Sweeney v. Kansas City Cable Railway Co.

51 S.W. 682, 150 Mo. 385, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 6, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 51 S.W. 682 (Sweeney v. Kansas City Cable 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
Sweeney v. Kansas City Cable Railway Co., 51 S.W. 682, 150 Mo. 385, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 88 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This suit was begun by plaintiff in the circuit court of Jackson county against the defendant, a street railway company, for damages in the sum of $5,000 for negligently killing her husband, Patrick Sweeney. Upon the application of plaintiff the venue of the cause was changed to the circuit court of Pettis county where a trial was had before a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $5,000, for which judgment was rendered in accordance therewith. After unsuccessful motion for a new trial defendant appeals.

At the time of the accident defendant operated a double track cable street railway upon Summit street in Kansas City, Missouri. There was a space of four and one-half feet between the two tracks. The train upon which deceased was riding as a passenger at the time of his injury was made up of an open gripcar and a closed coach coupled to it, each twenty-two or twenty-three feet long, and weighing about 6,500 pounds each.

The train was operated by a grip, which was attached to a moving cable rope and was manipulated by a gripman. The rope moved at near twelve miles per hour. Summit street runs north and south. Southbound cars run on the west track, and northbound cars on the east track. At the [390]*390place where the accident occurred the fall of the grade is about ten feet in every hundred. The accident occurred a few minutes after six o’clock on the evening of October 29, 1894, while the train was going south. To the front of the-train was attached a headlight which according to the testimony adduced by plaintiff, on a dark night without a fog,, cast its rays from one hundred to one hundred and thirty feet in front, and according to defendant’s testimony, on a misty, foggy night cast its rays in front from twenty to sixty feet. At the time of the accident there were only seven or eight passengers in 'the coach, while its seating capacity was twenty-four, besides there were vacant seats in the gripear. Sweeney desired to leave the car at Twentieth street, and when near that point so stated to the gripman, and stepped out upon the running-board upon which it was customary for passengers to ride to be in readiness to leave the car when it stopped. There were three persons on the board when Sweeney stepped out on it. It seems that the gripman who-was at the time engaged in conversation with a policeman did not hear Sweeney and carried him past his place of destination and when asked by a passenger why he did not let the old gentleman off at Twentieth street replied in effect that he did not hear him, and that he would stop at Twenty-first street which was the next street south. In the meantime Sweeney remained standing on the running-board so as to be ready to-get off the car at the next street, being Twenty-first street. About this time a coal wagon had broken down on or close to the track of defendant -at a point about three hundred feet south of Twentieth street, the rear end of which extended over the east rail of the track upon which the car was proceeding southward. The testimony of several witnesses tended to show that the gripman could have seen the broken down wagon on the track, or its close proximity thereto from fifty to one hundred and twenty feet. That the train was-[391]*391running at full speed and that no effort was made to stop, until about the time of the collision.

The driver of the coal, wagon, Colton, and a negro woman, Emma Pullman, to whom the coal was to be delivered with which the wagon was loaded, testified that Colton ran up the 'tracks fifty or sixty feet to warn the gripman, but that he paid no attention to it. The gripman, however, denied that he either saw or heard Colton when he was trying to attract his attention. The track was at the time what a witness called a “clean wet track.” The evidence, as is usual in such circumstances, was conflicting with respect to the dis-anee in which the train could have been stopped-under the then existing conditions, some saying within forty feet, ■others in not less than seventy-five to one hundred feet.

There was evidence tending to show that at the time of ■the -accident the gripman was not looking down the track in front of the oars, but was talking to a passenger and looking-in a different direction.

Before the car struck the wagon upon the track, two passengers who stood in front of Sweeney upon the running-board, jumped into the seat space in the car, but Sweeney, the deceased, received a blow which crushed his left leg at the knee. The injury made amputation necessary, and he died upon the morning of the 30th of October from the hemorrhage incident to the operation. Another man standing behind Sweeney upon the running-board was also knocked off and injured, but not seriously.

"When the ear struck the wagon it was going at full speed. The gripman did not put on the brake to stop the car until just as it struck the wagon.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, and again at the close of all the evidence, the defendant interposed a demurrer thereto, which was refused and defendant excepted.

The court over the objection and exception of defendant instructed the jury in behalf of plaintiff as follows:

[392]*392“1. Tbe jury are instructed that if they believe and find from the evidence that defendant was, on the 29th day of October, 1894, operating a railway upon and over certain streets and highways in Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri, and upon and over Summit street, between 20th and 21st streets in said city, and was at said time engaged in the business of transporting passengers for hire over said last named line of railway; that plaintiff was, on said 29th day of October, 1894,* and prior thereto, the wife of Patrick Sweeney, deceased; that this suit was brought within sis months nest succeeding the death of her said husband, deceased ; that on said 29th day of October, 1894, her said husband took passage upon one of the cars of defendant’s railway as a passenger; that said defendant railway company received and accepted her said husband as a passenger upon its said ears; that said defendant, by its agents, servants and employers in charge of the cars upon which plaintiff’s said husband was riding as aforesaid, so negligently, carelessly and unskillfully managed, operated and conducted said cars at a point on Summit street, between 20th and 21st streets, in said city, as to cau'se said ears and the person of plaintiff’s said husband to be brought into violent contact with a broken down wagon and obstruction which was at said time upon and in close proximity to the tracks of the defendant at said point, injuring plaintiff’s said husband and causing his death, that the agents, servants and employees of the defendant in charge of the said cable cars upon which plaintiff’s said husband, deceased, was then riding, saw or would, by the exercise of the care required of them, as set out in instruction No. 3, have seen the broken-down wagon or obstruction upon and in close proximity to said track in time to have stopped said cars, and have avoided the injury to plaintiff’s said husband, but negligently and carelessly failed to stop said cars and prevent said injury and killing; and that plaintiff’s said [393]*393kusband was himself, at the time of the happening of the injury in question, in the exercise of ordinary care, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff. •
“2.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W. 682, 150 Mo. 385, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweeney-v-kansas-city-cable-railway-co-mo-1899.