Court Opinion

ID: 8265836
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 16:01:17.199473+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:20.965073
License: Public Domain

NORTONI, J.
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff through the alleg’ecl negligence of defendant. At the conclusion of the evidence for plain*21tiff, the court directed a verdict for defendant, and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
Plaintiff is an incorporated manufacturing company, doing business in St. Louis, and defendant is an incorporated railroad company which owns and operates a street car system in the public streets of the same city. The grievance complained of relates to a collision of one of defendant’s street cars with a buggy or carriage owned by plaintiff, which at the time was being driven along Easton avenue, a public thoroughfare of the city, on which defendant owns and operates one of the lines of its railroad. The president of plaintiff company was driving its horse and storm buggy eastward on Easton avenue about 5:30 o’clock in the afternoon and in broad-daylight when defendant’s street car collided with the rear of the buggy and occasioned the damage sued for. It appears Mr. McCloskey, president of plaintiff company, had. been driving along Easton avenue for as much as two blocks immediately before the collision occurred. He drove into that thoroughfare from another street and turned to the eastward on Easton avenue. -Along the south side of Easton avenue and adjacent to the curb, arrangements were being made to the end of laying water pipes and, besides some excavations, large water pipes to be utilized were lying in the street. These pipes were about eighteen inches in diameter and occupied a considerable space. Because of them, Mr. McCloskey was compelled to drive with the two north wheels of his buggy inside of defendant’s south track, while the others traveled south thereof. The horse attached to the buggy was moving forward' in a jog trot in the street immediately south of the south rail of defendant’s track and had so continued for about two blocks at the time the collision occurred. As before stated, McCloskey was driving eastward, and upon approaching a point at or about 31st street, an old gentleman suddenly stepped forward from the *22curb, immediately in front of the horse, so as to occasion the driver to veer it to the northward for the purpose of preventing an injury. This unexpected movement of the old gentleman immediately in front of the horse occasioned a sudden checking of the speed or stoppage of the buggy and instantaneously therewith defendant’s street car ran upon it with great force. As a result of the collision, the buggy was thrown to the northward, overturned and almost demolished, and plaintiff’s horse was precipitated forward with such violence and force as to inflict serious injuries upon it. Notwithstanding the collision, the street car traveled twice its leng’th to the eastward before the motorman was able to stop- it.
The specifications of negligence relied upon in the petition go to the effect that defendant’s agents and employees in charge of the car negligently and carelessly ran and operated it at a high and dangerous rate of speed and failed and omitted to ring a bell, sound a gong, or give other warning of the approach of the car as it neared plaintiff’s buggy; second, that the agents and employees in charge of the car negligently failed to keep- a vigilant watch for vehicles on the track or traveling in close proximity thereto, and, furthermore, that they negligently failed to stop- or check the car so as to avoid colliding with the buggy, after they saw, or by exercising ordinary care might have seen, its situation of peril.
There is no evidence whatever tending, to show in what distance the car might have been stopped, but the record abounds with proof tending to show negligence on the part of defendant in other respects. The evidence tends to prove that no bell, gong or other alarm of the approach of the car was sounded, and there is direct proof that the car was running at eight miles per hour at the very instant the collision occurred. The facts and circumstances in evidence, too. tend to prove that those in charge of the ear were re*23miss ás to their duty with respect to keeping a vigilant watch for those driving upon the tracks. It is true the vigilant watch ordinance was not introduced in evidence, but, be this as it may, though the term “vigilant watch” is employed in the petition, we do not understand the allegation predicates on a breach of that ordinance, but, instead, the averment proceeds as at common law, for at common law the duty is cast upon defendant to exercise ordinary care by looking out for the safety of persons seen to be driving upon its tracks in a public street in front of the cars or for those who are so driving where they may be observed by the operatives of a car, exercising ordinary care to that end. The evidence tending to, prove that' no gong or other alarm of the car’s approach was sounded, and that, notwithstanding the presence of the buggy on the south portion of the track, the rate of speed of the car was continued at eight miles per hour to the very point of collision sug’gests a strong inference to the effect that the motorman omitted to exercise' ordinary care in making observations for those upon the track traveling in. the same direction as that in which the car moved, for had such observations been made, it would seem that .an ordinarily prudent man would check the speed and so control the car as to be able to stop' it within less than twice its length after the collision occurred. It was broad daylight, the street was straight and open, and it appears plaintiff’s buggy was in plain view of the motorman, as the car approached, for a distance of some two or three blocks. In circumstances such as here prevail, where a portion of the street is rendered impassable by the deposit of large water pipes therein, plaintiff’s driver should not be declared negligent as a matter of law for driving eastward upon the tracks two or three blocks and at least until the obstruction was passed. We say this in view of the fact that no gong or alarm was sounded upon the car, for the driver *24had a right to assume that defendant would observe, its duty in respect of that matter in time to have enabled him to arrange for the passing of the car. [American Storage, etc. Co. v. St. Louis Transit Co., 120 Mo. App. 410, 97 S. W. 184; Conrad Gro. Co. v. St. Louis & Meramec River R. Co., 89 Mo. App. 391.] As to persons thus occupying a public street, neither has a superior right and both are required to exercise ordinary care to prevent a collision. But in cases such as this, where the.one is driving in front of and in full view of the other, the law casts the duty upon the one in the better position to observe the probability of injury he is about to inflict to first warn the other of impending peril, before a right of recovery may be denied as a matter of law on the grounds of the negligence of the injured party. [Latson v. St. Louis Transit Co., 192 Mo. 449, 91 S. W. 109; Schafstette v. St. Louis & Meramec River R. Co., 175 Mo. 142, 74 S. W. 826; Conrad Gro. Co. v. St. Louis & Meramec River R. Co., 89 Mo. App. 391.]
