Loftus v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

IN BANC.

PER CURIAM.

All of the opinion of Craves, J., in division, is adopted as the views of the court, except the result and those views expressed in paragraph three thereof, wherein it is held that the verdict is so excessive as to authorize an affirmance of the judgment on that ground. The majority of the court is not

*475of opinion that the size of the verdict is snch as to authorize the affirmance of the judgment, nisi. The court is of the further opinion that there is no real conflict between this case and the Davidson case mentioned in the divisional opinion, and have this day expressed more fully their views upon this question in a per curiam opinion in the case of Price v. Metropolitan Street Ry. Co., reported at page 435 of this Report. A majority of the court, Graves, J., not assenting, is of the opinion that the amount of the verdict is not such as to authorize the action of the lower court in sustaining the motion for a new trial, and there being no other error in the record, the cause should be reversed and remanded with directions to reinstate plaintiff’s judgment of the date as originally entered. It is so ordered.

Graves,- J., adheres to the views of paragraph three as originally expressed; Valliant, C. J., absent.

IN DIVISION ONE.

GRAVES, J.

This is a companion case to the case of Elizabeth Price v. Metropolitan Street Railway Company, decided at this term and reported at page 435 of this Report. Both eases grew out of the same accident and both were tried before the same judge in the court nisi. As to the accident and the causes or want of cause, the evidence of the two cases is along the same lines, many of the same witnesses being used, and their testimony is substantially to the same effect in each case. This case should be read with the other for a detail of the facts.

Plaintiff was working for the firm of Emery, Bird & Thayer in Kansas City, Mo., although she lived in Kansas City, Kansas. She boarded a street car at Grandview in Kansas City, Kansas, and then transferred and got on the front end of the trailer or coach on the Twelfth Street train going east from Mulberry *476street, which train was wrecked as fully stated in the companion case. This plaintiff was standing up in the front end of the coach or trailer and was seriously injured.

The order of her testimony was such as we find in the other case, that is to say, the plaintiff was not content with showing the collision, the attendant circumstances and her consequent injuries, and the relationship of passenger and carrier, hut proceeded, in chief, to introduce other evidence.

She sued for $15,000, and the cause being submitted to the jury a verdict in her favor for the sum of $7,595' was returned by the jury.

The negligence charged in the petition is thus stated: “And at a point commonly known as the Twelfth Street incline, the defendant carelessly and negligently caused and permitted the train on which plaintiff was riding as a passenger, to come in violent collision with another train of defendant’s, such other train being on said Twelfth Street and on said incline as aforesaid. That said collision was occasioned without any fault on the part of plaintiff, but by reason of the negligence as aforesaid of the defendant. That said cars collided with great force and violence, wrecking both trains of defendant, in which collision and wreck plaintiff was injured as follows:” etc.

Defendant’s answer was a general denial. After verdict was returned the defendant filed its motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, which motions were by the court sustained by an order of record in this language: “Now on this day it is ordered by the court that the motion for a new trial and motion in arrest of judgment he and the same are hereby sustained because the court erred in giving instruction ‘No. One P.’ to which the plaintiff excepts.”

Said instruction One P reads thus: “The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff was a passenger upon a train of de*477fendant at the time she claims to have been injured, then the due obligation of the defendant to plaintiff was to use the highest practicable degree of care of very prudent, skillful and experienced men engaged in that kind of business, to carry her safely, and a failure of the defendant (if you believe there was a failure), to use such highest degree of care would constitute negligence on its part; and defendant would be responsible for all injuries resulting to plaintiff, if any, from such negligence, if any. And if you believe from the evidence that there was a collision between two trains of defendant on one of which plaintiff was a passenger (if you believe she was a passenger thereon) the burden of proof is cast upon the defendant to establish that there was no negligence on its part; and that the injury, if any, was occasioned by inevitable accident, or by some cause which such highest degree of care could'not have avoided, and if defendant has not shown that there was no negligence on its part, or that the injury was occasioned by inevitable accident, or by a cause that said highest degree of care could not have avoided, you will find for plaintiff, provided she was injured in said collision.”

