Stephens v. Oklahoma City Ry. Co.

1911 OK 116, 114 P. 611, 28 Okla. 340, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 104
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 21, 1911
Docket592
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 1911 OK 116 (Stephens v. Oklahoma City Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. Oklahoma City Ry. Co., 1911 OK 116, 114 P. 611, 28 Okla. 340, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 104 (Okla. 1911).

Opinions

KANE, J.

This was an action for personal injuries, commenced by the plaintiffs in error, plaintiffs below, against M. H. Kessler, city of Oklahoma City, and the defendant in error, Oklahoma City Railway Company, defendants below. The petition, in so' far as it is necessary to notice its allegations for the purposes of this case, states, in substance: That on'the 17th day of September, 1905, the plaintiffs were passengers on one of the cars of the defendant, the Street Railway Company, and as such passengers received transfers and had disembarked from a car at the corner of Main and Broadway streets in said citv of Oklahoma City, and were there waiting on the sidewalk, in the place desig- *341 Rated by ordinance and fixed by custom for passengers to wait for the north-bound Maywood car of said street railway company, with the intent and purpose of boarding the north-bound Maywood car of said company, and continuing their journey thereon in ae-ordance with the provisions of said transfers; said Maywood car being the only car upon which said transfers, under the rulés, regulations, and customs of said company, would be honored. That, while waiting for said north-bound Maywood car, a fire alarm was turned in, and the usual and customary fire alarm signals were given and sounded, which were plainly audible to the employees of said company, who were operating the north-bound Maywood car, for which said plaintiffs were waiting. That at said time said Maywood ear was at a point on Main street in said city just west of the corner of Main and Broadway streets. That, when said fire alarm was sounded, said employees on said northbound Maywood car heard the same, but failed and refused to stop said car, but continued eastward pn said Main street and turned north into Broadway street. That plaintiffs, seeing said northbound car approaching, and knowing by the sign in front of said car that it was the car for which they were waiting and for which they held transfers entitling them to passage thereon, went,, with other passengers, from the sidewalk where they had been waiting to a point near the east side of the track of said defendant company, upon which said north-bound Maywood car was approaching, and signaled the motorman to stop' said car at said point, which was the usual and customary point for north-bound cars to stop for the purpose of receiving passengers. That said motorman failed and refused to stop' said car, but continued northward on Broadway street at a rapid rate of speed, and plaintiffs were thus unable to board said car. By the rules and regulations of said street railway company, said transfers were forfeited and valueless if not used on the said Maywood car then approaching said point. That, after said ear had passed plaintiffs, they attempted to return to the sidewalk on the east side of Broadway street, and while they were so attempting to return, and while *342 plaintiffs were using due and proper care and caution for their own protection and safety, a fire wagon containing fire apparatus, belonging to the fire department of Oklahoma City, came north on Broadway street and on the west side thereof, in response to the fire alarm herein before referred to, which had been sounded two or three minutes previously. That at said time said defendant M. H. Kessler, the chief of said fire department, in á buggy drawn by one horse, was immediately in front of and across the street from said wagon bearing said fire apparatus, and was urging and causing said horse to run at full speed north on the east side of Broadway street. That said fire chief saw said plaintiffs and saw they were in imminent danger of being run down, injured, and killed by him, when he was about 80 feet from them. That said fire department wagon, preceded by said fire chief, came north on Broadway street just at the moment that said plaintiffs attempted to board said Maywood car and were seeking to return to said sidewalk for safety, and that said fire chief saw these plaintiffs in ample time before he reached the point where they were located, and by the exercise of proper care could have stopped said horse and thereby have protected said plaintiffs; but' said fire chief, wholly disregarding their rights, and wholly ignoring the danger in which said plaintiffs were placed, did, then and there, in a manner grossly negligent of the rights and grossly unmindful of the lives and safety of plaintiffs, continue to urge his said horse northward at full speed, and did then and there carelessly, negligently, heartlessly, cruelly, and in a cold-blooded and murderous manner, urge said horse and the buggy drawn by it against the persons of said plaintiffs, thereby badly wounding and injuring them, and killing the husband of the plaintiff Daisy J. Stephens and the father of the other plaintiffs who were members of their party.

It is further alleged, in substance: That, by a valid and subsisting ordinance of said city, said street railway company was on said date required to stop its cars after the sounding of any alarm of fire and upon the approach within 300 feet of said cars of any *343 fire engine or apparatus. That said provisions of said ordinance' were unknown to said plaintiffs. That it was the further duty of said company to stop its car on Broadway street at the north line of Main street when properly signaled so to do by persons desiring to enter said cars, and that said company failed and refused to stop said car when said pretended fire alarm was turned in, and failed and refused to stop said ear at said north line of Main street on Broadway, although signaled so to do by plaintiffs. That said defendant company failed and refused to comply with the terms of said ordinance, but, on, the, contrary, negligently arid carelessly proceeded on its way with said car after the sounding of said pretended fire alarm as aforesaid, and after said car had approached to within 300 feet of said fire apparatus and a buggy occupied by defendant which was proceeding north on Broadway street, and that by its negligence in so proceeding upon its way after the sounding of said pretended fire alarm and after said fire apparatus had approached to within 300 feet of said street railway oar, in violation of said ordinance as aforesaid, lured said plaintiffs into the said street and caused said plaintiffs to believe that by remaining in said street they would be able to board said street oar, and that had said street car stropped at the north line of Main street on Broadway said plaintiffs could and would have boarded said street car, and would have been in a place of safety. That by reason of the negligence and carelessness of said defendant company, as aforesaid, said plaintiffs were injured and killed as above set out, and that the injury was the direct and proximate result of the combined negligence of defendants herein. That, but for the negligence of said company in proceeding on its way after the sounding of said pretended fire alarm as aforesaid, said plaintiffs would not have been in said street and would not have been exposed to the danger and injury which caused the death of one of said plaintiffs, and that said negligent action of said defendant company, in violation of said ordinance, and in refusing to stop, said car as aforesaid, in violation of law and its duty under said ordinance, and as a common carrier of passengers, combined *344

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 116, 114 P. 611, 28 Okla. 340, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-oklahoma-city-ry-co-okla-1911.