46 Mo. App. 198 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
This is an action .for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in being run into by a freight train of the defendant that was backing up and across a public street crossing at the intersection of Mulberry street and St. Louis avenue, Kansas City. At the point of accident these two streets cross at right angles ; it was also the crossing of four railroad tracks, running east and west, as also the crossing of a double-track cable railway, running north and south. This crossing is one of those. where the city by ordinance provides the railroad company shall keep a watchman to notify all persons about to cross the railroad track of the approach of trains. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove that on the morning that he was injured he was walking down South Mulberry street, and when he reached the point at which St. Louis avenue intersects said street he saw a passenger train moving on the second track from the north; that there are four tracks on said crossing, the two northernmost belong to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and the others to other railways; that before he stepped onto the first and northernmost track he looked in the direction from which the train that struck him came, and saw the car which struck him moving slowly at a distance of thirty feet or more from him ; that he supposed said car was moving in the opposite direction, and paid no further attention to it; that he stepped upon the track and stood there awaiting the passage of the passenger train on the next track, until he was struck by the
Defendant’s evidence tended to prove that there was a watchman stationed at said crossing at the time of the accident; that he was on the south side of said crossing, warning persons approaching the track not to get on because of the approach of the passenger train ; that the passenger train at the time plaintiff approached and stepped upon the track on which he was injured was between said watchman and plaintiff; that the watchman saw plaintiff stepping on said track, and waived his flag and hallooed to him under the moving passenger train, but plaintiff did not heed said warning, but remained on the track until he was struck by the backing freight train ; that the freight car at the time plaintiff stepped upon the track was within a few feet of him and that the view from the point at which the plaintiff was to the freight car was wholly unobstructed ; that plaintiff could have seen the car approaching if he had looked in that direction, in time to have avoided his injury ; that there was a man stationed on the end of the car furthest from the engine at the time of the accident; that the freight train which struck plaintiff could not have been stopped in a shorter space than about fifteen to thirty feet; that, as soon as the signal to stop was commuhica,ted to the engineer, he
The several acts and omissions of the defendant charged as negligence are thus summarized in the petition: “That, by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the defendant, its agents, servants and employes, he would have been first notified by its watchman of the approach of said freight train ; second, said freight cars would not have been moved over said street at said crossing at a time when there was not then and there stationed and present a watchman, both as required by said ordinance ; third, a man would have been stationed on the forward end of said train so backing up over said dangerous crossing to warn him of his peril; and, fourth, necessary and proper signals and • warnings would have been given of the approach of said, train; and if he had been warned in any of the several ways mentioned, by the servants of defendant, whose duty it was at the time and place and under the circumstances alleged, to warn him of his danger, he could and would have stepped off said track before the car struck him and averted the injury, and he further alleges that by the exercise of ordinary care on the part of the defendant’s agents and servants in charge of said freight train, they could and would have seeu him on said north track intime to have stopped the train and avoid injuring him.” The answer was a general denial, coupled with a plea of contributory negligence. The issues were tried by jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor for $1,000, and defendant appealed.
I. Defendant’s counsel have argued with much force that the trial court should have sustained a demurrer to the evidence. The ground for this contention is, that, admitting defendant’s negligence as charged, yet the manifest contributory negligence of the plaintiff at the time should preclude his recovery. As to this branch of the case, we must hold against the
II. At the instance of the plaintiff, and over the objection of the defendant, the trial court gave the following instruction : “The court instructs the jury that the ordinances of Kansas City read in evidence required the defendant to keep a watchman at the crossing where
“No man has a right to depend entirely upon the care and prudence of others; he is bound himself to exercise due care to prevent injury to himself from the lack of the proper caution in others.” 2 Wood’s Railway Law, pp. 1302, 1314. Hence, it has been repeatedly held in this state, that while the failure to ring the bell or sound the whistle as the train approaches a crossing is .negligence per se on the part of the railroad company, still if the x>erson injured was himself at the time negligent — did not use his eyes and ears, but went carelessly and heedlessly into danger which he might have avoided by ordinary care — he cannot recover. Zimmerman v. Railroad, 71 Mo. 476; Taylor v. Railroad, 86 Mo. 462, and cases cited. The facts in the Harlan case (64 Mo. 480, and 65 Mo. 22) are very similar to those here. Says Judge Napton in the opinion : “A person who goes on a railroad track or x>roposes to cross it must use his eyes and ears to avoid injury ; a neglect of regulations in regard to bell ringing may amount to negligence in law on the part of the railroad employes, but that does not absolve strangers, who x>rox>ose to
This branch of the case has no room for the application, of the rule, where plaintiff is put in danger by the combined negligent acts of plaintiff and defendant, and defendant sees, or by ordinary care could see, the peril of the plaintiff in time to avoid the danger, then plaintiff may recover. For here the negligence (if any there was) of the watchman in failing to warn plaintiff
It results, therefore, that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.