Shohoney v. Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City Railroad

132 S.W. 1059, 231 Mo. 131, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 1059 (Shohoney v. Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City 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
Shohoney v. Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City Railroad, 132 S.W. 1059, 231 Mo. 131, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 241 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

LAMM, P. J.

Plaintiff lost his right foot and ankle while in the line of duty as a switchman in defendant’s yards and employ in Milan in June, 1904. He sued, laying his damages at twenty thousand dollars, grounding his action on, first, negligence in furnishing defective machinery (couplers, drawheads and coupling apparatus); and, second, on the negligence of a fellow-servant, to-wit, the engineer of the switch engine, in that, without any proper order or direction so to do, he ran his engine against a ear and plaintiff’s leg, plaintiff being at the time engaged in manipulating and adjust[138]*138ing the coupling apparatus of the car to the end of presently effecting a coupling with the engine for switching purposes.

Commenced in Sullivan, removed to the Federal court, there dismissed, brought anew in Grundy, appealed once before from a judgment for five thousand dollars, reversed and remanded (223 Mo. 649, q. v.), then taken on a change of venue to Linn, the case now comes here again on defendant’s appeal, this time from a judgment of fifteen thousand dollars.

"When the case went down, defendant moved'to strike out all allegations pertaining to defective appliances. This motion was sustained and plaintiff went to trial upon a petition bottomed alone on the duty of defendant to handle its switch engine with care, having regard to the safety of employees required to work about the same, and a negligent violation of that duty, in that the engineer, as said, without order or direction, negligently ran his engine with force and violence against a car, while plaintiff was adjusting the coupling appliance, catching plaintiff’s right foot between the drawheads, and so mashing it that amputation followed four inches above the ankle.

The amended answer, after a formal admission or two, and a denial, as a further defense, set up a written contract whereby plaintiff, in consideration of his employment and receipt of one dollar in hand paid, released defendant from liability for any and all injuries received while in its employ, by or through the negligence or want of care and caution on the part of any other employee or employees of defendant, and acknowledged full satisfaction and payment of all claims for damages against defendant which may accrue to him, or to any other person on account of such injury to him while in-such employ.

By replication plaintiff denied all and singular the allegations of hew matter, next alleging affirmatively that the contract pleaded as a defense in the answer [139]*139was against public policy, in violation of the policy and laws of the state, and, therefore, void. To further break and avoid its effect, the reply pleaded waiver and estoppel in that, with knowledge of the injury of plaintiff and the negligence and wrongful acts of its own causing the same, defendant had not only fully investigated the same but litigated with plaintiff for years in different courts of this state its liability, and now, for the first time, undertook to set up, plead and seek advantage of said instrument. (Nota bene: Defendant filed answer to plaintiff’s petition as amended on the 23d day of February, 1910, for the first time pleading a release by virtue of the contract of employment, and on the same day plaintiff replied as above). On the same day defendant filed a motion to strike out those parts of the reply setting up waiver, estoppel, that the contract was void, against public policy and in violation of the statutes of the state. The grounds of this motion will appear presently in the opinion.

The court entries show that on the same day the motion to strike out was taken up and overruled, “defendant excepted.” The court’s order overruling the motion for a new trial also shows defendant excepted.

After filing an affidavit for appeal, depositing its docket fee, having its appeal allowed and taking record leave to file its bill of exceptions on or before July 1, 1910, defendant filed' none — its statement of the case in its brief closing with the following: “Defendant appealed and has brought up the record proper for review by this court.”

A summary of contentions made follows: For defendant it is argued that, first, the motion to strike out parts of the reply filled the office of a demurrer, therefore, a bill of exceptions was not necessary to preserve the motion or the court’s action thereon, those things being part of the record proper; that, second, the effect of the court’s ruling on that motion was to sustain those parts of the reply struck at, as pleas good at law, [140]*140therefore, whether such pleas were good at law is here to be determined; that, third, the contract of release was not opposed to public policy or prohibited by any valid statute — meaning thereby that the statute interdicting such a release was unconstitutional and void; fourth, defendant was not estopped to set up the release ; and, fifth, the verdict was grossly excessive.

For plaintiff it is argued contra. Further, that if there was error nisi in ruling on the motion to strike out, it did not materially affect the merits; that the motion is not part of the record proper, therefore is not here, absent a bill of exceptions; that, at any rate, some of the grounds of the motion were not in the nature of a demurrer, and (if any ground'be in the nature of a general demurrer, then) plaintiff, under his general denial in the reply, was entitled to show the contract was void; and that, at all events, the motion was well ruled for that the statute interdicting such contract in abrogation of liability under the fellow-servant law is a valid and constitutional exercise of legislative power.

Attending to the questions raised, we rule as fol - lows:

I. At first glance (on the surface of things, as an abstract proposition) fifteen thousand dollars for the loss of one foot is a full, round sum and might well be held excessive (if we were at liberty to deal with it) absent elements of malice, as here, and where plaintiff is entitled to just compensation and no more. The conservatism of this court on damages in such cases is evidenced by a line of decisions, early and late, assembling a cloud of witnesses in that behalf. In dealing with remittiturs in personal injury cases we have eschewed sentimental conceits, elements of punishment, and mere views to catch the crowd (ad, captanclum vulgus) — for example, that the jury or court should place themselves in the position of plaintiff and, on that hypothesis, put a financial estimate on what one or the [141]*141other would take and swap places with him. "We have sought to put such damages on the solid basis of a fair, reasonable estimate of a recompense, keeping in mind the injury, the detriment probably ensuing to plaintiff in the future therefrom, and have refused to allow an unhappy accident to be capitalized at such sum as would make a fair mind instinctively cry out against it as a mill-stone about the neck of business, or as filling plaintiff’s pockets so full that he is left in a better fix than lie would likely be in had the accident not happened. But in delivering pronouncements on remittiturs we have always kept the facts of the concrete case in eye as a guide-board; and our rulings in that behalf, from the very necessity of things, took color and direction from the facts established by the evidence, not otherwise. Here, absent a bill of exceptions, we have no facts and no evidence. Therefore, we are put to a leap in the dark.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 1059, 231 Mo. 131, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shohoney-v-quincy-omaha-kansas-city-railroad-mo-1910.