198 Mo. App. 293 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1918
In this case the respondent, plaintiff below, recovered a judgment for $5000 for personal
Plaintiff’s petition seeks to recover on the following grounds:
First: The violation of an ordinance of the city of St. Marys, Missouri, limiting the speed of freight trains to. six miles per hour.
Second: The violation of an ordinance of the city of St. Marys, requiring a watchman to be stationed on the advancing end of all locomotives, cars and trains, while being operated or run within the corporate limits of said city.
Third: The failure to give the statutory crossroad signals.
Fourth: In addition it is alleged that the plaintiff was in a place of peril and that' the employees of defendant saw, or by the exercise ■ of proper care could have seen plaintiff’s peril in time to have stopped the train or to have slackened its speed so as to have avoided the collision.
The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.
The collision occurred within the corporate limits of the city of St. Marys, Missouri, at the intersection of the main tracks of the defendants’ railroad company and Pine. Street. The railroad tracks in question ran through St. Marys on the banks of the Mississippi River and at the point in question the tracks consisted of a main line and a side track or switch. These tracks ran parallel with each other and as close together as the safe operation of cars over each track would permit. The tracks run almost east and west, the main track being the nearer of the two to the river. Pine Street, where it intersects the said tracks, runs almost north and south.
Plaintiff was driving a wagon, drawn by a team of gentle mules, north along Pine Street toward the river. The view from Pine Street to' the north is obstructed
On cross-examination plaintiff testified that he did not stop bis team before be started across the tracks; that be looked twice, the first time be looked was just as soon as be got past the box car, and the second time was when the mules were on the main track, but whether the mules, at the moment be saw the engine, bad their forefeet on the track or their entire bodies, be was unable to say. the mules'were walking at the time at the rate of three miles per. hour.
The plat introduced in evidence below shows that the west rail of the side track is 6.75 feet from the corner of the building which stands at the intersection of Pine Street and said tracks. The said side track has a width of 4.95 feet and there was a distance between the side track and the main line of 9.45 feet, the main line in turn was 4.95 feet in width.
Willis Morrison, a witness for plaintiff, testified that be was driving a wagon immediately behind the plaintiff; that the train, which consisted of an engine and some eight or ten freight cars, came along with the
Another witness, E. R. Shoults, testified he saw the train going by his'home; that his attention was drawn to it by the fact that it did not whistle or ring a bell; that it went by at a speed of about ten to fifteen miles per hour. His home was within three hundred steps of the Pine Street crossing.
Charles Nelson testified that he saw plaintiff just’ before he got to the switch or side track; that he saw him drive on and that when plaintiff got on the main line he looked down the track; that it was impossible for plaintiff to have seen the engine before that time; that plaintiff then raised up and began whipping his team. Plaintiff jumped when the team was on the main line. The train hit the wagon and ran over plaintiff. Witness did not hear 'any whistle blown nor did he hear any ringing of the bell. When the collision occurred the witness was sitting down eating his. lunch and was within one hundred and fifty feet of the place of the accident. When plaintiff’s mules were on the main line the train was about seventy-five- to eighty feet away from him and the front wheels of plaintiff’s wagon were on the west rail of the main track when plaintiff saw the engine; that the train was coming along at a rapid speed up to within seventy-five to eighty feet of the crossing, and was making some noise up to that point but from there on it was not making any noise and was coasting along; ’ that the speed of the train did not
H. H. Sheer testified that the box ear was about one-foot north of the side walk.
Benj. Lukefhar testified that the end of the box car was near the end of the sidewalk on the side of Pine Street just a little north of the comer; that quite a few townspeople looked at the box ear immediately after- the accident and he remembered that it was close to the street.
One William P. Smith testified that he had been a locomotive engineer for over twenty years; that a locomotive of the type in question pulling ten freight cars, if they were loaded, and running at a speed of six miles per hour on a dry track could be stopped in about fifteen feet and if the - speed was eight miles per hour at twenty-five feet, and if eight to nine miles per hour within thirty feet.
One Robert McAtee testified that he had been a locomotive engineer for over twelve years; that he knew the particular crossing at which plaintiff was injured, having passed over it in an engine approximately 2500 to 3000 times and that he was familiar with the type of engine that collided with plaintiff’s wagon; that an engine of that type, in hauling ten loaded cars over this crossing on a dry track, when running at the rate of six miles per hour, could be stopped within fourteen to fifteen feet; running eight miles, within seventeen feet; ten miles within twenty-two feet.