Much evidence, medical and lay, was introduced as to the character of plaintiff’s injuries, as also there was evidence, as to the condition of her health prior and subsequent to the accident. So, too, there was evidence of her earnings at date of injury. In this case-there was for the defendant the additional evidence of the train crew on the train going up the incline, which collided with the one coming backward down the incline. Their testimony was to the effect that the appliances, rope and other things were in proper condition, and that the trains ran two and one-half minutes apart at the time.

This sufficiently states this case when it is taken and read with the Price case, supra. Points made will be noted in the opinion.

*478I. In this case as in the case of Price v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., supra, the defendant attacks the propriety of giving instruction No. IP. The instruction is identical with the one given in the Price case, and what we have said therein is applicable here. The defendant goes one step further with the contention here, and charges that the use of the words “and experienced” renders the instruction bad. Defendant seems to have impressed the learned trial judge with the alleged error in this instruction, in this case, although unable to so impress him in the Price case.

The use of the words “and experienced” did not render this instruction faulty. [Magrane v. Railroad, 183 Mo. l. c. 128; Heyde v. Railroad, 102 Mo. App. l. c. 541.]

In the Magrane case, supra, Valliant, J., in speaking of the degree of care required of a carrier toward its passengers, says: “It is a very high, degree of care, but not the utmost care that human imagination can conceive. It is the highest degree of care that can reasonably be expected of prudent, skillful and experienced men engaged in that kind of business. The term as far as is capable by human care and foresight’ in this connection is liable to be misconstrued by a jury as meaning care to the utmost limit imaginable, that is, care without limit, whereas the highest degree of care practicable among prudent and skillful men in that business is all that can reasonably be expected of any men and it is all that the law demands.”

In the latter case, Goode, J., said: “The court gave an instruction that if the jury found the agents, servants and employees of the defendant in control of the car on which plaintiff was a passenger, or of the track on which said car was running, or at the switch at the pi,ace where the derailment occurred, and could have prevented said derailment and collision by the exercise of the very high degree of care and foresight *479of skillful, careful and practical railroad operatives under the same or similar circumstances; then the plaintiff was entitled to recover. That instruction states the law with reference to the care defendant was bound to exercise to prevent an injury to the plaintiff, and is couched in- approved language. [Furnish v. Railroad, 102 Mo. 438; O’Connell v. Railroad, 106 Mo. 482; Willmott v. Railroad, 106 Mo. 535; Jackson v. Railroad, 118 Mo. 199; Hite v. Railroad, 130 Mo. 132; Sullivan v. Railroad, 133 Mo. 1; Feary v. Railroad, 162 Mo. l. c. 100; Parker v. Railroad, 69 Mo. App. 54; Freeman v. Railroad, 95 Mo. App. l. c. 99.]”

There is no difference between “practical railroad operatives” and “skillful and experienced men.” A practical railroad operative must be one of experience in that line. The instruction complained of follows the verbiage of the opinion in the Magrane case, and is fully sustained by that and the Heyde case, as well as by other opinions of this court cited in the Heyde case. The trial court was in error in sustaining the motion for new trial on this ground.

II. The further contention is made that this court should not disturb the discretion exercised by the trial court in granting the new trial. In other words, that the granting of a new trial rests within the sound discretion of the trial court. In the broad sense, the granting of a new trial does rest within the sound discretion of the trial judge, and this discretion, like all judical discretions, should not be disturbed when properly exercised. We are cited to the recent cases of Rodan v. Railroad, 207 Mo. l. c. 406, and Seeger v. Silver Co., 193 Mo. l. c. 407, as stating correct rules upon the question.

In the latter case, Judge Marshall said: “The rule is now well settled in this State that this court will not reverse the action of a trial court in granting one new trial, unless the case is such that no verdict *480in favor of the party to whom the new trial is thus granted, could, under any circumstances, he permitted to stand.”

And in the former, Judge Lamm said: “In the first place, in limine, it must be assumed as a common - place of the law, arising to the level of an axiom, that the granting of a new trial rests within the sound discretion of the trial court; and its action in that behalf will not be disturbed on appeal unless it appears that its discretionary power was abused, i. e., exercised in an arbitrary or improvident manner. [R. S. 1899, sec. 800; and see first note under that section, Ann. Stat. 1906, 761, where the authorities are gathered.]”

