Petty v. St. Louis & Meramec River Railroad

78 S.W. 1003, 179 Mo. 666, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 10, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 1003 (Petty v. St. Louis & Meramec River Railroad) 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
Petty v. St. Louis & Meramec River Railroad, 78 S.W. 1003, 179 Mo. 666, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 41 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

— This is an action for twenty thousand dollars damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, on November 29, 1899, at the intersection of Longfellow and Plant avenues, in the town of Webster Groves, by reason of a collision between one of defendant’s cars and an open wagon in which the plaintiff and her brother were riding. There was a judgment for the plaintiff for two thousand dollars, and defendant appealed. The negligence charged in the petition is as follows:

“Plaintiff alleges, as the specific facts constituting the said negligence of defendant, that at the time and place of said collision defendant’s said electric car was being run by its said agents and employees at a rapid and dangerous rate of speed, on a descending grade. The night was growing dark, but said car carried no headlight, no bell was sounded and no warning of any [670]*670Mud given of the approach of said car until too late to enable plaintiff and her said brother to escape said collision; that defendant’s agent and motorneer in charge of said car saw, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have seen, the danger and peril of the plaintiff, in time to have stopped, or so have checked the speed of said car, as to avoid said collision, but failed to either stop, or check the speed of said car.”

The answer is a general denial and a special plea that the plaintiff and her brother were guilty of contributory negligence.

The case made is this:

Longfellow avenue runs east and west, and Plant avenue runs north and south. The defendant has an electric street railroad on Longfellow avenue. The cars run west on the tracks on the north side of the street and east on the tracks on the south side of the street. From the south track to the south side of Longfellow avenue at Plant avenue it is twenty-two feet. From Plant avenue looking westwardly, Longfellow avenue is perfectly straight for a-distance of twelve hundred feet, and the grade rises three and a half feet to the hundred. The plaintiff, her mother, two sisters and her brother raised vegetables on a farm south of Webster Groves, and she and her brother sold the same to residents of Webster Groves, going into town two or three times a week. On the day of the accident the plaintiff, a woman twenty-three years of age, and her brother, two years younger, were driving north on Plant avenue, in an open wagon, in the evening between dusk and dark. When they reached Longfellow avenue she and her brother say they stopped with the horse on Longfellow avenue and the wagon just south thereof. They say that while in that position they could see west on Longfellow avenue at least a block. There were no houses on that side of Longfellow avenue, and nothing to obstruct their view for at least twelve hundred feet. They [671]*671say they looked and listened and eonld neither see nor hear any car approaching. They then started the horse forward, and when the horse and the fore wheels had gotten across the south track they saw a glimpse of light and looked and saw a car right upon them; that the brother grabbed the whip but before the wagon could clear the track, the car struck the hind wheel of the wagon, and she was thrown out and injured. They say they saw no ear, saw no headlight on the car, and heard no bell rung and heard no noise of an approaching car.

George W. Leming testified for the plaintiff that he lived in Webster Groves and was engaged in the express business; that he was driving west on Lockwood avenue towards Plant avenue, and when he reached Plant and Lockwood he saw the headlight of the car coming eastwardly from the raise at the Congregational church (which was twelve hundred feet west of Plant avenue), and that he also saw the plaintiff’s wagon was coming north on Plant avnue towards Lockwood avenue; that when he got to the culvert, the motorman on the electric car was ringing his bell and he wondered whether he was ringing for him or the other wagon; that ‘ ‘ at that time” the plaintiff’s horse was close to the mouth of Plant (avenue.” Over the objection of the defendant that he had not shown himself qualified to speak, this witness was permitted to testify that the car was running at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour, but he said he could not say whether it was running faster or slower than the cars usually ran at that point. He further testified that he saw the headlight burning on the car, and that when he passed Plant avenue, the plaintiff’s wagon was fifteen or twenty-five steps from Lockwood avenue, and that the car was in the neighborhood of from fifty to seventy-five feet west of the culvert; that anybody coming into Lockwood avenue could see a car for about four or five hundred yards and sometimes even farther than that; that he did not notice any slacking of the speed before the collision; that when the [672]*672motorman began to ring the gong, he kept ringing it.

This was all the evidence for the plaintiff outside of the testimony as to the nature and extent of her injuries, as to which the doctors disagreed as to whether they were simple and not serious, or were grave and probably permanent. The defendant demurred to the evidence, the court overruled the demurrer and the defendant excepted.

Daniel R. Fauste testified for the defendant that he was the motorman of the car; that from the Congregational church at the top of the slope until he got three-fourths of the way down the slope, the car ran at a speed of fifteen miles an hour, but before the car reached Plant avenue it had slowed down to eight or ten miles an hour; that he had no power on going down the slope; that as he went down the slope he sounded the gong and sounded it more as he approached Plant avenue; that there was a headlight burning on the front of the car; that he did not see the plaintiff’s horse and wagon until his car got within about fifteen or twenty feet of Plant avenue; that it was dark and the horse was not over three or four feet from the track at the time; that he rang his bell loudly and applied his brakes to stop and at that time the wagon was driven right rapidly across the track in front of the car; that he applied the brake and also reversed the current, and that the car ran just its own length, thirty-five to forty feet, after it struck the wagon. On cross-examination he said that he commenced to take up the slack of his brake when about two hundred yards west of Plant avenue; that the headlight on the car threw a light about fifty or seventy-five feet in front of it; that going down grade at the rate of ten miles an hour the ear could not be stopped in less than about seventy-five feet.

H. O. Rockwell testified for the defendant that he is the assistant manager of the defendant and is an electrical engineer; that it is twelve hundred feet, by actual measurement, from the west line of Plant avenue [673]*673to the top of the slope, at the Congregational church, and that the grade is three and a half feet to the hundred; that it is twenty-two feet from the east-bound track to the south line of Longfellow avenue; that a person coming north on Plant avenue, when he reached the gutter on the south line of Longfellow avenue, could see to the top of the hill at the Congregational church; that there was nothing to obstruct the view; that a car like the one in question would make considerable noise when coming down, the slope.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 1003, 179 Mo. 666, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petty-v-st-louis-meramec-river-railroad-mo-1904.