Sandifer v. Lynn

52 Mo. App. 553, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 415
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 52 Mo. App. 553 (Sandifer v. Lynn) 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
Sandifer v. Lynn, 52 Mo. App. 553, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 415 (Mo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Ellison, J.

This case is for damages arising from personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff and caused by being run over by one of defendant’s carriages. The judgment below' was for plaintiff, and defendant has brought the case here.

The team was being driven by a hack driver, and one of the principal questions in the case is, was he defendant’s servant*? There are also two other questions discussed by the respective counsel, viz., negligence of the hack driver, and contributory negligence of the plaintiff. The accident happened, substantially, in this way: Plaintiff was riding on an open “gripcar” of one of the cable car companies of Kansas City, there [558]*558being a regular car attached to the grip. The driver came up alongside of the rear car, going at a rate of speed, which the evidence justifies us in saying, and the jury in finding, was ten miles an hour. The horses, as some of the testimony showed, were going in a lope or gallop. The car was stopped for plaintiff to alight. He stepped off into the street and was almost instantly struck and knocked down by the team. He was facing east while on the car, the car and team both going east. The team, coming up from the west, was behind plaintiff as he sat on the car seat.

That the driver was guilty of negligence, the evidence shows beyond any doubt. He was going at an extraordinary rate of speed, which perhaps would have been negligence any where on the streets of a city, but in this instance he was driving at this rapid rate alongside of a street car of passengers, knowing, as he must have known, of the probability of the car stopping at any moment to permit passengers to alight in the street. Added to this, he made no effort to check the horses as the car was being stopped. His effort, in this respect, being confined, as he states himself, to the moment he discovered plaintiff on the street. His statement on this point is as follows: “The car was running, and I was driving right along by the side of it, and the car stopped and I kept on going, and I never saw anyone getting off the ear, and this man got off the car and I couldn’t stop in time to keep off of him. The car had stopped. I must have been about the length of the team, and carriage — about twelve or fourteen feet — from where the man got off. He had just got off and stepped about two steps off the car when I saw him. The horses were then right onto him.

[559]*559“Q. Did you halloo to the man when you saw him? A. I don’t think I did. ■ I pulled on my lines just as hard as I could to stop the team, and hallooed at my horses. Some one on the car did halloo. I did not.”

The driver’s negligence was submitted to the jury, as a question of fact. If there was any error in this it certainly was not against the complaining defendant.

The contributory negligence of plaintiff was duly and properly submitted to the jury. The distinguished member of the bar who was selected to try this cause could not, nor can we, with any degree of propriety, say, as a matter of law, that plaintiff was guilty of negligence directly contributing to the accident. He had his coat collar turned up and his cap pulled down. His ears were so covered as to, in all probability, obstruct, to a degree, his hearing, though his vision was free. He was looking to the east and saw the way was clear. He did not look back of him to the west before getting off, and had not taken more than a step towards the sidewalk, after getting off, till he was struck. Where the act charged to be negligence will admit of different inferences or constructions, it is properly left to the jury to determine. Taylor v. Railroad, 26 Mo. App. 336. We cannot say (considering the nature and place of this accident) that plaintiff’s act was accompanied with less care than ordinarily prudent men are accustomed to observe under similar circumstances. Whether a given act is negligent is to be largely determined by the surrounding circumstances as connected with the act. And the same caution and care to avoid a team and carriage on a city highway is not as necessary as to avoid, under the same circumstances, a steam carriage on a railroad highway. Prudent men are accustomed to observe a less degree of care to avoid teams on a city highway than they [560]*560would, under the same circumstances, to avoid cars on a railroad highway. This results from the well-known fact that vehicles on the street are customarily under the immediate command of the driver, and that horses are driven with less speed and under much quicker control than are steam engines. An examination of the case of Norton v. Ittner, 56 Mo, 351, will show that Judge Napton had such distinction in mind when he wrote the opinion in that case. The distinction was. expressly pointed out by the supreme court of Massachusetts in Purtell v. Jordan, 31 N. E. Rep. 652, a case in many material respects like the one before us. After referring in this connection to accidents upon railway tracks, the court said: ‘ ‘But, in view of the rate of speed at which horses are ordinarily driven in crowded streets, and the control which is usually exercised over them, to determine what precautions are necessary to prevent being run over is commonly a matter of fact, and not of law.”

But there is another distinct justification of the-trial court in refusing to say that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. It was clearly shown that, the driver was driving his team at an immoderate speed. .It was further shown that the city ordinance forbids any other “than a moderate gait.” Plaintiff, therefore, was not at fault in expecting that this ordinance would be observed by hackmen. It- was not incumbent' upon him to expect that this municipal law was to be broken. Williams v. O’Keefe, 9 Bosw. 536; Baker v. Pendergast, 32 Ohio St. 494; Simmons v. Gaynor, 89 Ind. 165. The opposite rule would make it necessary for pedestrians, about to enter upon streets, to be on the alert for all manner of recklessness, -even to horse racing. In this instance plaintiff did not seethe approach of the team. If he had noticed its [561]*561reckless handling, and yet put himself in its way, a different question would be presented.

This brings us to a consideration of the relation of one Litchfield with defendant. The facts are that defendant came into the ownership of a line of hacks and teams, and that he had no experience in running such business and wished to dispose of them. He placed the outfit with one Litchfield, a livery man in Kansas City, for board and keeping, agreeing to pay him a certain fixed price for the board of the horses and the expense of maintaining the vehicles, as well as a certain price for their care. Litchfield was to operate the line for defendant and to apply the proceeds arising therefrom, less expense of operating, to the board of the horses and keeping up the harness and vehicles. Defendant said that “I wanted him [Litchfield] to manage it and look after it, and if possible get the expense of maintenance out of it.” Litchfield stated that defendant came to him and stated that he-, had come into the possession of property that had. formerly belonged to the Kansas City Cab Company, and wanted him to board the horses and take charge of' the rigs and to “let them out in the usual manner to. the best advantage I could for him.” It seems that. Litchfield’s compensation was included in the price he: got for the board of the horses and care of the vehicles. He stated that he had charge and superintendence of' the property for defendant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Chastain v. Winton
152 S.W.2d 165 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1941)
Pillet v. Ershick
126 So. 784 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1930)
Semper v. the American Press
273 S.W. 186 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1925)
Fitzgerald v. Cardwell
226 S.W. 971 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1921)
Steube v. Christopher & Simpson Architectural Iron & Foundry Co.
85 Mo. App. 640 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Mo. App. 553, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandifer-v-lynn-moctapp-1893.