Smith v. Kansas City Public Service Co.

43 S.W.2d 548, 328 Mo. 979, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 469
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 17, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 43 S.W.2d 548 (Smith v. Kansas City Public Service 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
Smith v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 43 S.W.2d 548, 328 Mo. 979, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 469 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

ATWOOD, C. J.

This appeal was first heard in Division Number 2 where an opinion was written by Commissioner. Cooley.. One judge concurring, another voting duhiiante and .the third judge *984 being1 absent, tbe cause was transferred to Court en Banc, where it was heard and the divisional opinion adopted as the opinion of the Court en Banc. ' It appearing that error alleged in defendant’s motion for a new trial, but not presented in Division and therefore not dealt with in the opinion, was presented at this hearing en Banc, respondent’s motion for rehearing was sustained and after this rehearing the case came to the writer on reassignment. We have carefully considered the divisional opinion in the light of the whole record and all pertinent objections urged by respondent. Finding no fault with its treatment of the matters reached, we adopt all except the concluding1 paragraph of this opinion, and set forth the adopted portion as follows, without enclosing same in quotation marks.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from an order of the Circuit Court of Jackson County, sustaining defendants’ motion for a new trial in an action for personal injuries wherein plaintiff recovered a verdict for $10,000.

The suit was originally brought ágainst Francis M. Wilson and Fred W. Fleming, Receivers of the Kansas City Railways Company. Before the trial, by stipulation of all parties, the present defendant, which had acquired the. street railway property and assumed the liabilities of the original defendants, was substituted for the original defendants and entered its appearance and the cause proceeded against it as the defendant. At the time of plaintiff’s injury the street railway system of Kansas City was operated by the receivers, but since no point is made regarding the substitution of the present defendant, respondent, and its responsibility for the acts of the receivers, we shall herein for convenience of reference treat it as having been in control at all times involved.

Plaintiff’s petition presents a case based upon the humanitarian doctrine and his case was submitted to the jury upon that theory alone. The sufficiency of the petition is not questioned. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence and again at the close of all the evidence, defendant requested a peremptory instruction directing a verdict in its favor, which the court refused. But after the verdict for plaintiff the court sustained defendant’s motion for new trial upon the ground stated in the record that “the court erred in failing and refusing to give a peremptory instruction in favor of the defendant at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony and again at the close of all the evidence.” (The sufficiency of the evidence is the only question presented by this appeal.)

Plaintiff was injured at the intersection of Summit Street and West Penn Way in Kansas City, Missouri, by being thrown from a motorcycle on which he was riding when it and defendant’s street car collided, the rear wheels of the street car passing over and severing plaintiff’s right leg above the knee.

*985 From a plat offered in evidence, the accuracy of which is conceded, it appears that Summit Street runs north and south, is sixty feet wide from property line to property line, the paved portion being thirty-six feet wide, and approximately in the center thereof there are two street car tracks. The west track was used at the time in question by southbound cars. The distance from the east rail of that track to the east property line of Summit Street is 35.8 feet. West Penn Way is ah east-and-west street. East of Summit Street it is 109.55 feet wide from property line to property line, the central portion to a width of fifty feet being paved. West of Summit Street there is a “jog.” From that point AVest Penn Way runs northwest, and a narrower street called Twenty-first Street continues westward. The curb at the northeast corner of the Summit-West Penn Way intersection, as stated by appellant, “is rounded to take care of this condition, which tends to pull traffic northwesterly at that point.”

At the southwest corner of the intersection above mentioned, on the west side of Summit Street and fronting east thereon, there was located the Ogilvie drug store, the north line of which was fifty feet south of the center of the roadway of West Penn AVay, east of Summit. On the west side of Summit Street just north of the northwesterly extension of West Penn Way there was a “car stop” at "which point southbound street cars were expected and accustomed to stop. ' This ear stop was about seventy or seventy-five feet north of the north curb line (extended) 'of West Penn Way east of Summit. (Note: As we are concerned with the situation upon and east of the west ear track we shall hereafter, when we speak of West Penn Way, have reference to that street east of Summit Street, unless otherwise indicated.)

Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that about eight o’clock p. m., on February 27, 1926, he was riding his motorcycle westward on West Penn Way about eight or nine feet from the north curb. The motorcycle had a sidecar or “basket” attached to it on its right side. Plaintiff had been traveling about twenty-five miles an hour, and as he approached Summit Street he looked to the north and saw a street ear coming southward, the one that later struck him, which was at that time north of the car stop at which he knew it should and expected it would stop, and believing there was no danger from it he looked to the south and saw an automobile coming north in Summit Street south of West Penn Way. Not knowing whether the automobile would come on north or turn west he ‘ ‘ slowed down” and put his motorcycle in second speed until he saw that the automobile was turning west, whereupon he again looked to the north and discovered the street ear bearing down on him. He testified:

*986 “Well, just as I was giving it the gas to go on, to give it enough speed to shift into third, I looked to the right and when I did that street car was bearing down on me. So I took and turned to the left and stepped on my brake to avoid it. Well, I can’t tell you just the distance I went, but I turned to the left going south and when that street car hit me my motorcycle was pointed more south, you would say southwest by the compass. Well, it seemed like it just pushed me. I hung onto the handle bars'to stand up. I can’t say how long that lasted but the next thing I knew it seemed like I was going backwards and it seemed like I made a regular turn and when I felt that it felt like I fell sitting down and I no more than bumped until I kept sliding, it seemed like my head, shoulders and arms was up in the air, I couldn’t feel nothing, I was numb, and the next thing I knew the street car left me, just like I could see the back end of the street car leaving me.”

Pie further testified that when he so discovered the street car he was not quite to the east street car track, but “I knew by the distance I couldn’t stop before I hit that street car track, the way that street car was coming, so I stepped on my brakes and at the same time I turned to the left;” that the.“left front corner” of the street car struck the motorcycle. “Q. What part of your motorcycle did it strike? A. Well, I couldn’t say, but then it seemed like it tipped me over this way (illustrating). It brought the motorcycle itself up in the air. I was kind of on an angle.”

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.2d 548, 328 Mo. 979, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-kansas-city-public-service-co-mo-1931.