Simon v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

132 S.W. 250, 231 Mo. 65, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 29, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 250 (Simon v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.) 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
Simon v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 132 S.W. 250, 231 Mo. 65, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 236 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court of Jaeksoh county granting the plaintiffs a new trial.

The action was for ten thousand dollars, brought by the plaintiffs for the death of their minor daughter. The trial resulted in a verdict for the defendant, and the court set aside the verdict and granted plaintiffs a new trial on the ground that the court erred in giving instruction “number 3A” on behalf of the defendant.

The petition stated that the plaintiffs were husband and wife and respectively the father and mother of Sarah Simon, who was at all times a minor and unmarried; that the defendant was at all the times mentioned a corporation operating an electric car line over and upon the streets of Kansas City, among other streets an electric car line and electric cars over and upon Third Street between Walnut and Grand Avenue; that on or about July 11, 1905, about five o’clock in the afternoon, on said Third Street and about sixty feet west of Grand Avenue, Sarah Simon, the minor child of plaintiffs, while attempting to cross said Third Street from the south side thereof to the north side thereof, the said Third. Street running east and west, was run .into, her left leg fractured, and she was terribly injured otherwise, by an electric car which was then and there run, conducted and managed by the employees of the defendant, and as a result of said injuries said Sarah Simon died within ten hours thereafter. That the said Sarah was thus run into and injured by [69]*69said car through the negligence and unskillfulness of the servants and employees of the defendant whilst running and managing said electric car in this: First; the motorman of the said car and in charge thereof negligently failed to sound any bell or give any other warning of the approach thereof; second, the said motorman failed to stop the said car within a reasonable time after he saw the dangerous situation of the said Sarah; third, that the said motorman negligently failed to stop the said car within a reasonable time after he might have seen the dangerous situation of the said Sarah; and, fourth, that the agents, servants and employees of said defendant negligently failed to attach' a good and sufficient fender to the front end of said car, which in the exercise of ordinary care they should have done.

The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence on the part of the said Sarah Simon and the plaintiffs directly contributing to the injury of the said Sarah.

The evidence tended to show that on July 11, 1905, the plaintiffs resided on the north side of Third Street just east of the alley between Walnut Street and Grand Avenue in Kansas City. They were the parents of several minor children, and among them the deceased child Sarah, aged four years and three months. The father conducted a clothes pressing shop at said place, and his family lived in the rear of it. Third Street runs east and west. Almost directly across the street from the plaintiff’s business place and home, Mrs. Barman, with her husband, conducted a millinery establishment. In the afternoon of the 11th of July, 1905, Mrs. Barman, who testified she-was a childless woman, went over to the plaintiffs’ residence and on the parents’ consent took their three minor children across the street to her business place. They played around her establishment inside of the house or store. She had the youngest child on her knee and [70]*70did not notice that Sarah had gone outside until she heard the shouts and cries in the street about five o’clock that afternoon. She went out and found that Sarah, the deceased child, had been struck and run over by an electric car. There was no one on the car except the motorman and conductor. She testified that the child was never permitted to cross the street unaccompanied.

George Chapman testified that he was walking along Third Street, proceeding east, between Walnut Street and Grand Avenue, on the south side of the street, and' passedThe little girl Sarah about the time she was leaving the curb to cross the street; that at the time the child first started in.the street, the car was at the Walnut street curve; that he stopped four or five feet after he passed her and leaned against the iron post, one of the posts that supports the electric line of the defendant. He saw the child standing four or five feet from the curb in the street; that the child started again, and when she did so the car was about to the vacant lot west of the alley. He saw she was in danger; there was no object between the child and the street car. The witness heard no bell, and the car’s speed was about five or six miles an hour. The child toddled, did not run. She was dragged six or seven feet after she was struck. A colored policeman took the child from under the car.

Edwin J. Shannahán testified that he had made measurements for the plaintiffs, and that it was seventeen feet and four inches from the south curb to the rail at the alley; that it was sixty-one feet and seven inches from the alley to Grand Avenue, and twenty-nine feet and one inch east of the east line of the alley to the east line of the door in Barman’s place; that the vacant lot alluded to by Chapman in his testimony was over forty feet west of Mrs. Barman’s door, out of which the child came.

Mrs. Bernstein testified that she was coming from [71]*71Grand Avenue into Third Street; that when she was six or seven feet from the corner of Grand Avenue, she saw the child coming from the sidewalk into the street and also saw the car coming’; she hallooed to the motorman to stop the car, but he paid no attention, he was looking towards the north side' of the street (all the testimony showed that the child came from the south side of the street). Mrs. Bernstein testified that she hallooed when the child was leaving the curb of the sidewalk. At that time the car was fifty or fifty-five feet west of the place where it struck the child. She testified further that no bell was rung, and that the child was walking and did not stop.

Mrs. Emma Bernstein testified that she saw the child and then saw the car about fifty feet on the other side of the alley. She'raised her hand and hallooed to the motorman, but he was looking to the other side. He paid no attention. No bell was rung.

Lee J. Hill testified that he was an ex-motorman; that he had operated similar cars to this one over similar grades; that this grade was three or four per cent, and in this connection it may be remarked that Mr. Satterlee, defendant’s assistant superintendent, corroborated this witness as to the grade of the track. Hill testified that this car, under the circumstances in evidence, could have been stopped within ten to fifteen feet. The motorman. himself testified that he stopped the car within from twenty to twenty-five feet.

The father of the deceased child testified that at the time the child was hurt, he was at work in his shop on the north side of Third Street between Grand Avenue and "Walnut Street and just east of the alley, which extends south through the block; that there was no window in the west side of his shop, but there were large windows in the front; that he could see about fifty feet up towards Walnut Street through the front window ; that from time to time he looked across the street and saw his children over in Mrs. Barman’s store; that [72]*72he saw the ear that injured his child when it was about fifty feet west of the alley; that the motorman was looking towards the north side of the street and upward at the point above witness’s shop ; that he heard no bell.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 250, 231 Mo. 65, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-mo-1910.