159 Mo. App. 63 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff on account of the death of her husband through the wrongful, negligent act of defendant. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
Plaintiff’s husband came to his death while walking upon defendant’s railroad tracks in the village of Jonesburg, Missouri, through being run upon by defendant’s east-bound passenger train. Finding the public crossing obstructed by a freight train, decedent
It is argued that the court should have directed a verdict for defendant on the ground of the contributory negligence of decedent, but we do not accede to this view, for in view of all the facts, the question was for the jury. To a proper consideration of the question of contributory negligence, the defendant’s conduct must be scrutinized with care, as it relieves the situation for plaintiff. Even the witnesses for defendant concede that defendant’s passenger train was traveling nearly sixty miles an hour. An ordinance of the village of Jonesburg forbade' trains to be operated through the same at a rate of speed to exceed twenty miles per hour, and this ordinance is both counted upon in the petition and proved in the case. Defendant’s locomotive engineer said on the witness stand that he was running at the time plaintiff’s husband was killed, probably fifty-five miles per hour, or as fast as he could propel the locomotive with safety to the train. The witnesses for plaintiff estimate the speed of the train to have been at from sixty to sixty-five miles per hour, and it is said neither the whistle nor the bell was sounded as it approached the town from the westward. The counsel for defendant concede, both in oral argument and in the brief, that defendant’s negligence as to the operation of the train
Another ordinance provision counted upon in the petition and proved in the case forbids the obstruction of any public street crossing in the village of Jones-burg for more than ten minutes by standing trains across the same. The evidence tends to prove that defendant’s long freight train occupied the sidetrack, as above stated, for as much as thirty minutes before plaintiff’s husband came to his death, and that it was because of this unlawful obstruction that he was compelled to walk eastward along the way commonly used by pedestrians between the tracks, seeking a means of crossing the same on other streets. While thus at a place where he had a right to be, because of the license shown in the ease, plaintiff’s husband was run upon and killed when seeking a place that he might cross defendant’s railroado on a public street where it was not so unlawfully obstructed. Prom this it appears that it was defendant’s unlawful act in the first instance, through obstructing the crossing, that occasioned decedent to pass to the eastward between the two tracks and to the place where defendant precipitated the dangers of a rapidly moving passenger train upon him without warning. In this view, no one can doubt that plaintiff’s husband was not a trespasser but was rightfully on the tracks when he came to his death, and the only question for consideration touching the argument suggested relates to the matter of his exercising ordinary care for his own safety in the particular circumstances of the case, at the point of the collision. Decedent had a right to rely upon defendant’s giving the warning which the law requires and he should not be declared guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law for walking eastward from the depot on the licensed way, when it appears no such signals were given, and his conduct must be determined by reference to what occurred upon the
The instructions for plaintiff authorized a recovery for her if the jury found from the evidence that the locomotive and cars of the passenger train were run at a high and unlawful speed and that such conduct on the part of defendant directly contributed to cause the death of plaintiff’s husband. The.use of the word “contributed” in instructions in negligence cases such as this- has been frequently condemned by the courts on the theory that the negligence for which one may recover must be the sole and proximate cause of the injury. In other words, instructions containing this word have been condemned when there are but two possible sources of negligence, for consideration by the jury. If the question of defendant’s negligence be under investigation on the one part and that of the plaintiff on the other, then plaintiff is not entitled to recover upon its appearing that defendant’s negligence did no more than contribute to the injury, for such would authorize a recovery. by plaintiff though his negligence! contributed as well. We expounded the law on the question, as we understand it, in Schmidt v. St. Louis Transit Co., 140 Mo. App. 182, 120 S. W. 96.
There are several acts of negligence in this case which are set forth in the petition and proved at the
In view of the question pertaining .to the contributory negligence of decedent, the instructions above referred to must be condemned as reversible error, for such is the course of decision. [See Krehmeyer v. St. Louis Transit Co., 220 Mo. 639, 120 S. W. 78.] For the reason stated, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.