Shaffer v. Kansas City Transit, Inc.

463 S.W.2d 606, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 761
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1971
Docket25415
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 463 S.W.2d 606 (Shaffer v. Kansas City Transit, Inc.) 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
Shaffer v. Kansas City Transit, Inc., 463 S.W.2d 606, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 761 (Mo. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

FLOYD L. SPERRY', Special Commissioner.

Plaintiff, a school teacher by profession, was a passenger on defendant’s bus on December 27, 1966. The bus stopped and plaintiff stepped down and off, holding onto a vertical bar inside the bus, with her left hand. The door closed on her left arm, between the shoulder and the elbow, after her feet were on the pavement. The door opened and she recovered her arm. She sued for personal injuries received on this occasion and, from a verdict and judgment for $15,000.00 in her favor, defendant has appealed.

Defendant makes two contentions: one, that the verdict is so excessive as to indicate bias and prejudice, requiring a new trial, or so excessive as to be the result of a mistake, requiring remittitur; and, two, that the court erred in refusing defendant’s Instruction 11, authorizing a finding that plaintiff was negligent in permitting her arm to remain inside the bus after she had alighted.

The day on which this accident occurred was snowy and there was an accumulation of snow on the streets in Kansas City. Plaintiff boarded the bus down town and rode it to Truman Road and Woodland, where it stopped at an angle with the curb, because of piled up ¿now, so that passengers disembarked at the rear, stepping into the street. There was a lady immediately ahead of plaintiff when the bus stopped and the rear door opened. When that lady cleared the door, plaintiff started down, stepping onto the street. There was a vertical bar inside the bus door, which she grasped with her left hand. She put one foot onto the pavement, and then placed *608 the other one down, holding onto the bar. About when her second foot came to the ground, but before she had released the bar, or taken her left arm down, the bus door closed on her arm between the shoulder and the elbow.

Mrs. Keatings, a passenger, stated that she was immediately behind plaintiff when plaintiff dismounted; that, after plaintiff “was on the ground, or as she was getting on the ground” the bus doors closed; that plaintiff’s upper left arm was caught between the doors; that a passenger immediately behind witness "pulled the cord, so that the doors would open, the bus driver would open the doors * * *;” that the doors opened and plaintiff removed her arm; that witness then stepped down and off. The witness said that the doors remained closed “a short second” and opened; that plaintiff retrieved her arm; that the doors did not again close.

Plaintiff stated, at the trial, that she was thirty-eight years old; that she rode defendant’s bus to the intersection of Truman Road and Woodland; that the bus stopped and the rear doors opened; that another lady stepped off, and plaintiff followed her; that, as she stepped down, she grasped a vertical bar in the bus with her left hand, in order to steady herself because the street was slippery from snow. She said, “* * * when my body cleared the door, almost simultaneously the door closed on my left arm, between my elbow and my shoulder;” that she jerked her arm while the door was closed; that she believed that it closed, then opened, and closed again, but was ‘not certain that it closed a second time. She stated that her left arm, between the elbow and the shoulder, was bruised; that she was treated at St. Joseph Hospital, and by Dr. Reynolds at his office; that, at the date of trial, September, 1969, there was a swollen knot on her arm; that any fast movement of the arm, up or back, results in pain; that there has been no improvement since January, 1968; that she cannot move furniture in her home, or move movie equipment or phonographs in her work as a school teacher; that she cannot lift heavy grocery bags; that her doctor charged her $7.-00 per office call and $10.00 for treatments for her arm; that she cannot operate a sweeper in her home; that her arm pains her while in bed; that she was examined by Dr. Pipkin at defendant’s request. She stated that her total doctor and hospital bills were $796.25; $90.64 for medicines; that she lost wages at Woolf Brothers in the sum of $40.00, and school salary in the amount of $525.00; a total of $1451.89.

Dr. Reynolds, a member of the staff of St. Joseph Hospital, stated that he is plaintiff’s family doctor; that on December 28, 1966, he saw and treated her; that she complained of swelling and tenderness of the left shoulder and arm; that her arm resisted movement on abduction; that no bones were involved; that the fibres of the deltoid muscle at the intersection with the humerus were torn; that she had suffered muscular damage with some ligaments involved; that he saw her in his office sixteen times between that date and February 5th, 1967, when she entered the hospital for treatment; that she was discharged February 11th; that he had seen her forty-one times between that date and September 9, 1969; that he had treated her condition, but that it has remained “fairly static”; that there is a “mechanical” impairment on abduction; that there is actually a block to movement; that there are calcium deposits at the point where the del-toid muscle inserts into the humerus, which blocks movement; that she has suffered a tendon “rip” at that point; that she is disabled from lifting, carrying, or doing anything requiring strenuous lifting with her left arm, that it will, sometimes, be painful when not being used; that this disability is directly due to injuries received in the accident of December 27, 1966; that her condition is permanent; that it may worsen because of developing arthritis; that she will, in the future, need frequent medication and medical care; that his charges, for services were $427.00; that his *609 charges, as well as hospital charges of $305.00, were reasonable; that there is an indentation on her upper left arm that should not be there but has been there since the accident. There was evidence tending to prove that a thirty-eight year old person has a life expectancy of a little more than thirty-two years.

Defendant’s counsel, in his opening statement, said that defendant had no witness who saw plaintiff when she stepped off of the bus. Defendant offered no such witness, nor does it here contend that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case. However, defendant contends that the court erred in refusing to give its offered Instruction Number 11. This instruction, briefly, told the jury that:

“Your verdict must be for the defendant, whether or not defendant was negligent, if you believe:
First, plaintiff either:
allowed her arm to remain inside the bus, holding the handle, after she alighted from the bus, or
allowed her arm to remain between the doors after the doors closed and reopened; and
Second, plaintiff’s conduct, in any one or more of the respects submitted in paragraph First, was negligent; and
“Third, such negligence of plaintiff directly caused or directly contributed to cause any damage plaintiff may have sustained.”

There was no substantial evidence tending to prove that defendant “allowed” her arm to remain inside the bus after she alighted. Mrs. Keatings was the only eye witness (other than plaintiff) to the occurrence. She stated that the doors closed while plaintiff was alighting, and about when she had her feet on the ground.

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Bluebook (online)
463 S.W.2d 606, 1971 Mo. App. LEXIS 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-v-kansas-city-transit-inc-moctapp-1971.