Took v. Wells

53 S.W.2d 389, 331 Mo. 249, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 652
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 28, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 389 (Took v. Wells) 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
Took v. Wells, 53 S.W.2d 389, 331 Mo. 249, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 652 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*253 WHITE, P. J.

The plaintiff was injured after alighting as a passenger from one of the street cars in charge of Rolla Wells, Receiver for the United Railways Company and the St. Louis Public Service Company. She was employed by the R. C. Can Company. June 3, 1927, she boarded a Taylor Avenue car at 6:55 a. M., to go to her place of business. She intended to transfer to a Broadway car at a place called “The Loop.”

The car on which the plaintiff was riding came on the loop from the west and stopped at the point marked “A,” opposite the southwest

*254 (The accompanying plat shows the situation.)

corner of the building marked “Office Building.” Sbe desired to change to a Broadway car which was stopped at the point “B, ” headed to the west. In front of the car on which the plaintiff had been riding were two other cars, one next the ear from which she alighted *255 and a second one at tbe point “C” to tbe east. About fifty or sixty persons were on tbe ear and it appears that all of them alighted for the purpose of changing. The plaintiff testified that about half of them preceded her in getting off the ear and started down the space between the tracks to the point “D.”

The south rail of the inside track of the loop on which stood the car from which plaintiff alighted was distant from the north rail of the Broadway track at the nearest point about ten feet, and at the point “D” it was 13 feet between those inside rails. The normal overhang of a car standing on a straight track was 18 or 20 inches, so that if two cars were standing opposite jeach other at “C” and “B” and the track were straight they would be 9 or 10 feet apart. In making the curve going east, however, the overhang at “C” was five feet 9 inches. A little further along at the point marked “XX” the overhang was six feet. At the time of the trial a concrete walk ran down between the tracks. At the time of the accident a rolled gravel bed was along there. The passengers who got off the car at “A” walked eastward along that space in order to cross over to the Broadway car at point “B.” Plaintiff got as far as point “D” when a car standing with the rear near point “C”'started up and in turning the curve the overhang swung out and struck her, causing the injuries for which she sued. She testified that she walked until she got about eight feet from the back of the Broadway car; that she was about five feet from the track at point “C” when he started to turn south-wardly and in just a second she was struck. No gong was sounded nor signal given from the car that started. In going along to that point other people took the same route and walked the same way. There was no obstruction between her and the car. A conductor was standing on the rear platform of the car on Taylor Avenue, which' struck her. Another passenger, Marie Sutter, who was in advance of the plaintiff, testified that the passengers got off the Taylor Avenue car and walked down between the tracks to -take tbe Broadway car. She did not see the accident but heard Mrs. Took scream and saw her after she was hit.

Plaintiff introduced two or three physicians who testified to the nature of her injuries. Defendant introduced no evidence except two physicians who testified only to the nature and extent of the plaintiff’s injuries. On this evidence the jury returned a verdict April 11, 1929, awarding her damages in the sum of $10,208.33. The defendant filed a motion for new trial which the court sustained September '9', 1929, and from the order sustaining the motion the plaintiff appealed.

The court in sustaining the motion for new trial stated it was upon assignments 7 and 8 in the motion, which related to instructions 1, 2 and 3, given on behalf of the plaintiff. Each of those instructions the court held was erroneous in the same particular. Each one of them *256 is of great length and it is unnecessary to set them out. Instruction 1 directed that if the jury should find the facts as related regarding the plaintiff’s alighting from the car on Taylor Avenue and “walking eastwardly by the most direct route customarily and habitually used by passengers for the purpose of transferring to a Broadway street car, and “that immediately in front of the Taylor Avenue car from which plaintiff had alighted there was another of defendant’s Taylor Avenue street cars standing still, . . . and that said latter Taylor Avenue street car was caused and permitted by the defendant, his agent and servants, to start forward to traverse said loop or curve, and thereby cause said platform and overhang of said street car to strike plaintiff.”

And in finding other facts relating to defendant’s negligence they would find for the plaintiff.

Instruction 2 and Instruction 3 each has the same phrasing requiring the same finding in order to return the verdict for plaintiff.

The court handed down a memorandum in sustaining the motion in which it was said:

“The three instructions given for her so predicate her right of recovery, that is that she was struck by the car on the Taylor Avenue track which immediately preceded, on that track, the Taylor Avenue ear she had left for the purpose of taking the Broadway car. Her evidence makes it clear that there were three Taylor Avenue cars on the track; the one from which she had descended, one just ahead of that and then another ahead of the second car and standing at point “C,” on the plat used in connection with her evidence. It was the rear end of that last car when moving forward around the curve that struck her. Miss Sutter said there were three cars on that track and that plaintiff was struck by the car she had traveled on. Mrs. Took went back on the stand and denied that was the car struck her, but she made no change in her previous explicit testimony in chief and cross, that it was the third car — the car second ahead of the one she left — by which she was struck. The allegation in the petition and the instruction for plaintiff are, therefore, contradicted by plaintiff’s own testimony.”

The plaintiff testified that cars were all around the loop; that three cars were stopped at the point where she alighted at the Taylor Avenue car, two in front of her car; that she walked east past one car and the second car from the one from which she alighted struck her when it started up.

Mrs. Marie Sutter testified that she was certain that Mrs. Took was struck by the car from which she alighted. That it started up and swung around at the point “C.” The petition alleged and the instruction told the jury to find that it was neither, but the car “immediately” in advance of the car from which she alighted which *257 struck her. This is the error upon which the court sustained a motion for new trial.

I. At most this would be a variance between thq pleading and the proof. Section 817, Revised Statutes 1929, is as follows:

"Sec. 817. Variance, ivhen'deemed material.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 389, 331 Mo. 249, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/took-v-wells-mo-1932.