This is an appeal from a judgment for damages for injuries respondent received when one of appellant's street cars upon which he was acting as both motorman and conductor collided with another car.
The accident occurred in North Kansas City, which is on the north side of the Missouri River and separated from Kansas City by that stream. The terrain there is low and flat for more than a mile from the north bank of the river. In the fall and spring dense fogs are of frequent occurrence in these bottoms. North Kansas City is platted so as to correspond, in a measure, with the streets and avenues of Kansas City. The road or street which runs north from Kansas City across the Interurban bridge is called Grand Avenue. Along it are laid the double tracks of the K.C., C.C. St. J. Railway, an electric line. Fourteenth Street, in North Kansas City, runs east and west, and crosses Grand Avenue at a point a quarter of a mile or more north of the Missouri River. Troost Avenue runs north and south, parallel to Grand Avenue, and is a half mile or more east of it. Armour *Page 25 Road runs east from a point on Grand Avenue nearly a half mile north of Fourteenth Street, and crosses Troost Avenue, with a northing at that point of a few hundred feet — about one block. The fourth side of the trapezoid is that part of Grand Avenue between its intersection with Fourteenth Street and that with Armour Road. Grand Avenue and Troost Avenue are the parallel sides. Appellant operates its cars on tracks which lead out of Kansas City and across the bridge, then pass around the sides of the figure described. Double tracks are used on Grand Avenue and Fourteenth Street, and single tracks on Troost Avenue and Armour Road, except that tracks at Oak Street, a block east of Grand Avenue on Armour Road, could be used for purposes of passing cars. There was a passing place at the intersection of Troost Avenue and Armour Road. In addition, there was a switch on Armour Road which was occasionally used. The length of the run was between four and five miles, and what was called "the round trip" was twice that. Appellant's car-barns were situated near Grand Avenue and Armour Road. At the time respondent was injured five cars were operated by appellant. These were "one-man cars"; i.e., one man acted as both motorman and conductor. Under the schedule in force the first car (on the morning of September 17, 1918, in charge of Haggard) left the car-barn at 5:35 or 5:38. The cars were "spaced" about twelve minutes apart. Connington took out the second car. After the five cars in use began their runs, some of them began to run around the loop in one direction and some in another. The result of this was that they were required to pass each other on the trip around the loop, either on the double tracks or at the place or places provided for passing at points along the single-track part of the loop line. The evidence tends to show that, other than the schedule furnished, appellant had adopted no rule or system whereby the operator of one car could tell where the other cars were, except as he could see them as they approached or passed him. In daylight, in the absence of fog, snow, heavy *Page 26 rains, and the like, the cars could be seen from one end of each leg of the loop to the other. In the fogs, which frequently covered the bottoms, cars could be seen but a short distance. These fogs would be very dense for a space, and then partial "breaks" would occur in them. At some places, in such fogs, cars would be visible but a few feet, and at others they could be seen for seventy-five or a hundred feet. On the morning and late-afternoon runs the traffic was heavy and quite frequently the men were not able to make the schedule. The presence of fogs had a like effect. The tracks were not so laid that vehicles, of which there does not seem to have been many, could pass along, across or over them very conveniently. The evidence tends to show that the men were frequently behind time on their runs. They adopted or fell into a practice of designating the car which first left the barn as the "leader" of the next car to leave, and of calling the second car the follower of the first, and so on. The evidence tends to show that these names were adhered to, though the "leader" and its "follower" soon began running around the loop in opposite directions. As a result of the cars almost customarily getting late in the mornings by reason of the early heavy traffic, fogs, etc., a practice arose whereby the operators of the cars, at least of a leader and its follower, would agree upon the point at which they would meet and pass each other. There was also a sort of practice or understanding among the men that when a car became so late that "it got on the other fellow's time," it would miss one trip and start in again. Some witnesses said this was done when a car got ten minutes late. The evidence tends to show this was not strictly followed. In operating on schedule, if on time or about on time, or under the agreements as to passing places when late, the follower would await the appearance of its leader before starting in on a single track. When his leader appeared that was understood to give a clearance to the follower to the next passing place, or to the agreed place of meeting, as the case might be. Appellant did not institute these practices *Page 27 and they were not invariably followed. They were devices of the men to take care of conditions which arose with much frequency, and had been followed, in the manner stated, for some time. If a car was late but not so late as to get on the time of another car, it strove to make up its time and avoid losing a trip. The average rate of speed was reduced about one-half in fogs, or to eight or ten miles per hour.
