77 Mo. 34 | Mo. | 1882
This is an action for personal injuries to Josephine Ely, commenced in the circuit court of Carroll county, and moved by change of venue to Livingston, where upon a trial of the cause plaintiffs obtained judgment, from which defendant has appealed.
Omitting the formal parts of the petition, after alleging that said Josephine Ely was a passenger on defendant’s train, it avers as the cause of action the following: That
1876, to so change or alter said embankment as to provide against a recurrence of similar storms; and if it appears from the testimony that defendant caused said embankment to be altered or changed for such purpose, such testimony should not be taken into consideration in this case by the jury in determining whether said embankment was properly constructed and sufficient to withstand and turn back, and had withstood and turned back, all floods that had occurred since the construction of the road, or that might reasonably, within the experience of those living in that locality, be expected to occur.
It appears from the evidence in this case that the rainstorm on the night of the disaster .was wholly unprecedented in violence and the quantity of water which fell during its continuance, and was on that account of such a character that defendant in the construction of its roadbed was not required to anticipate or provide against it, and if after the occurrence defendant, out of abundant caution, altered its road-bed so as to provide against injury from the recurrence of such a storm, which might or not again occur, such fact was not a proper one to be taken into consideration by the jury, in determining the question whether the embankment at the point of the accident was sufficient to withstand and turn back all floods that had occurred since its construction, or that might reasonably, within the experience of those living in that locality, be expected to occur. We are of the opinion that the instruction should have been given, since evidence was received to the effect “ that' after the accident a new pile bridge had been built where the old one was.!’
It is also insisted that the court erred in submitting the question of negligence to the jury because there was no evidence of it. The ease of Ellet v. St. Louis, K. C. & N. R’y Co., 76 Mo. 518, was a suit for the recovery of dam
The case in all other respects, except those above noted, seems to have been well tried, but for the errors herein pointed out. the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded,