95 Mo. 286 | Mo. | 1888
This is an action in which plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the alleged negligence of defendant in running its locomotive and cars over her husband, Jacob Guenther, and killing him. The answer of the defendant contained a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence ; the reply of plaintiff to the answer was a general denial. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence in chief, a demurrer to the evidence was interposed, which being overruled the defendant then introduced its evidence, and the case was submitted to the jury. Under the instructions of the court, a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff, and from the judgment entered thereon, the defendant, after an unsuccessful effort for a new trial, appeals, and assigns for error the refusal of the court to sustain the demurrer to the evidence, the admission of improper evidence for the plaintiff, the giving of improper instructions for the plaintiff, and refusing proper instructions for the defendant.
The defendant is not in a position to urge the overruling of the demurrer to the evidence, as reversible error, having waived the same by putting in its own evidence, and the case will have to be examined "and determined upon the whole evidence in the case. Bowen v. Railroad, ante, p. 268.
It appears from the evidénce that, about seven o’clock on the morning of the thirteenth of August, 1884, the deceased, while walking southwardly on the defendant’s track, at a point within the limits of the city of St. Louis, about three miles south of the Union Depot, was struck by the Carondelet accommodation train, running south; that he was thrown from the track and died the same day ; that the train was ab out-on time, perhaps a few minutes late, and running at the rate of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour; that there is a plain and unobstructed view of the track for five hundred yards or more north of the point where the
Defendant’s roadbed was constructed on a strip of land conveyed to it for a right of way in the year 1856, and originally sustained but one track. In 1859, the owners of the land over which the defendant’s easement was granted laid off that part of the tract lying west of the roadbed into lots and blocks, divided by streets, and located on the plat a street forty feet wide running parallel with the west side of the railroad track, and filed and recorded a deed of dedication thereof to public uses; this street was afterwards recognized by the city on its plats, but was never improved or definitely located on the ground, so far as the evidence shows, nor was it'
The evidence on this subject is very vague and unsatisfactory, nor in the view we take of this case do we think it very important to determine which is right. The negligence, if any, of either plaintiff or defendant is to be measured by the condition of things at the place where the accident took place, as they were known to exist by each of them at the time the acts of each are complained of as being negligent, and those acts cannot be affected, one way or the other, by the existence of a fact which could be determined only by an accurate survey, and neither of the parties would have been a whit more or less negligent, if, on such survey, the true line of division between the roadbed and street should happen to fall on the one or the other side of the exact spot where the deceased was struck ; or if it should turn out that the street-way and roadway lapped, and that that spot was both within the limits of the defendant’s right of way and also of the platted street.
It further appeared from the evidence that there was no public crossing at or near the place where Gluenther was struck and no improved streets within two or three blocks thereof. The evidence of the plaintiff failed to show the place at which the deceased entered upon the track, but tended to show that he had been
In view of the first instruction given by the court, on its own motion, many of the objections urged to the action of the court in refusing instructions asked for in behalf of the defendant are obviated, as it is not perceived how, in the light of that instruction, the refusal of the court to give them could have operated to the prejudice of defendant’s case. A consideration of instructions numbered one, two, three, and five, given by the court on its own motion, in connection with defendant’s instruction numbered thirteen, will be sufficient for the disposition of the case. Those instructions are as follows:
“1. The court instructs you that the deceased, Jacob Gfuenther, was guilty of negligence in failing to take ordinary care to notice the train that struck him. Hence, your duty as jurors requires you to find a verdict for defendant, unless you find the other facts relating to this case to be as set forth in instructions two or three.”
*293 “2. If the jury believe, from the evidence, that, at the time of the accident, the place where the injury occurred to Jacob Guenther was a traveled public road or street, and had been used as a public road, highway, or thoroughfare for twenty years prior thereto, then the court declares the law to be that it was the duty of the servants of the defendant to keep ringing the bell of the locomotive while the train was passing over said road or street and for a distance of eighty rods before reaching the place of the accident, and if it appears from the evidence that no bell was rung while the locomotive was so passing over said street or road at the time of and immediately before the accident, then the jury may infer negligence or carelessness in the agents or employes of the defendant in the running and managing of said train, and if you further find, from the evidence, that the death of said Jacob Guenther was directly occasioned by, or directly resulted from, said omission to so sound the bell as aforesaid, then you should return a verdict for the plaintiff.”
“3. If you find, from the evidence, that said train of defendant that struck deceased could have been stopped by the employes of the defendant in charge of said train, by the exercise of ordinary care on their part, ' in time to have prevented his injury, after they (said employes) became aware, or might have become aware (by the exercise of ordinary care), of his imminent peril of being struck by said train, then you should return a verdict for the plaintiff.”
“5. If you find, in view of the other instructions, that the place where Guenther was killed was not a part of the public street, or that defendant was not guilty of any such negligence as is described in instruction numbered two (under the law as stated therein), and further find that the agents of defendant in charge of said train exercised ordinary care in the management of said train, and did all they reasonably could in the • circumstances*294 to stop the train and avoid the injury to deceased, Guenther, then you should .return a verdict for defendant.”
Defendant’s instruction refused:
“13. If the jury find, from the evidence, that the deceased, Jacob Guenther, stepped upon the western track of the defendant’s railway just before the accident, in front of a passenger train approaching thereon from the north, and that he could have seen or heard said train if he had looked or listened, and that he went on said track without looking or listening for the same, and was struck by said train, then the verdict should be for the defendant; unless the jury further find, from the evidence, that said train could have been stopped by the employes of defendant in charge of said train by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence in time to prevent the injury, after they became aware, or might have become aware (by the exercise of ordinary care), of the peril of said deceased while on said track.”
The evidence fails to show that the deceased was struck at or near the crossing of any traveled public road or street, or that any such public crossing was within such a distance as to require that the bell on the engine should have been kept ringing, under the statute, as it approached the place where deceased was struck, and while the failure to ring the bell when a train is passing longitudinally along a public street, except on ■approaching a public crossing, and within the distance of eighty rods thereof, is not, in the absence of any ordinance requiring it, negligence per se, yet it must be conceded, considering the long-continued and well-known situation of affairs on defendant’s roadbed at the place where deceased was struck, whether that point is within the limits of the street proper or not, the exercise of reasonable care and caution required that the bell should be continually rung on the engine of a train approaching that place, at that hour, at a speed of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour. And the failure
The plaintiff had no case on the evidence, unless the facts brought it within this qualification of the general rule on contributory negligence, and the court properly so declared in the first instruction. And if, the case had been submitted to the jury on this instruction in connection with the third, and the defendant’s refused instruction, the real and only issue in the case might be said to have been in a manner submitted to the jury. And while in the first instruction the jury were told in effect that, although the deceased was guilty of such contributory negligence as would prevent a recovery, unless they found the facts to be as stated in the third instruction, they were also told, not only if they found the facts as stated in the third instruction to find for the plaintiff, but if they found them to be as stated in the second instruction to find for plaintiff. By the use of the disjunctive conjunction in the first instruction, it is made possible to read the first and second instructions together as one instruction, or the first and third together as one instruction, but it is impossible to so read and understand the first, second, and third together as one instruction. Reading the first and second together, the jury were in effect told that, although the deceased had been guilty of negligence contributing directly to his death, yet if they found from the evidence that no / bell was rung while the locomotive was passing over.the street or road immediately before the accident, and that the death of said Jacob <xuenther directly resulted from the omission to sound the bell, they should find for the plaintiff.
In other words the jury were told, here are two acts of negligence, one of the plaintiff in being on the track, the other of defendant in not sounding the bell, concurring at the same time and place, the' result of which is death; now, if you find that the death resulted
The evidence of the defendant tended to prove the facts hypothetically stated in defendant’s refused instruction, and no good reason is perceived why it should not have been given. There would seem to be no difficulty in presenting the issues of fact to be tried in this case properly to the jury. The place where the accident occurred, and the defendant’s roadbed along there, cannot, in the common acceptation of the terms, be called a public street, road, or highway, nor are there any public crossings, properly speaking, such as are contemplated in the statute requiring a bell to be rung-on approaching them. Nevertheless, for many years, a street has been dedicated to public use, running parallel with defendant’s track, it may be and probably in some places is, within the limits of that street; however that may be, for years the space alongside the track between it and the bluff, has been used by quarry teams, and at places they have been in the habit of crossing the track to get to the river, whilst the roadbed for years has been made use of by pedestrians, and especially by the workmen in the adjacent quarries in going to, and returning from, their work. In,, the morning, about the time this train is passing the point of the accident, large numbers of them are to be found passing over this ground, to their work. The track is straight, clear, and unobstructed, and a person 'on it is in plain view to an approaching train from the north for several hundred yards. The servants of the defendant on this train, approaching this point, at this hour, at the rate of speed testified to, while such rate of
Por the error in giving the second instruction, and in ref using defendant’s instruction number thirteen, without discussing the other instructions, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for new trial.