Wahl ex rel. Wahl v. St. Louis Transit Co.

101 S.W. 1, 203 Mo. 261, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 1 (Wahl ex rel. Wahl v. St. Louis Transit 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
Wahl ex rel. Wahl v. St. Louis Transit Co., 101 S.W. 1, 203 Mo. 261, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 10 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is an action by Eaymond Wahl, a minor, who at the time of his injury was of the age of five years. The action was brought through his mother, who was duly appointed as his next friend pHor to the filing of the petition. The petition alleges that the defendant, at the time "of the injuries complained of, was a corporation by virtue of the laws of Missouri, and used and operated a railway and the cars [264]*264thereon for the purpose of transporting persons for hire from one point to another in the city of St. Louis. That Twenty-second street at the time and place mentioned in the petition was an open public street within the city of St. Louis; that on the 3d day of June, 1903, the plaintiff was on Twenty-second street north of Montgomery street near the defendant’s track and in danger, by reason of his youth and want of discretion, of being struck and injured by the defendant’s northbound car then approaching the.place where plaintiff was beside and near the defendant’s track; that whilst plaintiff was in such exposed position liable by reason of his youth and want of discretion to expose himself to peril from said car, the motorman of said car negligently left his post on said car where he could control and manage the said car and negligently waved to the plaintiff and other children to move, and thereby caused the plaintiff, who was standing on the side of the bank near the defendant’s track, to start to run across said track whilst said motorman was so negli-' gently away from his post, and when he was unable to reach his post and stop said car, and thereby negligently caused and suffered said car to' run upon and against the plaintiff, and drag him and permanently injure him, cutting off his right thumb, crushing and mangling the fingers of his right hand, crushing his right hand, tearing off his scalp and lascerating his head, knocking out six teeth, lascerating his face, lips and mouth and injuring him internally. That by his injuries so sustained plaintiff has suffered and will suffer great pain of mind and body and is maimed and crippled for life and will lose the earnings of his labor after he shall arrive at the age of twenty-one. He prayed for damages in the sum of ten thousand dollars. The answer was a general denial.

The action was originally brought against both the St. Louis Transit Company and the United Rail[265]*265ways Company, but at the close of the evidence, the trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence in behalf of the United Railways and the cause went to the jury against the defendant Transit Company only.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove that Twenty-second street and Montgomery street are both public-highways in the city of St. Louis. Montgomery street runs west from Twenty-second street, but does not cross Twenty-second to the east; that on the third of June, 1903, the Transit Company, the defendant herein, operated a single track railway on Twenty-second street, on which its cars, ran north; that the plaintiff’s mother lived three doors from the corner of Montgomery and Twenty-second streets at house numbered 2205' Montgomery street, and plaintiff’s father was dead. At the time of the injury, the plaintiff was five and a half years old and lived with his mother. On the third day of June, 1903, the Laclede Gas Light Company was engaged in putting some gas pipes just north of the north crossing of Montgomery and Twenty-second streets, and for this reason had excavated a trench in Twenty-second street, a foot or so north of said north crossing. The Gas Company in making the excavation in Twenty-second street near the north crossing thereof on Montgomery street, had by their servants thrown the dirt taken out of the trenches into a pile on the north side of the trench and this pile of dirt extended up to within a foot or so of defendant’s track. The plaintiff was playing at this pile of dirt, filling a box he had with loose dirt and then emptying it again. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that while, at play on this pile of dirt, he was in dangerous proximity to a passing car if he should move or slip toward the track. A north-bound car on defendant’s track .came along about five o’clock that afternoon. The motorman on this car, seeing the [266]*266child was near the track, stepped from his place at the front of the car, with his right foot down on the step of the front platform, and as it approached where the child was, reached ont with his arm to wave or frighten the child away, whereupon the plaintiff undertook to run across the track in front of the car, and was struck and knocked down by it and run over and sustained the injuries alleged in the petition. The injuries were so serious that the verdict is not assailed as excessive if otherwise proper.

There was a sharp conflict in the evidence. On the part of .the plaintiff the evidence of two of the employees of the Gas Light Company, Sims and Murphy, tended to show that they were working in the trench, which was about two and a half feet wide and from one to four feet deep, north of and adjoining the north crossing of Montgomery street and running east and west from the car track toward the curbing. Murphy was digging in the trench and Sims was shoveling away the earth and macadam that Murphy had thrown out within about a foot of the trench and on the north side thereof and running its full length. The earth was piled up a foot or two high. Sims testified that he was standing on the north side of the hole at the west end near the track and the little boy, the plaintiff, was playing with the dirt that he piled up there; that the little boy was standing near enough to the track, if he had remained still, for the motorman to have reached out with his hand and touched him, or about three feet from the side of the car; that when the motorman reached out, the plaintiff started to run. The plaintiff was looking at the car as it came towards him; when the motorman reached out after him he got scared and ran down and around the pile of dirt and went in front of the car; the car did not stop at the crossing, [267]*267though the evidence tends to show that one passenger jumped off there. When the motorman saw the plaintiff start towards the track, he stepped hack to his post and tried to stop the car before it struck the boy, but before the motorman regained his position, the boy was knocked down by the car. The two witnesses, Sims and Murphy, fixed the place of the accident near the trench where they were working not over six feet from the crossing; another witness for the plaintiff, a passenger, thought it occurred about twenty feet from •the crossing “more or less;” and a lady, Mrs. Heitland, testified that she saw the car just as.it was coming from the crossing at Montgomery street, and saw the child jump from the mud pile that the gas men were digging, and he ran right on to the car track; she did not wait to see what became of the boy after, the car struck him; she did not think the car was more than ten feet across the crossing when the accident happened. .

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 1, 203 Mo. 261, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wahl-ex-rel-wahl-v-st-louis-transit-co-mo-1907.