James McClain, one of the witnesses for the defendant, testified that he was up at the depot, 1500 feet from the place where the collision occurred, and saw the train start away from the water tank; that he heard the engineer blow the whistle as it left the water tank but that he did not hear them blow the whistle or ring the bell after they had gone from there up to the time they had struck plaintiff’s wagon; that the train pulled out pretty fast, “they were headed at a pretty good lick, I heard them say that they had lost an hour’s time waiting and they had to get out of there.” In answer to the question as to whether the traiii was puffing or going along without puffing, answered: “They were gliding along pretty smooth.” In his opinion the train was going ten to twelve miles an hour.
The engineer in charge of the engine testified that he did not see the plaintiff until he was directed by the fireman to stop; that at the time the fireman called to him the train was moving about six miles an hour; that he immediately made an emergency stop; that the front of the locomotive was perhaps five feet from the ■wagon when he started to stop; that the coupling between the engine and the tank was standing on the crossing about thirty-five feet after he did stop the train. He was sure that the bell was not ringing as they approached the crossing but that they had blown two short blasts of the whistle at the time they started up from the water tank. As the fireman called to him, and, “when I looked up, the team were on the right hand side with- the front wheels and bed of the wagon coming off on the right hand side. ’ ’
The fireman on the engine testified that as they approached the crossing at Pine Street he had just finished
•In addition to the testimony set out above the record contains two sections of an ordinance of the city of St. Marys introduced by the plaintiff. One of the sections of the ordinance.limits the speed of other than passenger trains, cars, engines or locomotives, within the corporate limits of the city of St. Marys, to not exceed six miles per hour. The other section of the ordinance requires any locomotive, engine, car or train being run through the corporate limits of the city in the daytime, to have a watchman on the advancing end of such locomotive, car or train.
The plaintiff’s case was submitted to the jury on the humanitarian doctrine as well as upon the question of the negligence of defendants in the alleged violation of the ordinance limiting the speed- of' freight trains to not exceed six miles per hour.
The first assignment of error is that the plaintiff was permitted to introduce in evidence the two sections of the ordinance. We have examined the record carefully, as well as the objections made below by the defendants’ learned counsel at the time the ordinance was offered in evidence, and we hold the court properly allowed- the plaintiff to introduce it.
The next error assigned is that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendants at the close of all the evidence on the part of the plaintiff and again at the elose of all the evidence in the case,
In view of the testimony in the case can we bold that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law for failing to stop and listen before he started to drive bis team across the defendants’ tracks? It must be remembered that nearly all the testimony on this point was to the effect that the engine and cars were approaching the crossing making very little noise. As most of the witnesses put it, the engine bad the steam shut'off and the train was “coasting.” In addition it is admitted that the bell was not ringing. With this state of facts before us, can we say as a matter of law that if plaintiff bad in point of fact stopped bis wagon and listened, he could have beard the approaching train? The facts in this record fall clearly within the rule of law as laid down in the case of Donohue v. Railroad, 91 Mo. 357, where the court held that one attempting to cross railroad tracks at street crossings where the view of the tracks is obstructed, cannot be held guilty of contributory negligence in failing to stop and listen for the train, when it does not appear from the evidence that be could have beard the train bad be stopped and listened. ^
As was said in Kennayde v. Railroad, 45 Mo. 255, l. c. 261: “Tbe citizen who, on a public highway, approaches a railway track, and can neither see nor bear any indications of a' moving train, is not chargeable with negligence for assuming that there is no car sufficiently near to make tbe crossing dangerous.”
In tbe instant case we hold that whether the plaintiff should have stopped to listen before attempting to cross tbe tracks, was a question for the jury, and an examination of tbe instruction given by tbe court for tbe defendants shows that this question was properly submitted to the jury. [See Jackson v. Railroad, 189 S. W. (Mo.) 381.]
The next point raised by defendants is that in submitting his case to the. jury upon the humanitarian doctrine plaintiff thereby admits his own contributory negligence and is therefore barred from submitting any other theory, for his recovery, to the jury, even though such other act of negligence be pleaded in plaintiff’s petition, and that on the ground that such other alleged acts of negligence are inconsistent with such humanitarian doctrine.
It is no longer open to argument but that the plaintiff has a right to plead all negligent acts whether common law or statutory all in one count, and that an act of negligence which brings the ease within the humanitarian rule can be alleged along with other acts of negli
We have examined the several assignments of error made by appellants and find no prejudicial error, and the judgment, being for the right party, is accordingly affirmed.