Unterlachner v. Wells

296 S.W. 755, 317 Mo. 181, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 665
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 24, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 296 S.W. 755 (Unterlachner 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
Unterlachner v. Wells, 296 S.W. 755, 317 Mo. 181, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 665 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

GRAVES, P. J.

This is a second appeal in this case. AYhen first here (278 S. W. 79) the plaintiff appealed from a judgment against him. In that appeal, the only question was whether or not' plain *185 tiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. 'While there were four grounds of negligence charged against the defendant, the plaintiff submitted the ease then, as he did in the second trial, upon a violation of the speed ordinance. On the first appeal we ruled, (1) that the speed limit was fifteen miles per hour, and that there was evidence upon which the jury could find that the street car was running much in excess of such speed limit, i. e. thirty miles per hour, and (2) that the jury could well find that such excessive speed occasioned the injury to plaintiff. The issues were the same upon this trial as upon the previous one. Plaintiff submitted his ease upon the single ground of negligence stated, supra, and defendant, after having, by instructions, withdrawn the other alleged grounds of negligence from the jury, pressed the alleged con-' tributory negligence of the plaintiff, and in so doing say that the record evidence is different from that on the former trial. There is serious question as to whether or not defendant’s Instruction 9 withdrawing the humanitarian rule would not have been error, had not plaintiff voluntarily abandoned that issue, by failing to submit it by instruction; At the second trial, involved in the record now before us, the plaintiff had a verdict for $17,500 and judgment was en'-tered for said sum, from which defendant has appealed. When the ease was first in this court (Unterlachner v. Wells, 278 S. W. 79) there was little dispute about the facts. At that time we then stated the case (278 S. W. l. c. 80, 81) :

"Action for personal injuries. The plaintiff was struck and injured by an eastbound street car, operated and run by defendant upon Arsenal Street in the city of St. Louis. The accident occurred at the intersection of Arsenal Street and Macklind Avenue. With some slight modifications, the respondent agrees to appellant’s statement of facts.. In respondent’s brief it is said:
" 'The statement of facts contained in appellant’s brief is a fairly, correct abstract of the proceedings that were had before the trial court. We desire, however, to point out a few additional facts.’
"We shall not overlook these additional suggestions in the course of;the opinion. The appellant’s statement is as follows-.
" . ‘ This is an action for damages which plaintiff claims he sustained on. or. about the 1st day of February, 1922, when he was struck by' one of the defendant’s cars and injured. The accident occurred at the intersection of Macklind Avenue and Arsenal Street. Arsenal Street is an east-and-west street in the city of St. Louis, about thirty-six feet wide, and Macklind Avenue is a north:and-south street about the same width. Macklind. does not cross Arsenal Street, biit exténds from Arsenal Street north at 5400 west on Arsenal Street. The sanitarium grounds are on the south side of Arsenal Street, at the point opposite the intersection of Macklind. There are no car tracks ón ' *186 Macldind Avenue. At tbe time. of tbe accident there was a store building on the northeast corner of this intersection, referred to in the evidence as the confectionary store, and a saloon building on the northwest comer. Westbound cars run on the north track, and eastbound cars on the south track. From the north curb line of Arsenal to the first rail of the westbound track is ten feet and six inches and to the first rail of the eastbound track from the north curb line is twenty feet and eight inches. At the time of the accident, westbound cars stopped at the northeast corner (that is, the near side), and eastbound cars stopped with the front of the car about even with the west curb line of Maeklind, or what would be the near side if Macldind. crossed Arsenal. After the accident, the eastbound. cars changed the stopping place to the east side of Macldind and stopped with the front end about even with-the east buildihg line of Macldind Avenue if extended across Arsenal at a yellow pole on the south side of Arsenal, about even with the east building line of Maeklind. There is a slight up-grade on Maeklind west, of about three feet to the hundred feet.
“ ‘.On the evening of February 1, .1922, the plaintiff had .been visiting at the confectionary store on the northeast corner, of the streets mentioned, and about ten p. m. he saw a car coming from the west about a. block away, and he started from the northeast corner to go across to the southwest corner where the ear stopped at that time, in order to catch this car, and was struck by the car about when he was on the north rail of the track. Plaintiff, does not remember anything that happened from the ..time he started across the track.
“ ‘Just before the approach of this eastbound ear to this intersection, a westbound car had stopped on the east side of Macldind. and two of plaintiff’s witnesses, Charles Kranz and George Larkin, got off of the car, and, when the car moved on, they started across Arsenal to the south side in order to go to the sanitarium building-where they were • employed at that time. They began their work about eleven p. m. and worked to seven a. m. They were stationary engineers.
‘ ‘ ‘ One of the men, Charles Kranz, testified that when the ear from which he alighted had gone on he then looked west and saw this eastbound car on the hill by the Isolation Hospital about 800 feet west ; that he then started to cross Arsenal Street, bearing a little to the southeast; that when he got nearly across the street he again looked at this eastbound ear, and it was then about opposite the Nickelodeon; that the Nickelodeon was 150 feet west of the west building line of Maeklind; that .the witness since the accident had measured that distance; that at the same time he saw this car up at the Nickelodeon he also noticed the plaintiff just leaving the northeast corner of , the sidewalk and. run diagonally across toward what *187 would be tbe southwest corner if Macklind crossed Arsenal, the place where the eastbound cars stopped at that time to receive and discharge passengers. At the same time he noticed a man standing at this southwest corner at the usual place where eastbound cars stop-' ped to receive and discharge passengers. He watched this ear and the plaintiff, and when plaintiff reached the north rail of the eastbound track plaintiff.“kind of” stopped and threw his head back. He said: “It looked to me like he ran and when he got there he seen the car was not going to stop, and he tried to jerk back; and then, after he jerked back, why the car hit him, the left-hand side of the front end of the car, about the corner — the front of the car, the left-hand front of the corner.”
“ ‘He testified that he observed the rate of speed this car was traveling, and he estimated it at least twenty miles per hour.; that the ear did not check its speed before it struck plaintiff, and it ran 120 feet before it stopped; that there was no gong sounded before the car struck plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 S.W. 755, 317 Mo. 181, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unterlachner-v-wells-mo-1927.