On the morning of September 17th, when respondent was injured, the fog was dense and the cars were all eight or ten minutes late. Respondent and Connington had agreed to pass at Armour and Oak, near Armour and Grand Avenue. Shore's car was late and was out of place. Respondent was completing his third trip. Shore left Fourteenth and Grand just ahead of respondent and proceeded east. Respondent followed on the same track. At Fourteenth and Troost, Phenix passed respondent. He went west on Fourteenth, and respondent went north on Troost. At Troost and Armour Road respondent turned west and started along the single track for Armour and Oak, the end of the double track just east of Grand Avenue, and the agreed meeting point with Connington. In the meantime Phenix had proceeded along Armour Road to Oak and passed Connington there, and had begun another trip south on Grand Avenue. He was late, as stated, and should have passed Armour and Oak before this. As soon as Phenix's car cleared, Connington moved out upon the single track and started along Armour Road for Troost Avenue. About a block west of Troost the collision occurred. The evidence tends to show that in the dense fog which enveloped him, Connington mistook Phenix's car for that of respondent. This meant to him that he had kept his agreement, and that his leader had come out of the single track and that he was entitled to go in upon it. This he did, with the result stated. Respondent says his car was moving eight or ten miles per hour when he first descried Connington's head light; that when he was first able to see it, it was ten or twelve feet away. Connington testified he *Page 28 could see respondent's car some seventy-five feet away. According to both of them, they made every effort to stop, but did not accomplish it. The testimony is that there was no method, rule or system whereby one could tell where the other cars were on a morning like this when the cars got late.
The negligence alleged is the failure of appellant to prescribe rules, methods or system of the safe operation of the cars in the circumstances shown in this case. The answer is (1) a general denial, (2) a general plea of contributory negligence, and (3) plea of assumption of risk. The judgment is for $13,000. Other facts appear in the opinion.
I. It is urged that no negligence was shown. Appellant does not deny that "one who employs servants in complex and dangerous business ought to prescribe rules sufficient for its orderly and safe management" nor that "a railroad company is boundDuty of to regulate the time and manner of running its trains,Company. so as to avoid collisions, and to enable all its servants to know when a train may be expected, and thus to avoid danger." [Reagan v. Railway, 93 Mo. l.c. 351, 352.] It contends (1) that "the evidence shows an established system;" (2) that the custom adopted is a part of appellant's system as a matter of law; (3) that the evidence shows the system worked successfully and was (4) sufficient.
(1) The only thing prescribed by appellant for the government of its employees in operating its cars was a schedule showing the time cars left the barn and were to reach designated points on their trips. The evidence tends to show that in theSchedule circumstances and conditions existing along theof Cars: line this schedule neither was nor could be nor hadAbandonment. been followed with any sort of regularity during the early morning hours, particularly in the fall and spring when dense fogs were of frequent or usual occurrence. So far as this case is concerned all the evidence shows *Page 29 that the schedule was neither enforced nor enforceable and fails to disclose any effort on appellant's part to enforce it. It was at least open to the jury to find that in the morning hours and foggy times, the schedule furnished had been abandoned with appellant's knowledge and assent, in so far as any question in this case is concerned. [Yost v. Railroad, 245 Mo. l.c. 245, 246, and cases cited; McNee v. Trolley Co., 170 Mass. 283.] When a schedule is departed from or abandoned, it is the duty of the company to provide some other rule or system which will bring about the safe running of its cars. [Lewis v. Seifert, 116 Pa. 628; 3 Labatt on Master Servant (2 Ed.) sec. 1123, p. 2971, et seq.] The objections to instruction one are answered by these considerations.
(2) The practice of waiting and losing a trip when a car became ten minutes late, or so late as to get on the time of another car, is urged to have been a sufficient precaution in the premises and enough to absolve appellant fromEstablished liability. In the first place, the practice was notSubstitute. always followed by the men. Second, the practice was not established by appellant, and it is not, to say the least, conclusively shown that appellant sanctioned or enforced it in such fashion as to give it character as a rule prescribed by it. Third, the cars are not conclusively shown to have been ten minutes late, nor to have been on each other's time. At least, this is true of respondent's and Connington's cars.
(3) It is argued appellant's system worked successfully for sometime and, therefore, every inference of negligence was rebutted.
(a) If the jury found, as the evidence authorized it to find, that appellant had no system in the sense of rules or methods applicable under existing conditions and either promulgated or sanctioned by it and supported by itsAssumption of authority, then this argument assumes a factNon-Existing Fact. put out of the case by the verdict and founds itself upon it. *Page 30
(b) Further, though the practice adopted by the men, and now brought forward by appellant, could be said to be shown to have been so treated by appellant as to be transmuted into a rule or system of operation backed by appellant's authority in such a way as was equivalent to its imposition by appellant, yet the practice was not universal, left the matter of losing a trip to the individual operator, and did not apply in the circumstances existing at the time.