These announcements must be taken in the light of the facts of the cases. In the Seeger case the trial court had sustained a demurrer to plaintiff’s testimony and thereby forced a nonsuit. Motion was made to set aside the nonsuit and that motion sustained by the court nisi, from which order the defendant appealed. Upon such an appeal Judge Marshall used the language above quoted. It must be noted that the sole question before the trial court and this court was the sufficiency of the evidence to make a case for plaintiff. At first blush, the trial court thought not, but upon considering the motion to set aside the nonsuit reached a different conclusion. The discretion exercised then was one as to the facts, and not one purely and simply of law. So, too, in the Rodan case. The trial court concluded, upon motion for new trial filed by defendant, that it had erred in giving a certain instruction, which instruction should not have been given in view of certain facts shown in the trial. In other words, the court had instructed the jury that in the absence of evidence that the deceased did not look and listen for an approaching car, then the jury were at liberty to presume that he did look and listen. A witness for plaintiff, and the only eye-witness, had testified in effect that he saw deceased leave the sidewalk *481and go on across to the railroad track, paying no attention to the approaching car. Judge Lamm’s remarks were induced by this state of affairs. The question before the trial court, and upon which the judicial discretion was exercised, was a mixed question of law and fact. The trial court concluded that in view of the facts testified to by this witness there was positive testimony that deceased did not look or listen before going upon the railroad track, and therefore there was no place for an instruction upon the ground of presumption. So that in this case the discretion was really exercised as to the facts of the case. Both of those cases announce the proper rule in cases where judicial discretion has been exercised as to the facts and the weighing of the evidence as to the facts. In such cases we will not disturb such discretion in a case wherein there is sufficient evidence to sustain a verdict in favor of the party for whom such discretion has been exercised. But these cases are not this case. Upon the facts of the ease at bar a verdict for either party could be sustained, but the discretion of the trial judge was not directed to the facts, so far as the question now before us is concerned. He was passing judgment upon a clear question of law, and we have concluded that his judgment on that question was erroneous. When the judicial act is directed solely to a question of law and the act is erroneous, it does not fall within the rule of the exercise of sound judicial discretion. There is no discretion as to the law of a case. Nor can there be an exercise of a sound discretion as to the law of a case. So that when we speak of the granting of a new trial being within the sound discretion of the trial judge, we have no reference to a case where the new trial is granted solely upon the ground that the law has been erroneously given, when in fact it has been properly given.

*482III. Whilst we cannot say that the trial court properly sustained the motion for new trial upon the ground stated by the court, yet we have always held that if the motion for new trial could be properly sustained upon other grounds, we will not disturb the action of the trial court. In this case the motion for new trial attacks the verdict as being excessive. Plaintiff was earning $5.50 per week at date of accident. In the.accident she received the following injuries, viz.: the large bone of the left leg between the knee and ankle was broken, an oblique fracture; she had a sprain and bruises in her back; her right side and hip were bruised; the right foot and leg were bruised, principally between the knee and ankle. Such were the injuries described by Dr. Leonard. After the injury she appeared to be troubled with nervousness which is ‘ ‘ apt to be permanent. ’ ’ The left leg was shortened about an inch, although it is not fully explained just how that could be with one solid bone left therein. The injury to the hip is not classed as permanent, nor are the sundry bruises mentioned. She was eleven weeks in the hospital and used crutches until the June following the accident on November 4th. The testimony of the two medical experts is not such as to justify a verdict for the sum obtained in our judgment. So that whilst we think there is ample evidence to support a verdict for the plaintiff, and the law was properly declared in the case, so far as she was concerned, yet the motion for a new trial was properly sustained on the ground of an excessive verdict and the action of the trial court should be and is affirmed.

IV. In this case, as in the Price case, it is strenuously urged that the petition pleads specific negligence and not general negligence. Of course, if this be true, the instruction given for plaintiff on the theory of res ipsa loquitur would be erroneous. We are cited to Davidson v. Railroad, 211 Mo. 320, as sustaining this *483contention, and as pointed ont in the price case, there is a conflict between the views we entertain and those expressed.upon that point in the Davidson case, supra. For that reason we will affirm the judgment, hut transfer the cause to the court In Bane for further consideration. Cause is transferred to Court In Banc.

Valliant, Jhowever, is not of the opinion that this case conflicts with the Davidson case.