Winston v. Lusk

172 S.W. 76, 186 Mo. App. 381, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 658
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 76 (Winston v. Lusk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winston v. Lusk, 172 S.W. 76, 186 Mo. App. 381, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 658 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

STURGIS, J.

— This is a suit for personal injuries inflicted on plaintiff growing out of assaults on him by defendants ’ brakeman while the relation of carrier and passenger existed between plaintiff and the railroad company being operated by defendants as receivers. The petition is in two counts, covering separate assaults by the same employee of the defendants, the first occurring while plaintiff was' attempting to board one of defendants ’ passenger trains at Kennett, Missouri, and the other about fifteen to twenty minutes later while the plaintiff was riding as a passenger on the same train.

The plaintiff, whose place of business was at Ken-nett, Missouri, purchased a ticket there one Sunday morning in order to go to Holcomb, Missouri, a few miles distant, to visit' his mother. When the passenger train stopped and the passengers getting off there had alighted, the plaintiff, with other passengers, started to board the train. Defendants had a rule requiring all intended passengers to exhibit their tickets before boarding the cars. The defendants’ brakeman assisted those getting off and took his position at the foot of the steps leading up1 to the passenger coach to enforce this rule and look after the loading of the passengers. Some three or four young ladies passed up the steps just ahead of the plaintiff and the brakeman says that one of them being without a ticket designated the plaintiff as having her ticket and he al[385]*385lowed her to pass on. The plaintiff denied that he was accompanying or even knew this young lady or had any knowledge of her being allowed to enter the car on her representation that he had her ticket. He exhibited his ticket to the brakeman and started to ascend the steps. Here the evidence diverges. The plaintiff says the brakeman, without any explanation whatever other than to say “you are not going to ride on that,” meaning the ticket exhibited, jerked him off the steps tó the ground', causing him to drop his overcoat and umbrella and further assaulted him, which he resented, ending in a fight until the two were separated. The brakeman says that he told plaintiff that two could not ride on his one ticket and that he had allowed a lady to pass on that ticket and refused to allow plaintiff to go up the steps without another ticket; that he used no more force than to pull plaintiff back and bar his way up the steps; that plaintiff became angered and struck him, in the face, whereupon they clinched and scuffled until separated. The brakeman denies striking the plaintiff at this time. After this difficulty was over the plaintiff had a few scratches about his face and neck and one of his little fingers was severely injured, but this latter injury was caused by plaintiff’s fist coming in violent contact with the brakeman’s face, causing his nose to bleed freely. The plaintiff was found to have blood on his hands and clothes, but this also largely came from the brakeman’s nose. The plaintiff’s evidence, however, was that after he was jerked to the ground and lost his overcoat and umbrella the brakeman got between him and the steps and struck at him, either with his hand or fist, and “scratched him in the eye” and not until then did plaintiff strike the brakeman.

If plaintiff ’s version of the affair is correct, and the jury has so found, then the brakeman was to blame in every way, as he not only wrongfully prevented [386]*386plaintiff from entering the oar but pulled him back rudely and with unnecessary violence and assaulted Mm after he was1 down on the platform. The plaintiff’s striking the brakeman was in self-defense and in protection of his rights as a passenger, for the relation of carrier and passenger then existed though the plaintiff had not yet entered the car but was only trying to do so. [Bledsoe v. Railroad, decided at this term, and cases cited. See also Schepers v. Union Depot R. Co., 125 Mo. 665, 673, 29 S. W. 712.] In such case it is but fair to hold the defendants responsible for all the injuries suffered by plaintiff, even to the injury to his finger resulting from Ms striking the brakeman, though the instructions given by the. trial court hardly went that far.

On this branch of the case the court instructed the jury that if the plaintiff had purchased Ms ticket entitling Mm to transportation and that4 ‘ while attempting to board said train in the usual and ordinary manner, he was struck on the head, arms, breast or body by an agent and employee of the defendants-, and that such striking, if you find such to be a fact from the evidence, was not justifiable, and you further find that he was injured by said assault, then your verdict will be for the plaintiff.” For the defendants, the court instructed that if “before plaintiff had boarded said train, the plaintiff and defendants’ brakeman engaged in a controversy as a result of a mistake on the part of said brakeman as to plaintiff’s right to board said train, and during such controversy the plaintiff struck the brakeman, then you are instructed that said brakeman had the right to defend himself, and to use such force as was reasonably necessary to repel plaintiff’s assault, and if you further find that said brakeman used no more force than was reasonably necessary for that purpose, then plaintiff cannot recover on the first count in his petition, but your verdict should be for the defendants on said first count.”

[387]*387The first count of the petition alleges that this assault was wanton and malignant and asks for punitive damages but the court directed the jury not to award any punitive damages. Under these instructions the jury returned a verdict under this count for $250 actual damages.

The defendants’ first point is that the plaintiff was the aggressor and that, notwithstanding the defendants’ duty to plaintiff as a passenger, the brakeman had a right to defend himself from plaintiff’s assault and that a demurrer should have been sustained to this count on the authority of O’Brien v. Transit Co., 185 Mo. 263, 269, 84 S. W. 939, and Breen v. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. 443, 451, 83 S. W. 998, There is substantial evidence, however, that the brakeman was the aggressor in this assault, as well as being in the wrong in attempting to prevent plaintiff from going into the car, and the court did right in submitting the question to the jury as it did in both of the cases just cited.

Plaintiff’s instruction, above mentioned, is criticised as submitting to the jury a mixed question of law and fact, whether the brakeman’s assault on plaintiff was justifiable and that the jury should have been told what facts would constitute a justification. An instruction similar to this, and equally as objectionable in this respect, was held not to constitute error in Sonnen v. Transit Co., 102 Mo. App. 271, 274, 76 S. W. 691. We approve what the court there said. “Two opposing theories of the assault are presented by the pleadings and the evidence; the plaintiff’s, that an unprovoked assault was made upon him,'the defendant’s, that the assault was justified. It was the duty of each party to the suit to take care of his own side of the case and to offer instructions covering his theory of the case as set out in his pleadings and sustained by his evidence. The instruction under review comprehends very fully all the facts which plaintiff relied on and which entitle him to the verdict, and is supported [388]*388by the evidence offered by bim, therefore it was appropriate.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Scott v. City of Marshall
14 S.W.2d 604 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1929)
Dorton v. Kansas City Railways Co.
224 S.W. 30 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 76, 186 Mo. App. 381, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winston-v-lusk-moctapp-1914.