White v. St. Louis Public Service Co.

259 S.W.2d 795, 364 Mo. 111, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 576
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 13, 1953
Docket43364
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 259 S.W.2d 795 (White v. St. Louis Public Service 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
White v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 259 S.W.2d 795, 364 Mo. 111, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 576 (Mo. 1953).

Opinions

[114]*114DALTON, J.

This cause reaches the writer on reassignment. It is an action for $4,000 damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained on account of defendant’s negligence. Plaintiff fell and was injured while boarding one of defendant’s busses as a fare-paying passenger. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff for One Thousand One Hundred ($1100.00) Dollars, but the trial court sustained defendant’s motion for a new trial and set the verdict and judgment aside on the ground of error in the giving of plaintiff’s Instruction No. 1. Plaintiff appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals and that court reversed the order granting a new trial and ordered the verdict reinstated and judgment entered thereon. White v. St. Louis Public Service Co. (Mo. App.), 249 S.W. (2d) 498. The cause was, thereafter, transferred to this court and we shall determine the issues presented as if on original appeal to this court. Section 10, Article V, Constitution of Missouri 1945.

• 'The petition charged that, on October 23, 1948, while one of defendant’s busses had' stopped or almost stopped at the southwest corner of Handley road and Delmar boulevard in the city of St. Louis for the purpose of permitting passengers to get on, the plaintiff attempted to enter the bus and was in the act of entering upon said bus for the purpose of becoming a passenger thereon when “said bus negligently started forward with a violent jerk, jar, and jolt in a very extraordinary, unusual, and unexpected manner, so that plaintiff was thrown forward onto the bus and sustained severe, painful, and permanent bodily injuries # *

The only evidence in support of the charge of negligence was plaintiff’s own testimony. She testified that “on or about sometime in October, 1948” she came to Handley road and Delmar boulevard to catch one of defendant’s busses. She was on the north side of the street when she saw the bus coming and she ran across to the south side and stepped upon the sidewalk. “The bus came along; it didn’t come up to the sidewalk like it is supposed to do. * * * It stopped out in the middle of the street. * * * He opened the door; said ‘Come on, Come on’; he is turning in. * * * I was ready to put my feet on (sic) and that is when he snatched me down. * * # I put this one foot up and started with the other one and that is when he snatched again. * * * That is when he pulled the bus up. He had never plumb stopped. * * * Q. He was going very slow? A. Yes. When I got up to put the other foot up, [115]*115that is when he snatched, snatched me down where he was. * * * When you say ‘snatched up’ the bus, you mean by that he jerked it up? A. Sure; pulled it up. * * * Q. When he pulled up the bus, or snatched it up as you say, what happened to you ? A. Snatched me down. * * * It wasn’t going fast; just going along slow you know. When I stepped up, then he pulled it up fast; that is what snatched me down. * * *1 put my one foot on. I went to put the other. That is when it pulled up fast. * * * That is when it snatched it. * * * The snatch when it pulled that fast. That is what throwed me down. * * * The snatch is what throwed me down when it went off fast.” Plaintiff “fell up in the bus * * * on the steps” and was injured. She got up, picked up a bundle of clothes she had had on her left arm, boarded the bus and paid her fare. In view of the issues presented, it is unnecessary to here review the evidence concerning the injuries sustained.

Plaintiff’s Instruction No. 1 submitted her cause to the jury on general negligence under the res ipsa loquitur doctrine. The instruction stated the duties of a public carrier to its passengers and then conditioned a verdict for plaintiff upon a finding of negligence in that the bus started forward with a sudden, violent jerk or jar in an unusual manner, and that as a direct result thereof plaintiff was thrown forward into the bus and thereby injured. It told the jury that “such facts (if you believe them to be true), are sufficient circumstantial evidence to warrant a finding by you that the defendant did not exercise the highest degree of care for plaintiff’s safety and was thereby negligent * * unless the jury believed and found the occurrence was not due to the defendant’s negligence.

The trial court granted the new trial to defendant on the ground stated in paragraph 30a of the motion for a new trial, to wit, that Instruction No. 1 was erroneous “for the reason that said instruction does not properly hypothesize the evidence inasmuch as said instruction requires a finding that the bus started forward, whereas, the evidence was to the effect that the b%is never stopped but continued in motion at all times.” (Italics ours).

Appellant contends that the instruction is not erroneous in hypothesizing the evidence by reason of the phrase, “started .forward with a sudden, violent jerk” contained in the instruction, since it does not mean that the defendant’s bus was standing still at the time plaintiff boarded it; and, regardless of whether the bus was standing still or moving slowly, the bus started forward with a jerk in an extraordinary, unusual, and unexpected manner causing plaintiff to be thrown down and injured. Ridenhour v. K. C. Cable R. Co., 102 Mo. 270, 283, 13 S.W. 889; Williams v. St. L. Public Service Co., 363 Mo. 625, 253 SW: (2d) 97, 99.

Respondent has made no attempt to support the action of the trial court in holding the instruction erroneous for the reason stated in [116]*116the trial court’s order. In effect respondent concedes the court’s order cannot be sustained on the ground stated therein. Respondent now argues that the instruction is erroneous for two entirely different reasons, to wit, (1) that there was no evidence to warrant the submission of the question of a sudden, unusual, and violent jerk or jar of the bus; and (2) that plaintiff’s own evidence showed precisely what had caused her injury and thereby deprived her of the right to submit the case upon the theory of res ipsa loquitur. Respondent argues that the trial court properly sustained defendant’s motion for a new trial because Instructions 1, 6, and 11 are prejudicially erroneous.

The St. Louis Court of Appeals held that the defendant in its motion for a new trial had elected to attack Instruction No. 1 with particularity and had confined its criticism to a single matter; that the award of a new trial could not be sustained upon the specific ground set forth in the motion for a new trial and in the trial court’s order; and that the defendant (respondent) was not entitled, on appeal, to support the trial court’s order upon any other grounds of error with reference to said instruction, but could urge any other matter preserved in the motion which might constitute good reason for affirming the order.

Defendant’s motion for a new trial, however, contained the following assignment “10. Because the Court erred in giving and reading to the jury erroneous, misleading, illegal and prejudicial instructions asked by plaintiff and erred in giving each and every instruction given on behalf of plaintiff, particularly the following.” (Instructions Nos. 1 and 11 were then referred to and specific complaint made thereof).

It is well settled that a party to whom a new trial has been granted is not bound by the specific ground mentioned in the trial court’s order granting the new trial, but may urge in support of the order any other points properly preserved by the assignments contained in the motion for a new trial. Ridenour v. Duncan, (Mo. Sup.), 246 S.W. (2d) 765, 767(2); Schroeder v. Rawlings, 344 Mo. 630, 127 S.W.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W.2d 795, 364 Mo. 111, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-st-louis-public-service-co-mo-1953.