74 Mo. 553 | Mo. | 1881
This is an action by respondent to recover damages against defendant, for the death of her husband alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant’s servants, in managing and operating a train on its-, railroad.
On the 20th day of July, 1878, the deceased, fifty or- or sixty years of age, in company with his three sons, was-walking on the railroad. The deceased saw the train coming, a half mile away, before he went upon a long trestle-west of Chillicothe. After getting on the trestle, the oldest son, who was about fourteen years of age, told him he had better come back, but the deceased said he thought he-could cross the trestle and get away. They had proceeded about one-third of the way across the trestle, when the oldest boy turned back and got off. The others went forward, and when about half way over the trestle, the father and younger son sat down on the ends of the ties, and the engine and three or four cars passed without injuring them,, when the deceased raised up and was struck, knocked off,, and received injuries which caused his death.
The negligence of the deceased was such as to preclude a recovery unless the servants of the'defendant running the train saw the danger to which he had exposed himself, in time to stop the train and avert the calamity. It is no defense to the action that he was guilty of negligence in going on the trestle, no matter how gross, if the servants of the company saw him on the trestle, and after-discovering him there, could have stopped the train and thus avoided injuring him. His negligence then ceases to be a matter for consideration.
As to whether defendant’s said servants saw the deceased on the trestle, and could then have stopped the train and prevented the accident, the plaintiff was permitted to prove by a witness that after deceased was struck,. and after the train was stopped, two of the trainmen, whom he touk to be the fireman and engineer, came up,,
The observations above quoted from the opinion of the New York court of appeals, were made in a case-strongly resembling the case at bar. The defendant was. sued for negligently running a railroad car, drawn by horses, against the plaintiff, in one of the streets of the city of New York. A police officer was allowed to testify that he arrested the driver directly after the accident, the citizens having stopped the car, and the driver having got outside the crowd which had gathered, and, on being arrested, assigned as a reason why he did not stop the car that the brakes were out of order. The court of appeals held it error to admit the testimony, and observed that: “ The-alleged wrong was complete, and the driver when he made-the statement was only endeavoring to account for what he had done. He was manifestly excusing himself and throwing the blame on his principal.” Here the servant who remarked to his fellow-servant: “ If you had stopped the train when I told you, you would not have killed him,”' was only endeavoring to exculpate himself and throw the-blame on his fellow-servant, and neither his remark nor-the reply to it by the other, was made in the prosecution of the business of their employer, nor did they immediately precede or accompany the act which led to the catastrophy, or constitute any part of that act, but if admissible at all would only go to show another fact, and were not of themselves facts to be proved as “ verbal acts.” They were-, only intended to prove another fact.
The cases of Insurance Co. v. Mosley, 8 Wall. 397; Comm. v. McPike, 3 Cush. 181, and Brownell v. Mo. Pac. R’y Co., 47 Mo. 243, relied upon by respondent’s counsel, were not cases-
It is not to be denied that some of the authorities cited by respondent’s counsel, and others not cited, sustain his position. With few exceptions, they are not cases, however, in which the question of agency was involved, but cases in which the declarations offered were those of persons injured, as to the causes of, or to the persons who inflicted the injuries, and, while there may be circumstances which would warrant a less rigorous application of the principle, in such cases, we are satisfied that a strict adherence to principle is the better course when it is sought to charge a master for the acts of his servant; and where there is such a conflict of authority on a subject, we are inclined to be guided by principle, rather than follow adjudications which have departed from it, in the apparent necessity for a departure in the given case. If, in the present instance, the train could have been stopped after deceased was discovered on the trestle by defendant’s servants, that fact can be proved by legitimate testimony. The servants who made the declarations offered in evidence, are competent witnesses for plaintiff to prove that her husband was seen on the trestle by the servant^ managing the train, and that the train could have been stopped before it reached him. It is no answer to this that plaintiff' could not rely upon them because they were in defendant’s employment. We are not to assume, in order to admit incompetent evidence, that the only person to whom the fact to be proved
For the error committed in admitting the declarations: of the defendant’s servants, the judgment is reversed and. the cause remanded.