Smith v. East St. Louis Railway Co.

123 S.W.2d 198, 234 Mo. App. 1220, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 104
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 3, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 123 S.W.2d 198 (Smith v. East St. Louis Railway Co.) 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
Smith v. East St. Louis Railway Co., 123 S.W.2d 198, 234 Mo. App. 1220, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 104 (Mo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HOSTETTER, P. J.

This is a suit instituted in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis on the 22nd day of June, 1935, being an action to recover damages for personal injuries growing out of a collision *1223 between plaintiff’s taxicab and a street ear in Bast St. Louis, Illinois.

Tbe amended petition, upon wbieb tbe ease was tried, in substance was as follows: That plaintiff, about the 7th day of June, 1935, was driving an automobile in a careful manner northwardly upon and along Sixth Street at its intersection with State Street, both open and public highways in the city of East St. Louis, Illinois, and while attempting to cross said intersection he was carelessly and negligently struck by a certain street ear belonging to defendant traveling westwardly on State Street, and, as a direct and proximate result thereof, he was thrown with great force and violence against the interior of his car, and sustained certain personal injuries (describing them).

The charges of negligence on the part of defendant were set out in said petition as follows: That defendant’s motorman carelessly and negligently failed to exercise ordinary care to keep a careful watch and lookout ahead; that he drove and operated the street car at a high and dangerous rate of speed under the circumstances; that he negligently failed to keep the street ear under control so that it could be stopped upon the first appearance of danger; that he violated the humanitarian rule; and that he willfully and wantonly caused the street car to collide with plaintiff’s automobile and injured him. Plaintiff asked for $15,000 damages.

Defendant’s answer to this petition was substantially that plaintiff’s injuries were brought about by his own negligence contributing thereto in certain particulars, to-wit: that plaintiff while defendant’s street car was crossing said intersection in a westwardly direction on State Street, drove his taxicab into State Street directly into the pathway of and against said street car at a high, dangerous and excessive,rate of speed under the circumstances; that plaintiff negligently failed to obey the boulevard stop sign and had he done so there could have been no collision between the street ear and the taxicab; that plaintiff by the exercise of ordinary care could have avoided driving his said taxicab onto the street car tracks and directly into the pathway and against defendant’s said street ear, thereby causing the collision; that plaintiff negligently failed to keep a lookout ahead to observe the conditions of traffic on said street and particularly failed to observe the westbound street cars; that plaintiff by exercising even ordinary care would have seen the westbound street car at said intersection in time to have avoided driving across State Street and would have swerved his taxicab or slowed it down, so as to have avoided a collision; that plaintiff exceeded the speed limit provided by the statute of Illinois, known as the Illinois Motor Yehicle Law, which prohibited driving in excess of ten miles per hour in the closely built up business portion of any incorporated town or *1224 village and in the closely built up residence portion of any town or village at a speed in excess of fifteen miles per hour.

Defendant also pleaded Section 39, Sub-section 2, of that portion of the Illinois Motor Vehicle Law which provides that “motor vehicles driving on public highways shall give the right of way to vehicles approaching along intersecting highways from the right,” and cited certain decisions of the Illinois courts, and also alleged that under the law of Illinois and the decisions of the Illinois courts the humanitarian, or last chance, doctrine is not recognized.

No reply was filed.

The trial of the case to a jury was concluded on October 1, 1936, and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $5000 damages and $100 doctor’s bills, totaling $5100, on which verdict a judgment was duly entered.

After an unavailing motion for a new trial the defendant brings the cause to this court by appeal for review.

There are double street car tracks along State Street, the northern track being the westbound and the southern track being the eastbound. The street car involved in this suit was westbound, consequently on the northern track. The distance from the south curb of State Street to the northernmost rail of the westbound street car track is thirty feet one inch, and the distance from the northernmost rail of the westbound street car track to the north curb of State Street is twenty-one feet one inch, and the entire width of State Street is fifty-one feet and two inches.

Plaintiff, being called as a witness on his own behalf, stated: that he was employed as a driver of a taxicab for the Economy Cab Company; that he started to work on the morning of June 7, 1935, and with a passenger bound for the Stock Yards, was traveling north on Sixth Street toward State Street, gave the following account of the collision, viz: “There is a boulevard stop there at Sixth and State. As I came up I stopped to shift my gears and looked first to the east and saw this street ear was, I should judge, about a block down from me, and I looked west and there was an automobile coming and he went by me and I pulled out. By then it looked to me as though the street car was 150 feet, or maybe 200 feet, from me and I thought I had time to go ahead to make it across. But I didn’t have time. The second time I looked at the street car it was when it was 150 or 200 feet east of me. The first time was when it was about a block away. I started to go across ahead of it and I looked again when I was about in the middle of the street on the first car track and it looked like this street car was then fifteen or twenty feet from me. I cut my cab to the left to go west of it or to duck up State Street and at about that time the street car hit me. My cab struck behind the front door of the righthand side. The first time I saw the street car I judge it was *1225 going about thirty to thirty-five miles an hour, and when I saw it next I don’t think it had cheeked its speed any.”

On cross-examination he testified on the same subject as follows:

“There is a boulevard stop before you can enter State Street from Sixth. My brakes were in good order. This was a Chevrolet sedan. State Street is a State highway running from Belleville to East St. Louis and through East St. Louis. I brought my ear to a stop just about a second in order to shift gears. At that time the street car was a block down the street. I didn’t remember what speed I went across there; maybe five or six miles, something like that, in low gear. I may have gotten higher, but I don’t remember. I continued straight across, but I didn’t swerve until I seen the street car was going to hit me. I judge my front wheels were over the eastbound track, north rail, and that was when I swerved. I was probably going five or six miles an hour when I swerved my car, but I didn’t remember how fast I was going. The time I first observed this car about a block down the street until I saw it fifteen or twenty feet from me I had been moving across there at the speed of five or six miles an hour. My brakes being in perfect condition and I moving five or six miles an hour, I cannot tell you how many feet I could stop in, maybe half the length of the car, maybe in five or six feet.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 198, 234 Mo. App. 1220, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-east-st-louis-railway-co-moctapp-1939.