Peterson v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

111 S.W. 37, 211 Mo. 498, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 37 (Peterson 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
Peterson v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 111 S.W. 37, 211 Mo. 498, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 110 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

— Peter L. Peterson sued for damages —his cause of action the negligence of defendant’s servants manning one of its street cars in Kansas City, Missouri, on the 13th day of December, 1902. Defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of Peterson for '$5,000. Here, his death was suggested and proceedings had reviving the cause in the name of Henrietta, administratrix of his estate.

Instructions in the nature of demurrers were ;asked, nisi, and refused. As we see it, defendant’s learned counsel no longer predicate error of such re[504]*504fusal; hence, the case may proceed on the assumption that plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury.

For our purposes, it will be sufficient to say that Peterson’s injuries were permanent and serious. There was a fracture of the right femur at its neck, technically called an “impacted fracture,” the broken bone being driven into the upper piece at the hip joint and held firmly. He was bed-ridden for a long time and suffered much. His right leg was shortened. His right foot was everted. The hurt leg being weakened and its use impaired, the result was a halting and crippled walk. There was testimony that his right leg had been a bad leg for eighteen or twenty years prior to the accident. Below the knee it was afflicted with varicose veins and indolent, chronic sores and ulcers, at spells swelling and suppurating, and this condition continued after the injury.

It will be sufficient for our purposes to sum up- the facts of a long record as follows:

(a) The accident happened at the intersection of Main and Twelfth streets in Kansas City, between half past eight and ten o ’clock of the morning of December 13th, 1902. It is conceded that defendant had two tracks on Main street and two on Twelfth street, running its cars on all of them in its business of a common carrier of passengers for hire, as a street railway company. It is admitted these streets cut each other at an angle of ninety degrees. Main runs north and south. Twelfth approached Main on a sharp grade— making the intersection subject to danger in collision of cars. It is admitted that south-bound cars on Main stop before reaching the tracks on Twelfth for a dual purpose — first, to let passengers on and off; second, to see that the way is clear of cars running on Twelfth; and that when such cars cross Twelfth they again stop. Mr. Peterson was night clerk at Ferd Heim Brewery. At some time, before, he suffered from rheumatism in' [505]*505the left knee and carried a cane because of that. On the morning in question he had the cane in one hand and a paper package containing a quart of oysters in the other and undertook to board a street car running south on Main to go to his home. It does not appear he was then lame. He says he carried the cane on that occasion from habit, and testified he was fifty-seven years of age. It is conceded that the car in question stopped at the usual point north of the tracks on Twelfth, and that Peterson was hurt in trying to get on. So much is’ certain, but from this on the testimony is in hopeless conflict.

(b) To sustain his case, Mr. Peterson took the stand and introduced one other witness on the incidents of the accident to-wit, Mr. Herzberg.

By Mr. Peterson, testimony was given tending to show that he arrived at the car'while it was stopped north of the Twelfth street tracks. That he reached its rear steps on the west side preparatory to entering as a passenger. That he waited for some passengers to get on and off. At that instant he held said cane and package of oysters in his left hand. That he was the last passenger to try to enter. There are two hand-rails at the steps — one to the front and the other to the rear, the forward one attached to the body of the car, the rear one attached to the dashboard. That while the car was standing still he seized the front hand-rail with his right hand, got one foot on the first step and one on the second and, while in that condition and before he had time to get on the platform, the cár started forward with a jerk and threw him off and broke his thigh. The usual signal for starting a car is two bells. Mr. Peterson says he heard no starting signal. He says the conductor was standing with his back to the dashboard, facing south, hard by the head of the steps.

By Mr. Herzberg, a printer, testimony was given [506]*506tending to show that he had known Peterson for eighteen years. That witness was at the northwest corner of Twelfth and Main waiting to- take a Twelfth street car west, and saw Mr. Peterson come around the hack end of the south-bound Main street car, while it was standing still, and “get on” the car, which then “jerked” and threw him off. He explains. that by getting-on the car, he meant on the steps leading to the platform and that he was holding with his right hand to the rail. That when the jerk threw him off he fell at once on his right side. That a year or so afterwards he was talking to a man about the accident and Mr. Peterson came up and- heard what he said. Up' to that time he had not seen Peterson and had not told him what he knew. That he (witness) was going west on Twelfth street, got on his car and saw the accident after he got on, and as his car was moving off.

The foregoing is substantially plaintiff’s ease on the facts.

(c) Defendant introduced a mass of testimony from an array of witnesses, some of them disinterested, tending to show a radically different state of things.

By a Mr. Stewart, a merchant, proof was put in tending to show that he was a passenger and remembered the accident, although not seeing it. The first thing he knew of it, the car stopped suddenly when just-over and clear of the Twelfth street tracks. The first thing he saw after that was the conductor helping Mr. Peterson on the car. After Mr. Peterson came in and sat on a rear seat a little while, he made the remark that he “ought to know better than to try to get on a car while it was in motion. ’ ’ That at the time the car suddenly stopped it was going- a “pretty good gait,” that, is, as fast as they could attain speed from the [507]*507time they had started — that they had only started, after a stop in front, (north) of the tracks.

By Mr. Stevens defendant put in proof tending to show that he lived at Junction City, Kansas, and was working on a farm. That at the time of the accident he lived in Kansas City. That he was standing at the northwest corner of Twelfth and Main and saw the car Peterson tried to hoard. That at the time Peterson tried to get on it had started up, and he came around from the east side of the car behind it and got hold of it and fell. That the car had gone fifteen feet when he grabbed hold. Witness went over to him and saw the conductor get off and come and pick him up. That the car was running slowly when Peterson took hold. That he did not get on the platform and that he did not see him get on the steps but fell more towards the back of the car than anything else. As witness saw it, Peterson took hold of the hand-rail at the back end of the car with his left hand and at that very time he (Peterson) was “stepping along pretty good.”

By Mr. Belles defendant put in proof tending to show that he was the conductor in charge of the car, but was not working for defendant at the time of the trial. That when the car stopped north of the Twelfth street tracks a few passengers got off. That there were only four or five passengers on the car after starting.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 37, 211 Mo. 498, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-mo-1908.