Sand Springs R. Co. v. Smith

1921 OK 381, 203 P. 207, 84 Okla. 211, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 429
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 15, 1921
Docket10357
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1921 OK 381 (Sand Springs R. Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sand Springs R. Co. v. Smith, 1921 OK 381, 203 P. 207, 84 Okla. 211, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 429 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This is an appeal from the superior court of Tulsa county.

On the 5th day of May, 1913, Roy Smith, by his father and next friend, W. B. Smith, commenced an action in the superior court of Tulsa county against the Sand Springs Intel-urban Railway Company, as defendant, to' recover damages and for alleged person-, al injuries received by the said Roy Smith on the evening of July 4, 1912, while a passenger on one of defendant’s trolley cars.

Before the case was tried below, Roy Smith attained his majority and was, by the court, substituted as plaintiff in his own right, and on the 6th day of December, 1917, the case was .tried to the court and jury, and resulted in a verdict and a judgment thereon in favor of the said plaintiff in the sum of $3,009, to reverse which judgment this proceeding in error was commenced.

For convenience, the parties will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff and defendant, respectively, as they appeared in the trial court.

The pleadings of the parties are quite voluminous, a brief summary of which is substantially as follows:

The plaintiff alleged, in substance, that the defendant was a corporation, and was át all times thereinafter mentioned engaged in the operation of a line of interurban railway between the city of Tulsa and Sand Springs, being aoout six miles west and northwest of Tulsa; that said defendant ran and operated both gasoline and electric cars over and upon said line of road between Tulsa and Sand Springs for the purpose of transporting and carrying passengers; that on the 4th day of July, 1912, the said defendant was operating said railway as aforesaid, and running both gasoline and electric cars over said line and carrying passengers for cash fares; that on said date, about nine o’clock p. m., said defendant received plaintiff on one of its said electric cars, which was being run by means of electricity from a wire overhead, jand said plaintiff had paid his cash fare to the city of Tulsa; that said defendant agreed and undertook to safely transport and carry said plaintiff from Sand Springs to Tulsa over its line; that shortly before said electric car upon which plaintiff was riding left the station of Sand Springs one *212 of the gasoline ears of saicl defendant, which was being used on said date to carry passengers over said line, left said station with many passengers for Tulsa; that said gasoline ear had not proceeded very far from Sand Springs when on account of the defective condition of the engine and machinery with which said car was being run said car stopped on the track of the defendant ^company; that it was a dark night and the agents and servants of the defendant company negligently failed and neglected to put up any danger signals or lights or send anyone back on the track of said defendant company to notify the agents and servants of said company who were running and operating the electric car upon which this plaintiff was riding, of the danger ahead; that the electric car upon which this plaintiff was riding, being very heavily loaded and running at full speed, was proceeding in an easterly or southeasterly direction on said railway line between Sand Springs and the city of Tulsa when *the said electric car collided with and ran into the gasoline car standing on the track of the said defendant, as afore-. said; that the electric car crashed into said gasoline car with great force, tearing off the front end of said electric car, and that by reason of said collision this plaintiff was knocked down and thrown forward and out of the front end of) said car with great force and violence, and was bruised, mangled, wounded, and rendered unconscious; that said electric car was being run and operated by the agents and servants of the said defendant in a careless and negligent manner; that the operators of said car were green, unskilled, and inexperienced men in the running of electric cars; that the brakes and appliances of said electric car, the technical names of which were unknown to said plaintiff, by which said car was operated were defective and out of order and failed to work, and that if said car had been in proper repair and operated by capable and competent men, said car could have been stopped and said accident avoided; that the plaintiff received in said collision permanent and lasting injuries as follows: His right ankle was badly sprained ahd wrenched; both hands bruised and skinned; forehead badly cut and gashed; skull badly fractured and thrust ini; ithat! all of said injuries were caused by the negligence, mismanagement, and want of care of the servants, agents, and employes of said defendant, and negligent management and control of said gasoline car and said electric car which were being run by them,' and particularly the electric car upon which this plaintiff was riding on said date; that the plaintiff was without fault in the premises.

Plaintiff further states that the cut and gash upon his forehead has left a permanent scar which has disfigured him permanently, and that the fracture of the skull,, as above described, has permanently injured him; that by reason thereof he has suffered and still suffers great and excruciating bodily pain and has undergone great mental suffering and worry ; that he has been unable to study or attend school since said injury; that by reason of the above and foregoing injuries, all of which were caused by the negligence and incompetency of the agents and servants of said defendant, this plaintiff has been injured in the sum of $5,000.

The defendant answered, admitting that it was a corporation and engaged in operating a railroad as alleged by the plaintiff, but denied generally and specifically the negligence charged 'by the plaintiff, and alleged that if the plaintiff was injured, it was due to his own negligence, and specifically set out such alleged contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, which was, in substance, that at the time the plaintiff boarded a car of the defendant he and others, consisting of a vast multitude of people, made a rush for said car and overloaded the same against the protest of the servants of the defendant in charge of said car, insomuch so that such servants were not afforded room to work and operate said car, and that the plaintiff voluntarily assumed a dangerous position on said car, on the front platform or vestibule thereof, knowing that such position was dangerous and hazardous, and that by reason of his conduct assumed an extra hazardous risk by reason of his said position on said car.

To the answer of the defendant the plaintiff filed a reply consisting of a general denial.

The issues thus formed by the pleadings consisted of a charge by the plaintiff of primary negligence on the part of the defendant, and as a direct and proximate result thereof the plaintiff received the injuries complained of; and in answer to which the defendant denied such charge of primary negligence and alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff which resulted in his injuries, whieh charge of contributory negligence the plaintiff denied.

The undisputed evidence showed, in substance, that on July 4, 1912, tne date of the injury, there was a picnic at Sand Springs *213 Part, and tliat an immense gathering of people had assembled there on that date, and that shortly after nine o’clock p. m. the plaintiff, with a companion, Floyd Riggs by name, with the vast throng of people boarded the defendant’s trolley car No.

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Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 381, 203 P. 207, 84 Okla. 211, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sand-springs-r-co-v-smith-okla-1921.