(4) The practice of operating cars, going in opposite directions on a single track, by agreement among the men as to passing places, in dense fogs, snow and heavy rains, when the track could be seen but a short distance, and while belated cars were getting out of place in efforts to make up time, is so clearly dangerous as obviously to "make the question one of common knowledge and experience." [3 Labatt, p. 2952.] Nor was this practice shown to have been established by appellant, nor is the inference of appellant's sanction of it a conclusive one.
II. It is insisted respondent was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. (1) The rule as to waiting on the siding and losing a trip was not, as pointed out, shown to be applicable to the situation, as a matter of law,Contributory and respondent's failure to wait does notNegligence. conclusively bar recovery. (2) The evidence amply justified a finding that the schedule was neither applied nor applicable in conditions like those existing when the collision occurred. (3) The evidence tends strongly to show that no rule requiring cars to be operated "under control" in fogs, rain and snow, was prescribed by appellant. The practice established by the men gave respondent the right of way from Troost and Armour to Grand and Oak, and he cannot be said conclusively to be shown to have been contributorily negligent because he acted upon it. It was a justifiable inference that it was the absence of established system, plus the insufficiency of this voluntary *Page 31 practice, which appellant failed to make any effort to supplement or supplant with a reasonably safe system, which caused the collision.
III. Leave to amend to conform to the evidence was given. An application for a continuance on this ground was denied. The point is argued. The petition had described the practice in use as requiring west-bound cars to "meet andAmending Petition: pass cars coming from the west either at OakContinuance. Street or at Troost Avenue" and Armour Road; "and that a car bound west should wait at Troost Avenue for the east-bound car, and then proceed west and have the right of way along said single track until Oak Street was reached, where another east-bound car should be met and passed." The amendment permitted changed this, so one passing place, under the practice, was alleged to be at Fourteenth and Troost and not at Troost and Armour. The car for which respondent was required to wait was his "leader" and it passed him at Fourteenth and Troost. There was no collision between these cars. Respondent was Connington's leader, and Connington should have awaited him at Armour and Oak. It made no difference, in this case, whether the car whose passing gave respondent the right of way to Armour and Oak was to pass him, under the practice, or did pass him in fact, at Fourteenth and Troost, or at Armour and Troost. The effect was the same, in either event. It was Connington's failure to wait at Armour and Oak which caused the trouble and not the passing of respondent by his leader at this or that point; and it was a reasonable inference that Connington's error was due to the absence of a reasonable system for operating in fogs.
IV. The objections to the argument of counsel were sustained and no further action was requested. TheArgument to Jury. record does not furnish a basis for the complaint now made.
V. It is argued that the verdict was excessive. In the collision the heavier car, operated by Connington, *Page 32 crushed the from of respondent's car. Respondent was confined to his bed for five weeks and used crutches for nearlyExcessive two months thereafter. He then went to work asVerdict. sheet-metal worker's helper and has been receiving wages a little larger than those paid him by appellant. He still loses one or two days a week because of his injuries. The evidence tends to show that he suffered a blow across the back and hips which broke off the transverse processes of the fourth and fifth lumbar vertebrae, and perhaps of the third; the pelvic arch was "slightly tipped;" he suffered a wound about an inch deep and the "size of a nickle or quarter" on the outside of the upper left leg; a blow and cut back of the left ear; a cut across the elbow; there was a bruise across his back, and his hands and wrists were scratched and bruised. The evidence shows respondent was a healthy, active and robust man prior to the injury. He has lost eighteen pounds, and has become very nervous and excitable. The injured region of the back continues painful and interferes with his movements. He uses his hands in sitting down and arising, and turning in bed or stooping over gives him pain. The left sciatic nerve is quite tender and painful, and he walks with a decided limp. His hearing in the left ear is impaired one-half or more and is getting worse. One expert says it is practically destroyed. His kidneys were affected and give him pain and some incontinence of urine has resulted. His memory has been affected. His sleep is broken and is not restful. He is unable to do any heavy lifting, and his brother-in-law, who employed him for the milling company, has had to take him off of work requiring heavy lifting. He moves slowly, contrary to his previous habit.
This is the second verdict. The first was for $12,000 and was returned about four months before the trial under review. These trials occurred more than two years after respondent was injured, and the evidence was quite full on the questions concerning the character and extent *Page 33 and results of his hurts. This evidence shows conditions in the judging of which the trial judge and the jury had more than the usual advantage over this court in passing upon the amount of damages to be awarded. Two juries have practically agreed on that amount. The new trial was granted after the first verdict on the ground that incompetent evidence had been admitted. The trial judge, therefore, has approved both verdicts, in so far as damages allowed is concerned. In the circumstances the record does not make a case proper for intervention on that question. The judgment is affirmed. All concur.