Peck v. St. Louis Transit Co.

77 S.W. 736, 178 Mo. 617, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 77 S.W. 736 (Peck v. St. Louis Transit 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
Peck v. St. Louis Transit Co., 77 S.W. 736, 178 Mo. 617, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 377 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

Plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s street cars and, in attempting to alight therefrom, Ml in the street and received injuries. She said in her petition that the car had stopped for the purpose of allowing her to alight and that while she [623]*623was in the act of alighting the defendant carelessly and negligently suddenly started said car, throwing her to-the ground in a violent manner. That is the only act of negligence charged. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to sustain the allegations of her petition; that for the defendant tended to prove that the car had not stopped, but was slowing down to stop, and that the plaintiff attempted to step off facing the rear while the car was still moving, and in doing so fell.

At the request of the plaintiff the court instructed the jury that if the car was stopped in compliance with her signal to enable her to alight, and if while she was in’the act of stepping from the car it suddenly started forward and she was thereby thrown to the ground, and if by the exercise of a very high degree of care the defendant’s servants could have prevented the car from so starting, and if she was herself exercising ordinary care in so attempting to alight, she was entitled to recover; and, further, that if the car came to a stop to allow her to alight, it was the duty of the conductor to have held it stationary until she had alighted, if by the exercise of a very high degree of care he could have done so.

For the defendant the court gave the following instructions :

“1. The actionable negligence charged in plaintiff’s petition is that the conductor of defendant’s car, upon which plaintiff was a passenger, caused the car to stop on the south side of Laclede avenue, on G-rand, for the purpose of permitting plaintiff to alight therefrom, and that, while plaintiff was in the act of alighting, the defendant carelessly and negligently suddenly started said car, whereby plaintiff was thrown to*the street and injured.

“The burden of proof, as to the act of negligence charged as above, rests upon the plaintiff throughout [624]*624the case, and, before you are entitled to return a verdict in favor of plaintiff, you must find by the preponderance or greater weight of the evidence that the plaintiff’s injuries were caused by the act of negligence on the part of defendant, as above stated, and unless you so find, your verdict must he for the defendant.

“2. If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff’s injuries, if any she sustained, were caused by her leaving the defendant’s car before it had stopped still on the south side of Laclede avenue, and while the same was in motion, and that hut for such attempt on her part to alight from said car while the same was in motion she would not have sustained any injury, then the plaintiff can not recover, and your verdict must be for the defendant.

“3. If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff got off of the car while it was about to stop to permit pasengers to alight, but while it was yet moving, then there is no evidence of negligence on the part of defendant, and the verdict must be for the defendant. ’ ’

There was a verdict and judgment for defendant and the plaintiff appeals.

The only action of the court asigned for error is the giving, for the defendant, of the three instructions above copied.

The complaint of the first instruction is, first, that it gives undue prominence to the fact of the stopping of the car and treating it as a part of the act of negligence, and, second, that it throws the burden of proof in the whole case on the plaintiff without distinguishing between the act of negligence stated in the petition and the contributory negligence charged in the answer.

An instruction undertaking to inform the jury as to the act of negligence which formed the gravamen of the plaintiff’s case could not have been correctly framed without stating it substantially as it was stated in this instruction. Whilst the stopping of the car and [625]*625the plaintiff’s attempting to alight were not acts of negligence, yet they constituted the condition which rendered the starting of the car an act of negligenc'e according to the petition. The instruction merely stated the act of negligence as plaintiff had stated it in the petition and in the instruction asked by her, and in the only way it could be intelligently stated to conform to the plaintiff’s theory.

As to the burden of proof the instruction only related to the act of negligence charged in the petition. Certainly the burden of proving that act was on the plaintiff and that is as far as the instruction goes. There was no reference to a condition of facts from which the jury were asked to find the plaintiff guilty of of contributory negligence. There was in fact no suggestion of contributory negligence in the case as it was given to the jury. The defendant merely took the position in its proof and in its instructions that the defendant did not commit the particular act charged to have been committed and that the accident did not happen as the plaintiff said it did.

In a case where a passenger is injured because of the breaking down of a ear, or the breaking of some appliance or equipment, where the breaking and the injury to the passenger, as resulting therefrom, are shown, a prima facie case is made, and the burden is shifted to the carrier to show that it was without his fault. Plaintiff in the case before us invokes. that doctrine, but this case does not fall within it. We see no fault with the first instruction for defendant.

The complaint of the second and third instructions is that they limit the inquiry.of the jury strictly to the letter of the plaintiff’s petition and say in effect that unless the car had stopped when the plaintiff was in the act of alighting the charge of negligence was not proven and the verdict should be for the defendant.

Appellant complains of the term “stopped still.”

[626]*626If the defendant had a right to nse the word “stopped,” in reference to the condition of the car, it was not am abuse of the right to say “stopped still.” There is really no difference in the meaning in that connection between “stopped” and “stopped still,” except that perhaps the latter is more emphatic. In this respect, however, the writer of the defendant’s instructions was not more emphatic than the writer of the plaintiff’s instructions, who said in the second instruction for the plaintiff, “If the jury believe from the evidence that the car upon which the plaintiff was a passenger came to a stop, . . . then it was the duty of the conductor to have held the car stationary until she alighted.”

The serious complaint, however, against these two instructions is, that they require the jury to find that the car had actually stopped when the plaintiff was stepping off, and prohibited the finding of a verdict for the plaintiff in case the jury should believe that the car had slowed down in its motion to such a degree that the plaintiff might, without passing the bounds of ordinary prudence, have attempted to alight, and that while doing so a quick motion was suddenly imparted to the car which threw her down.

The learned counsel seek to bring the case within the doctrine announced in Ridenhour v. Railroad, 102 Mo. 270. The plaintiff in that case was a boy nine years old.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 S.W. 736, 178 Mo. 617, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peck-v-st-louis-transit-co-mo-1903.