DocketNumber: Appeal, 24
Judges: Maxey, Frazer, Simpson, Kephart, Maxex, Drew
Filed Date: 4/25/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Plaintiff brought an action in trespass to recover damages for the death of her husband, whose body was, on March 5, 1934, struck by one of defendant's street cars. The negligence charged was that defendant failed to stop its car when its motorman saw plaintiff's body on the track and that the car was operated in a reckless manner, and ran into the body despite the fact that defendant's car was a sufficient distance away to have been brought to a stop before striking it. The case was tried before a jury and a verdict returned for the plaintiff in the sum of $4,677. A rule was entered for judgment n. o. v., and the rule was made absolute. Plaintiff appealed.
The weakness of plaintiff's case arises from the fact that there was no proof that her husband was alive just before the street car came in contact with him or his body. About fifteen minutes before he was observed to be lying on defendant's tracks, was the last time he was seen alive. He was then on the sidewalk in the company of two men near the point where his body later was found. When the street car struck him, his body was lying across the tracks and exhibited no signs of life. What caused him to be upon the rails has never been disclosed. As to whether he was killed (accidentally or otherwise) somewhere else and his body placed upon the tracks, or whether he was seized by an illness and fell upon the tracks, there is only conjecture. Appellant claims that she is entitled to the presumption that her husband was alive just before being struck by the street car. There is no such presumption *Page 516
to avail her in this case. Here the burden of proof, as in all civil cases, was upon the plaintiff. She was obliged to prove every essential averment of her statement of claim, one of which was that as a result of the street car striking her husband dragging his body a distance of 150 feet he met death. Plaintiff cannot be relieved of the burden of proof she assumed by invoking any presumption. We said in Watkins v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
In the case at bar there is not a particle of direct evidence that the plaintiff's husband was alive when his body was seen lying on the tracks. There are no attendant circumstances from which it could be inferred that he was alive just before the street car struck him. When a person reaches crossroads and possesses no knowledge as to which road will take him to his destination, and there are no facts or circumstances at hand from which he can draw inferences as to which is the proper road, his choice of the roads open to him rests entirely upon conjecture or guess. Likewise, in the present case, the answer to the question: was the plaintiff's husband killed by the street car or was he already dead when the street car struck him, rests entirely upon conjecture or guess. In Cain et al. v. Booth Flinn, Ltd.,
It is not necessary to discuss the question of defendant's negligence, for plaintiff's case failed in proof on another vital point, to wit, that the death of deceased was caused by the operation of defendant's car, whether that operation was negligent or otherwise. See Stringert v. Ross Twp.,
The judgment is affirmed. *Page 518