Schafstette v. St. Louis & Meramec River Railroad

74 S.W. 826, 175 Mo. 142, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 27, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 74 S.W. 826 (Schafstette 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
Schafstette v. St. Louis & Meramec River Railroad, 74 S.W. 826, 175 Mo. 142, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 54 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

MABSHALL, J. J.

— This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, on December 7, 1899, on Pair avenue, just south of Green Lea place, in St. Louis, in consequence of a collision between one of defendants ears and the plaintiff’s wagon. The negligence assigned is that while the plaintiff was driving his wagon along Pair avenue, near defendant’s tracks, the defendant’s servants “did so negligently, carelessly, unskillfully and wrongfully manage, operate, control and run at a high and unusual rate of speed one of its south-bound cars along its east track as to cause the same to run against and collide with, and the same did run against and collide with the rear end of said wagon, in which plaintiff was driving-as aforesaid, and that said defendant’s servants and agents, at the time saw said wagon, or by the exercise of reasonable care might have seen said wagon and said plaintiff in his perilous position in time to stop said car before striking or running against said wagon, and knew or by reasonable care might have known that its said car could not pass plaintiff’s wagon at that point without striking it.”

The petition also sets out the ordinance of St. Louis which requires the conductors, motorman, gripman, driver and any other person in charge of a car to keep a vigilant watch for vehicles and persons either on the track or moving towards it, and on the first appearance of danger to stop the car in the shortest time and space possible, and that in consideration of the franchise granted to it by the city, the defendant had contracted and agreed to be bound by the ordinance aforesaid. The petition pleads a failure by the defendant to comply with the ordinance.

[147]*147The answer is a general denial and a plea of ■contributory negligence, in that the “plaintiff drove toward the track on said Pair avenue without looking and listening to see whether or not a car was approaching on said track; and that said plaintiff, without so looking and listening drove towards the said track and against an approaching car of the defendant. ’ ’

There was a verdict for the plaintiff for seventeen hundred and fifty dollars, and the defendant appealed. 'The case came to this court because the constitutionality ■of the nine-juror law is called in question. That, however, is now settled by Gabbert v. Railroad, 171 Mo. 84. But the case is, nevertheless, properly here for adjudication upon the merits.

The case made by the plaintiff is this:

G-reen Lea place runs east and w'est, and intersects Pair avenue, which runs north and south. The defend.ant has a street car line on Fair avenue. At the. time of the accident only the east track (which is the north bound track) was completed, and for about four weeks before the accident the defendant’s cars had run both ways over the one track. Fair avenue and Green Lea place were unimproved streets. At the southeast corner of said streets there was an iron post about in the line of the sidewalk. The roadway between the post .and the track was very narrow, and there was a ditch on the sidewalk, and this, with the fact of the location ■of the pole on the corner, made it necessary in driving from G-reen Lea place onto Fair avenue and going to the south on the east side of Fair avenue, to drive close to the track. The plaintiff was a huckster and had been .in the habit of peddling vegetables in this neighborhood, and knew the conditions existing at the place in question. He drove west on Green Lea place to its intersection with Fair avenue, intending to go south on the east side of Fair avenue. As he reached Fair avenue he first looked to the north on Fair avenue, and saw a car ‘ ‘ at the curve, ’ ’ which he says was a block and a half [148]*148away. He then looked to the south on Fair avenue, and seeing no oar he turned from Green Lea place onto Fair avenue, towards the south. In doing so he had to drive close to or upon the track, in order to- avoid the pole at the corner. He says as soon as he made the turn at the-corner, he pulled in towards the east, in order to get. away from the track, but when he had gone only eighteen or twenty feet, the car coming from the north struck the hind wheel of his wagon, and the collision threw him off the wagon,and injured him. One of the-plaintiff’s witnesses, a lady who saw the accident, says that the plaintiff was trying to- get away from the track, and was not on the track or within range of the car more-than a minute. • Another witness for the plaintiff testified that just before the collision a citizen hailed the car, and he saw the motorman look back to see if he had gotten on the car, and then he looked forward again, and immediately put on the brakes anl tried to stop the car,, but' did not succeed in doing so in time to avert; the colli sion, and that at that time the plaintiff’s wagon was-fully off the track but not out of range of the car.

The citizen who hailed the car, testified, however,, that he hailed the car when it was from fifty to- one hundred feet north of Green Lea place, but that the- motorman looked straight ahead and paid no attention to him and did not stop to let him get on the car. He further testified that Green Lea place is a sixty-foot street; that the street is nearly level; that the car was running about ten miles an hour. The witnesses differed in their estimates of how far the plaintiff’s wagon was south of the-intersection of Green Lea place and Fair avenue, when it was struck. The- plaintiff said it was eighteen to-twenty feet. Other witnesses put the distance at forty,, fifty and a hundred feet.

An ex-motorman was called as a witness for the-plaintiff and after much preliminary examination, in which all the- circumstances and conditions were gone into, he was asked: “In what distance could you possi[149]*149bly stop tbe car?” This was objected to, “as not containing the proper elements for an expert’s answer on the question involved.” The objection was overruled ■and the defendant saved an exception. The witness then answered: “It could have been stopped, if the ear was running at the rate of ten miles an hour, with the ■brakes in sixty feet,” or by using the reverse power in' forty to forty-five feet. This ruling is complained of •on the ground that it calls for what the witness could do and not for what a person of ordinary strength and skill could do. But the answer was: “It could have been stopped,” etc., thus ignoring the personal character of the inquiry, and answering the question as an ■expert. _

The defendant’s motorman and conductor testified that when the car approached Greén Lea place there was a. citizen at the southwest corner of that street and Pair avenue who was signaling to the car to stop for him to board it; that the car was running about four and a half to five miles an hour; that while attempting to make the stop for the citizen, the plaintiff turned the •corner with his wagon and drove into the car,- and the front wheel of his wagon caught in the front gate of the car and the wagon was dragged ‘a short distance, but that the wagon was not turned over, and neither it nor the car was injured, but the plaintiff got frightened and jumped off the wagon; that the wagon thus ran into the car about five to eight feet south of Green Lea place, and that the rear of the car was about even with the' south crossing of Green Lea place at that time. The motorman testified that a car running at the rate of five miles ■an hour can be stopped by using the brakes in forty feet, which he says is the length of the car. The motorman and conductor testified that the car was stopped in half a car length after the collision.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W. 826, 175 Mo. 142, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schafstette-v-st-louis-meramec-river-railroad-mo-1903.