Smuzynski v. East St. Louis Railway Co.

93 S.W.2d 1058, 230 Mo. App. 1095, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 19
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 S.W.2d 1058 (Smuzynski 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
Smuzynski v. East St. Louis Railway Co., 93 S.W.2d 1058, 230 Mo. App. 1095, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 19 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*1098 HOSTETTER, P. J.

This suit was begun on the- 19th day of February, 1932, in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, Missouri. The petition seeks a recovery from the defendant railway company growing out of an accident on the night of January 11, 1931, whereby plaintiff was injured by being struck by an automobile in the 4100 block on Bond Avenue, after leaving defendant’s street car on which she had been a passenger. The place of accident was a short- distance east of the corporate limits of East St. Louis, Illinois. Bond Avenue runs east and west and the street car from which plaintiff alighted was going eastwardly on Bond Avenue which is about forty feet wide from .curb to curb. The width of the concrete slab on each side was, about ten feet, and the cinder or dirt portion in the center of the street was about twenty feet wide. The street car track in the middle of the cinder portion was about five feet wide. Both concrete slabs were very much used by vehicular traffic. The plaintiff lived at 4137 Bond Avenue on the north side of the street, which was at about the middle of the block. The automobile which struck and injured plaintiff was westward bound, and, consequently, was being driven on the ten foot concrete slab on the north side of Bond Avenue.

The amended petition, being the one on which the case was tried, after setting out the incorporation of the defendant and its-ownership, control and operation of the street car and street railway referred to, set out in substance the following as to the manner in which the injuries .were received and the negligence imputed to defendant. (We omit a description of the injuries.)

It was averred that on or about the 11th day of January, 1931, plaintiff was a passenger lawfully in and upon a certain Alta Sita street car which was being operated eastwardly on Bond Avenue in the city of East St. Louis, Illinois; that at said time and place the night was exceedingly dark and a great and heavy rain was falling and that as said street car approached the intersection of Forty- *1099 Second Street with Bond Avenne plaintiff signaled to the motorman in charge of said street car her intention to alight from same at the place customarily provided for passengers at Forty-Second Street and-Bond Avenue; that after giving the signal aforesaid the street car was brought to a stop near the middle of the 4100 block of Bond Avenue, not at a place usually provided for the discharge of passengers; that plaintiff, believing the street car to have been brought to a stop at Forty-Second and Bond Avenue and at a place customarily provided for the discharge of passengers, thereupon, in obedience to the orders and directions of the motorman, alighted from the left front door of the street car upon said Bond Avenue and into the path of a certain west bound automobile, and, as a direct and proximate result of the negligence and carelessness of defendant as hereinafter set out, was caused to be struck by said automobile and sustained injuries.

The following specific charges of negligence were made, under four divisions, which, grouped together, are as follows: That the motorman negligently caused and directed plaintiff to alight' in the nighttime on a portion of Bond Avenue much traveled by vehicles and at a place where plaintiff would likely be struck and injured by passing vehicles and that said motorman knew, or by the exercise of the highest degree of care could and should have known that said place in which the' plaintiff was directed to alight was likely to cause her to be struck and injured as aforesaid; that said motorman failed and omitted to warn plaintiff of the dangers attending a passenger in attempting to alight from the said street ear under the circumstances then and there existing, and that said motorman carelessly and negligently directed and caused plaintiff to alight in the nighttime at a place not customarily provided for the discharge of passengers and at a place much frequented by vehicular traffic, which was unknown to the plaintiff, and at such a place that the said motorman knew, or should have known, plaintiff was likely to be struck and injured.

The petition in detail described the injuries alleged to have been received and asked for $10,000 damages.

The answer consisted of a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff.

Plaintiff testified as follows: That she lived at 4137 Bond Avenue, East St. Louis; that she was thirty-eight years old, married; and had two children; that on the 11th day of January, 1931, she was riding as a passenger in an Alta Sita car of the defendant company, having boarded that ear some distance west where she had been visiting a friend; that Josephine Ctolsch, who also lived at 4137 Bond Avenue, was on the street car with her and alighted at the same time; that when the car g'ot into the 4100 block they fang the bell to get off and then went up to the front of the car to the right side and the motor *1100 man said: “This way out,” and opened the left front door; that ordinarily they got out on the right side; that at that time it was dark and rainy and about 9:30: in the evening; that she started out of the car ahead of Josephine Grolsch and stepped out and was just hit and knocked out; that she learned later what hit her; that the street car stopped in the middle of the block or thereabouts; that the motorman didn’t warn her to be careful of machines passing close to the car; that there were only three passengers on the car at the time, herself, Josephine Golseh, and a colored man; that the car only went one block farther to the end of the run; that she was taken from the place where she was struck to the hospital.

On cross-examination she gave the following testimony: That she had lived at 4137 Bond Avenue for five' or six years; that her house is on the north side of the street about the middle of the 4100 block; that Bond Avenue is a residential street forty or fifty feet wide, but she could not be exact; that it had a concrete slab on either side; that the car on which she was riding would go to the end of Bond, which is in the 4200 block, and switch the trolley and proceed back on the same track; that the only way they had of getting to their residence on Bond Avenue was by this Alta Sita car and that she used it frequently; that the car had doors on either- side at both ends so that when the trolley was moved from one end of the street car to the other when the car got out to 4200 Bond Avenue, entrance could be had from the other side; that the place of her residence was in Centerville Township, outside of the limits of East St. Louis and the end of the car line was right there near her house; that when the car would be standing at the end of the car line she would get in on the north side to go down town; that Mr. Adams was the motorman and that she had ridden with him a long time ; that after ringing the bell when the car got to Fortieth Street, she walked to the front of the car to the platform where Mr. Adams was; that after getting off the street car they could have to cross Bond Avenue; that all she remembered the motorman saying was, 1 ‘ This way out, ’

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 1058, 230 Mo. App. 1095, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smuzynski-v-east-st-louis-railway-co-moctapp-1936.