But it is argued that, though it appears defendant’s motorman was negligent, plaintiff is not entitled to recover here because the proximate cause of the collision was the unexpected act of the old gentleman who suddenly walked from the curb before plaintiff’s horse and occasioned the sudden stoppage of the buggy in front of the car. If it appeared that the car was running at the time at a very slight rate of speed and could not be checked immediately though an effort to do so was put forward, the argument would inhere with considerable force, for then the sudden stoppage of the buggy in front of the car, occasioned as it was by a fortuitous circumstance or the happening of an unexpected event, would no doubt introduce the element which attends the conduct of a wholly independent actor and operates directly to occasion an injury so as to remove defendant’s fault, if any, to a position of remoteness in the chain of causation. In such circum*25stances, the omission to ring the gong, though a breach of duty on the part of defendant, might be regarded as a remote, and the act of the old gentleman in walking immediately in front of the horse and causing the stoppage of the buggy as the proximate, cause of the injury, provided it appeared conclusively that the car, though managed with due care and slight speed, could not have been stopped and the collision averted after the stoppage of the buggy. But not so here, for it appears the act of the old gentleman in walking immediately in front of the buggy was either the happening of an unexpected event, introducing the element of accident which did no more than concur with defendant’s fault in inducing the injury, or it may be that the act of the old gentleman was careless or negligent when considered from the standpoint of plaintiff in view of the approaching car immediately behind the buggy, and, if so, such negligence did no more than concur with that of the motorman in causing the collision. In either event, defendant’s liability obtains. Though defendant’s negligence is not the sole cause of the injury, it may be liable therefor if it did no more than concur and contribute in -part directly with an accident which contributed in part thereto as well. [Brennan v. City of St. Louis, 92 Mo. 482, 2 S. W. 481; Schmidt v. St. Louis Transit Co., 140 Mo. App. 182, 120 S. W. 96.] The same is true if it appears the negligence of defendant concurred and contributed directly with the negligent act of an independent actor, or third party, which, operating together, occasioned the injury. [See Miller v. United Railways Co., 155 Mo. App. 528, 134 S. W. 1045; Schmidt v. St. Louis Transit Co., 140 Mo. App. 182, 120 S. W. 96.] And we believe it is true in every case where it appears the injury would not have occurred but for the omission of defendant to observe due care that such negligence is viewed in the eye of the law as a proximate cause of the injury, though it concurs *26and commingles with an independent canse as well, which contributes in part thereto. [See Miller v. United Railways Co., 155 Mo. App. 528, 134 S. W. 1045; Gratiot St. Warehouse Co. v. Missouri, K. & T. R. Co., 124 Mo. App. 545, 102 S. W. 11.] Besides the omission to sound the gong and, other matters above mentioned, it appears that the motorman was derelict in his duty with respect to controlling the speed of the car when plaintiff’s buggy was on the track immediately before him, for a reasonably prudent person should anticipate as within the range of reasonable probability, considering the use of a public thoroughfare, that something might occur to cause a sudden stoppage of the vehicle, as here. In this view, it is clear that the collision would not have occurred but for the fault of defendant’s motorman, and this is true whether the sudden stoppage of the buggy be regarded as occasioned i)y the intervention of an accidental cause on the track or the negligent act of the old gentleman. Obviously, we may not say that the act of the old gentleman in walking in front of the horse was either the sole cause of the collision or the proximate cause thereof in the sense essential to remove the fault of defendant to the position of remoteness in the chain of causation.. The case appears to be one for the jury. The judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reynolds, P. J., and Caulfield, J., concur.