126 Mo. App. 643 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
This action was instituted on account of personal injuries alleged to have been received by plaintiff as the result of the negligence of defendant in operating its line of railway and a train being run thereon. The judgment in the trial court was for the plaintiff.
Since the verdict was for the plaintiff" we will state the facts as the evidence in his behalf tends to establish them. Defendant’s line of railway passed through the town of Pattonsburg which town has in force an ordinance prescribing that trains shall not run within the corporate limits at a greater rate of speed than six miles. The railway crosses different streets in the town where sufficient crossings should be provided in accordance with the general statute.. Between one and two o’clock in the afternoon on the day plaintiff was injured he was riding a pony along one of the streets approaching the railway track. The railway crossing on this street was permitted to be in such negligent condition that a horse could readily get his foot fastened between the rail and a board next to it. Plaintiff could not see down the track for much distance until he got within twenty-five or thirty feet of the crossing. He then looked and saw an approaching train.“away off.” That is, as he again stated, seventy-five or eighty rods (about a quarter of mile). He did not observe that it
The chief reliance of defendant is upon contributory negligence of the plaintiff in attempting to cross the track, and it is urged here that the trial court should have sustained a demurrer to the evidence. We think there is no good ground for such position. This is not one of those cases where the traveller seeing an approaching train undertakes a race for the crossing in an endeavor to get there first. This is a case where a traveller who is only twenty-five feet from a crossing and observes a train a quarter of a mile away, correctly decides that he has an abundance of time to clear the crossing and would have done so but for the unexpected happening to the pony which was caused by defendant’s negligence. It was not the distance plaintiff was away from the track when he saw the train. It was not a miscalculation of his having time. The same thing would have happened to the pony if he had been right at the crossing when the train was a quarter of a mile away. The only difference is that in such case plaintiff would probably have had time to have gotten off and out of the way after he found the pony was fastened. And as it was, he would have gotten off before being struck
Defendant’s entire brief is based upon a refusal to credit plaintiff with the case.he makes. The first point made against the judgment is that “plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in going upon the railroad track yhen he knew the train was approaching, in such close proximity to the train as that he could not cross the track before being struck and the court should have given a peremptory instruction to find for defendant.” O'f course if plaintiff had gone upon the track in such close proximity to the train that he could not cross without being struck he should not have done so. But he did not go upon the track under any condition of that kind. He went upon the track with abundance of time to cross even at the unlawful speed with which the train was running; and he only failed to safely cross by reason of defendant’s negligence in the maintenance of the crossing. It is in consequence of defendant thus shutting out plaintiff’s side of the controversy that the authorities to be found collected in its brief are not applicable. Among other cases, defendant relies upon Stotler v. Railway, 204 Mo. 619, 103 S. W. 1. In that case the decisions of our Supreme Court are reviewed at length; but in none of them, where contributory negligence was adjudged as a matter of law, were the facts, in vital particulars, ]ike those in this case. In the Stotler case, the rapidly moving train was only half the distance away from the crossing that the train in this case was. In that case the court held that the plaintiff could have known the speed of the train had she looked, and would have known she could not cross. The logic of defendant’s position is that no one should attempt to cross over the eight or ten feet necessary to clear the width of a locomotive if one is in sight.
Evidence was admitted of the fact that another person’s horse got his foot fastened in the same place shortly before. A question was being made whether the place was such as would admit of a horse’s foot being caught in passing over. It was therefore proper to show that in point of fact it had done that thing. This class of evidence was discussed by us in Golden v. Railway, 84 Mo. App. 59. See also 1 Wigmore on Ev., 461, and notes 2 and 3; 6 Thompson, Neg., sec. 7849; Franklin v. Railway, 97 Mo. App. 473. Such evidence is to be distinguished from that ruled to be improper in Goble v. Kansas City, 148 Mo. 470, and other cases. In those, cases the evidence involved collateral matters concerning other persons, as for instance, the conduct of the other parties, whether they were careful and prudent, or rash and imprudent, etc. But aside from this, the evidence under the circumstances of the case as developed was altogether harmless.
Objection was made to expert testimony of a physician. The chief ground urged here is that the witness
The action of the court on the instruction was correct. Those given for the respective parties presented the ease properly and fully.
The judgment should be affirmed.