Sethman v. Union Depot Bridge & Terminal Railroad

218 S.W. 879, 203 Mo. App. 381, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 179
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 879 (Sethman v. Union Depot Bridge & Terminal Railroad) 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
Sethman v. Union Depot Bridge & Terminal Railroad, 218 S.W. 879, 203 Mo. App. 381, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 179 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinions

TRIMBLE, J.

Plaintiff’s automobile, while upon defendant’s electric street railway tracks, on the Armonr Bridge across the Missouri river at Kansas City, was run into and injured by one of defendant’s street cars coming from behind and colliding with it. He brought this suit to recover the damages done to the automobile. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff, upon which judgment was rendered and defendant has appealed.

As submitted, the case was bottomed upon the humanitarian rule, and the issue the jury was called upon to decide was whether, while said automobile (being operated by plaintiff’s brother) was upon the track and in a. perilous situation with the diver oblivious of the danger, the operator of the street car knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, of such perilous situation and that the driver was unaware thereof, in time by the exercise or ordinary care and with due regard to the safety of the passengers, to have stopped or slackened the speed of the car and thereby avoided striking said automobile. Of course, in the instruction, all the necessary elements of a cause of action based on the humanitarian rule were left to the jury to decide, though in the way we have stated it above, it might appear as if some of them, were assumed.

The defendant’s instructions 4, 7, 9 and 11 were properly refused since every one of them embodied the element of plaintiff’s contributory negligence as a defense to the cause of action resting on the humanitarian rule. Contributory negligence is not a defense in that kind of a case. Of course, if the plaintiff’s chauffeur wantonly drove into danger or care *383 lessly drove upon the track 'so closely in front of the on-coming car that the motorman did not have reasonable time in which to become aware of the automobile’s presence and, by the exercise of ordinary care "and with due regard to the safety of those in his charge, to avert a collision then there can be no liability. But the refused instructions above mentioned did not submit issues applicable to plaintiff’s cause of action but unqualifiedly made plaintiff’s contributory negligence, stated generally, a complete defense thereto. To have given such instructions in a case where the cause of action relied upon was a violation of the humanitarian rule, would have been error.

The trial judge’s conclusion as to the weight of the evidence is shown by the judgment and the disposition made of the motion for new trial. The record does not in any manner show that the trial judge was convinced that a new trial, should be granted and refused to perform his duty and consequently overruled the motion therefor. Even if the remarks of the trial judge could be considered by us, they show nothing more than that he had some doubts as to what he should do upon the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence and motion for new trial, but finally had resolved those doubts in favor of the plaintiff.

This brings us to the final and only question in this appeal and that is whether there is any substantial evidence to support plaintiff’s cause of action, or, to state it a little more closely, whether it appears conclusively, and as a matter of law, that plaintiff’s automobile went upon the track so closely in front of the street car that the motorman did not have reasonable time to avoid the collision after he saw or should have seen the danger.

The upper deck of defendant’s bridge is for the accommodation of electric street and interurban cars and also for the ordinary vehicles of road and street traffic, such as wagons, trucks, buggies and automobiles. *384 The middle portion of this deck is occupied by double electric street ear tracks,’ they running between the trusses, which in the portion of the bridge over the stream itself, rise above the upper deck and, upon the cantilever principle, help support the bridge in the spans over the river. A traffic way, for the ordinary street and road vehicles, lies on each side of this middle portion occupied by the tracks and outside of the trusses, the way on the west being for. south-bound travel and the one on the east being for the northbound traffic. The upper deck is on a level with the street at the south end of the bridge, which street level is on the top of the bluffs on the south side of the river, and the south end of the bridge proper begins at the edge of the bluffs. The land on the north side of, and for some distance next to, the river, is on a much lower level, and hence a long approach is required until the north end of the bridge proper is reached. The center or middle portion of this north approach is also occupied by the street car tracks with the traffic ways on each side. The floor of the traffic ways and of the car tracks on the bridge proper and the approach are upon the same level relatively considered, and automobiles are permitted to go upon this middle portion occupied by the tracks in going over the bridge proper and this track space at the “throat” or south end of the bridge proper near the south toll house and passing along over the bridge between the trusses and thence over the' approach till the north end of the north approach was reached where at the “throat” the north-bound automobiles would diverge slightly to the east, through an open space for that purpose, on to the east or north-bound traffic way again and thence on north along the roadway. The southbound automobiles on the west traffic way would enter upon the middle or track portion of the bridge at said “throat” at the north end of said approach, diverging slightly to the east through a similar opening on the west *385 side and opposite the one above mentioned on the east side.

The north toll house was not far from the north end of the trusses and from this north toll house northward on the approach to the bridge, for a distance of about 1250 feet, the traffic ways are separated from the middle or car track space by a fixed concrete guard rail about six inches high and six inches wide.

About 11 o’clock in the morning of July 26, 19Í7, plaintiff’s automobile, driven by plaintiff’s brother, stopped at the south toll house, paid the tolls, and went on north upon the north or east traffic way. He did not enter upon the car track space. While thus driving on the east traffic way and between the two toll houses, he passed the street car which afterwards collided with him, it also proceeding northward. After the automobile passed the north toll house, the driver thereof kept on in the east traffic way until he overtook a large transfer wagon which was too wide to allow the automobile to pass. Young Sethman, the driver, therefore turned the automobile to the left passing over the guardrail on to the car track space for the purpose of going on north to the place where at the “throat” he would diverge again slightly to the east and regain the east traffic way. It was while on this middle portion or car track space that the street car, Sethman had passed on the bridge, struck and injured the automobile.

We have carefully read and studied the record and are convinced that we are not justified in saying there is no substantial evidence to support the finding that after the motorman saw or should have known the danger he had reasonable time to have averted the danger and failed to exercise reasonable care to do so.

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Related

King v. Kansas City Public Service Co.
91 S.W.2d 89 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 879, 203 Mo. App. 381, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sethman-v-union-depot-bridge-terminal-railroad-moctapp-1919.