Court Opinion

ID: 8018618
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:07:50.478256+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:31.314843
License: Public Domain

BLAIR, C.
One of respondent’s wagons was driven over appellant, crushing off his left arm, and this action was instituted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis to recover damages therefor. This appeal is from a judgment on a verdict the court directed for defendant at' the close of plaintiff’s, evidence.
At the time he was injured, Joseph Kozlowski was eighteen months old. About 2:30' p. m., August 17, 1908, this child was in charge of his (then) ten- or eleven-year-old sister and the two had been in a yard from which a covered passage three feet wide, ten feet high and twenty feet long led eastwardly into the alley running north and south through the block between Ninth and Tenth streets and south of O’Fallon street. Respondent’s wagon, in charge of a negro driver, was standing on the. east side of the alley, across from the entrance to the passageway described, the horses’ heads being to the south.
There was. evidence tending to show that the sister of the injured child momentarily left him, and when, on re-entering the yard, She saw he had gone into the alley, she ran through the passageway and on approaching the alley entrance saw the child near the rear wheel of respondent’s wagon and saw the driver getting on the wagon and getting ready to start the horses.. She testified she ran through the passageway and as she ran out into the alley she “hollered at” the driver, “Hey, mister, stop;” that he turned around and looked at her but “didn’t notice” and “didn’t listen” and didn’t stop but struck the horses with his whip, driving on and over the little boy who was playing by the wheel of the wagon.
*337The children had entered the yard they were in from the alley, coming straight np the alley but a minute or two before the little boy re-entered it, and it is a fair inference the wagon was then in the alley, but there is no evidence whether the driver was in a position to see the children at that time.
As the little girl entered the alley and cried to the driver to stop she was greatly agitated and was running at the topi of her speed toward the child near the rear wagon wheel. There is evidence she was quite beside herself with excitement. The wagon was fourteen feet long and seven feet wide and the load upon it was higher than the driver’s head when he was seated, but the evidence tends to show he was standing on a step or foot-rest on the front of the wagon when the little girl shouted to him to stop. There was also evidence he could have easily glanced along the side of the wagon and would then have seen the child near the wheel, and evidence the child was seen a few moments before “wandering around in the alley.”
After injuring the child, the driver did not stop his team until arrested a block or so away from the scene.
There was other evidence on other matters but that stated is all that relates to the question whether there was sufficient evidence of negligence to take the case to the jury, and this is the question presented by the appeal.
Demurrer Allowable°e: inferences. It was the duty of the trial court, in passing upon the demurrer to the evidence, “to make every inference of fact in favor of the party offering the evidence, which a jury might, with any degree of propriety, have inferred in bis favor . . . but the court was not at liberty, in passing on such demurrer, to make inferences of fact in favor of the defendant to countervail or overthrow either presump*338tions of law or inferences of fact in favor of the plaintiff ; that would clearly be usurping the province of the jury.” [Buesching v. Gaslight Co., 73 Mo. l. c. 231.]
Negligence Another principle is that “negligence is ordinarily a question for the jury. It is always so when ^ie evidence on material points is conflicting, or where the facts being undisputed different minds might reasonably draw different conclusions from them . . '. and when the question of negligence arises upon even a conceded state of facts from which reasonable men might arrive at different conclusions', it must be submitted to the jury, and if the inferences' to be drawn from the evidence are not certain or incontrovertible, the question of negligence cannot be passed upon by the court.” [Gratiot v. Railroad, 116 Mo. l. c. 466.]
wagon°f Evidence, Whether in this case the driver was negligent must be determined in the light of all the circumstances. He was: not entitled to the exclus^ve 1186 the alley. He certainly was not justified in-disregarding the injured child’s1 presence near the wheels of the wagon if he had notice of it in any way before he put the wagon in motion. There is no direct evidence he had such notice. A jury, however, might with propriety have found from the evidence that the driver heard the little girl’s cry to him. She testified positively that when she called to him to stop he turned around and looked at her. It is a fair inference that he was not more than twenty feet from her at the time. The jury would have been justified in concluding that when the ■child testified the driver turned but “didn’t listen to” her and that he looked at her “but he didn’t notice,” and (in answer to a leading question on cross-examination which included an incorrect assumption as to her previous testimony on the point) that he “looked as if he didn’t hear her,” she meant the driver did not heed her warning.
*339When the little girl cried, ont to the driver, the injured boy was then at the rear wheel of the wagon and it was not yet in motion. In connection with the cry to stop., which the jury would have been justified in finding the driver heard, the evidence would justify a further finding that, in response, he turned and saw the little girl and saw that she was greatly agitated and saw that her agitation was causing her to run excitedly toward the part of the wagon immediately in front of the rear wheel where the injured child was standing or playing. The driver was getting ready to start the horses. If he heard the cry to stop, it is a fair inference from the evidence that he understood it was addressed to him. Taking these things into consideration and adding to them the fact that when the driver turned he saw the little girl and saw that though' calling to him to stop she was not running toward him but toward the rear wheel of the wagon and for some purpose attempting to reach it in great haste and that whatever that purpose was it had greatly excited her, it must be said, assuming, as we must, that these things are true, that the driver had sufficient notice there was danger of some kind to be apprehended if he then put his wagon in motion.
Warning. It was not necessary that the warning should have "been specific. It was negligence for the driver to start his horses after being warned that injury /?. to some one or something was likely to result from such an act. There was evidence he disregarded the warning, whipped up his horses, and ran over the child. If these things are true, his master is liable for the consequences of that negligence even though he did not forsee, or even if he could not foresee, the actual consequences at the time. [Hoepper v. Hotel Co., 142 Mo. l. c. 389; Miller v. Railroad, 90 Mo. l. c. 394; Christianson v. Railroad, 67 Minn. l. c. 97, and cases cited; Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Parry, 67 Kan. l. c. 519; City of Dixon v. Scott, 181 Ill. l. c. 119; *340Coolidge v. Hallauer, 126 Wis. l. c. 250; Hill v. Winsor, 118 Mass. l. c. 258, 259.]
The case should have been submitted to the jury. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Broiun, G., concurs.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion of Blair., C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
All the judges, concur.