboring pasture and drove the other two to the Blase premises. The afternoon of the same day, the colored man and the boy were sent back for the refractory cow mentioned; but they could not or did not get her out of the pasture. That evening Herman Blase went over to Gerhart’s to see if the cow had returned there, and to make arrangements to have her delivered at his place of business. He then made an agreement with a man named Simon (who had worked at odd jobs for Gerhart, and other dairymen, for some five or six years) to deliver the cow to Blase’s slaughterhouse for fifty cents. The particulars of the evidence on this point will more fully appear further on.

The next day (or the second day) thereafter Simon borrowed Gerhart’s horse and wagon, tied the cow to the rear of the wagon with a rope of his own and undertook to lead the cow to Blase’s premises. The rope was tied around the cow’s neck and a noose around her mouth. The other end of the rope was then fastened to the end of the wagon. Simon had [653]*653engaged tbe services of a friend named Sebeer to aid in tbe work he bad undertaken.

Tbe plaintiff is a man of advanced years, about sixty-five years old. He lived at No. 7614 North Broadway in St Louis. He bad been in business for many years as a landscape gardener, but lately bad not been employed actively. His sons took tbe active work off bis hands. Tbe mishap to plaintiff occurred about noon, June 1, 1900.

According to bis statement be was sitting on a bench at bis front g’ate when tbe two young men came along Broadway with tbe cow tied as above described. Broadway is a public street of St. Louis at that point. As tbe cow got opposite plaintiff’s gate she appeared to fall and to be in distress because of-being so tightly tied. Tbe wagon was stopped and tbe plaintiff called out some words of warning about “tbe cow being smothered,” or words to that effect. One of tbe men in charge of tbe cow remarked that the cow was mean and would “poke” as soon as she got up. Plaintiff turned around and walked through bis gate into tbe yard and hurried towards the door of bis bouse, some twenty feet back from tbe street. Before be reached a place of safety, tbe cow which bad gotten loose, ran up behind and struck him in tbe back. She knocked him down and trampled upon him. Bystanders rescued him and got him into the bouse. In tbe meanwhile be bad been seriously injured by tbe cow’s attack.

There was some conflict of evidence touching tbe exact movements of the plaintiff immediately before be was injured, but there is overwhelming proof that tbe cow attacked him in his own yard as be was endeavoring to escape into the bouse, and tbe jury so found in passing on tbe issues submitted by tbe instructions.

In a short time tbe cow was captured, tied to a telegraph pole and afterwards taken to Blase’s place, where she was slaughtered tbe same day.

On tbe subject of defendant’s knowledge of tbe vicious [654]*654character of the cow, it appeared by testimony submitted by plaintiff, that the boy Speiser (who went with the colored man to get the cow from Gerhart’s) had been attacked by the cow some days before the accident to plaintiff. According to this boy, the cow undertook to attack him again on the morning following his first trip to Gerhart’s. This boy also testified that before the day of plaintiff’s injury he had informed young Mr. Blase (one- of the managers of the defendant’s business) of this performance of the cow, but Mr. Blase paid little attention to the information and merely laughed.

To quote the language of the boy, touching notice of the vicious character of the cow, he informed the younger Blase, that the cow wanted “to buck him,” and had “chased” him.

The defendant’s evidence tended to contradict that given on behalf of plaintiff in some respects. But it does not seem necessary to comment upon the conflict of evidence except in those particulars which will be mentioned in the course of the opinion.

The place where the cow escaped was within the limits of the city of St. Louis on a public street — North Broadway.

The case was tried before Judge Zagieritz and a jury. There was a finding for plaintiff in the sum of one thousand dollars as against defendant Blase.

The other defendant, Gerhart, was relieved of liability by an instruction which declared that, under the pleadings and the evidence, plaintiff could not'recover against said defendant.

After the usual motions and exceptions, the defendant took this appeal.

Any other facts necessary to elucidate the rulings of the court will be mentioned in the progress of the opinion.

1. The first claim of error by appellant is -that the court should have sustained defendant’s oral motion made at the [655]*655trial to require plaintiff to .elect upon which of the two causes of action stated in the petition he would proceed.

Defendant made a similar motion when the evidence was all in, but the court overruled the motion in each instance.

The motion to elect is stated to have been made on “the same grounds as heretofore stated to the court in a written motion heretofore filed.” The original written motion does not appear in the transcript of record before us, and we can only conjecture the reasons on which it was based. Assuming that the motion was based upon the grounds which are dismissed, we consider that the trial court’s ruling was entirely proper.

The petition does not mingle two distinct causes of action in one count.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W. 764, 94 Mo. App. 648, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneill-v-blase-moctapp-1902.