LOLA E. HANCOCK, ADMINISTRATRIX OF ESTATE OF EUGENE P. HANCOCK, v. KANSAS CITY TERMINAL RAILWAY COMPANY, a Corporation, Appellant
Division One
December 14, 1936
100 S. W. (2d) 570
1237
Hancock had been in the employ of defendant company since 1920 and was thirty-eight years of age at the time of his death. He left surviving him his widow, Lola E. Hancock, who brings this action as administratrix, and one child, a son, of the age of eleven years. Hancock was a switch foreman and on the morning of March 23, 1932, his crew was engaged in distributing the cars from a train of thirteen to fifteen cars which had been brought from defendant‘s yards in Kansas to its yards in Kansas City, Missouri. One of these cars had been cut off and left on the main lead track near the west end of the yard. After various cars had been delivered to their respective destinations the crew with their switch engine proceeded west on this lead track to couple onto the car which had been left on that track and move it to its point of assignment. The crew was composed of Hancock, the foreman; Barnes, the engineer; Ferguson, fireman; and Bryning and McCormack, switchmen. The engine was backing west. Hancock and the two switchmen, Bryning and McCormack, were standing upon the footboard at the rear of the tender as the engine, backing, moved west. The footboard is not continuous across the rear of the tender but “is divided in the center by the drawbar . . . so that there is a footboard on each side of the drawbar;” and “there is a grabiron clear across the back of the tank to hold on to when riding the footboard.” Each half, or section, of the footboard is “39 inches in length on the outer edge,” “11 inches in width and extends “19 1/2 inches outside of the rail.” Switchman Bryning was standing alone on the north section of the footboard and McCormack and Hancock were on the south section with McCormack standing next to the drawbar and Hancock at the south end; they were facing west, the direction in which the engine was backing. As the engine approached switch No. 715 it was observed that the switch was so lined that the engine would be diverted to track 715. Hancock, who was on the south end of the south footboard, and in position to do so, gave a stop signal. The engine stopped three to five
To this point the facts may be said to be undisputed. But two eyewitnesses were produced who testified to having seen Hancock fall. Plaintiff‘s sole eyewitness was one Reinhardt, an employee of a transfer company, who testified that at the time he was in defendant‘s yards in connection with business of his employer; that he was walking east on the south side of the track toward this switch stand; that when he was yet “250 to 300 feet” from the switch stand he “first noticed the engine” backing west; that he continued walking east toward the engine; that he plainly observed the positions of the men on the footboard of the tank; that he observed the subsequent events and Hancock‘s movements; that while Hancock was throwing the switch Bryning (on the north section of the footboard) and McCormack (standing by the drawbar on the north end of the south section of the footboard) turned facing each other across the drawbar; that as Hancock started to “step on the footboard” McCormack “turned and stepped completely over in Hancock‘s path . . . their bodies came in contact” and “it knocked Hancock down.” It was clearly McCormack‘s duty, under the circumstances and under plaintiff‘s evidence as to the custom and practice prevailing in the yards to remain next to the drawbar and not move to the south end of the footboard. McCormack testified that when Hancock fell he (McCormack) “yelled as loud as I could yell,” jumped from the footboard and went west down the side of the track a distance of about 300 feet where he remained with another switchman until after Hancock‘s body had been taken away. Bryning denied that he was facing McCormack across the drawbar but says that while Hancock was throwing the switch and at the time he fell, while trying to get on the footboard, he was facing to the north and that he did not see Hancock try to get on the tender or see him fall. Defendant had some
Appellant does not here contend, and there is no ground for such contention, that respondent, plaintiff, did not make a case for the jury. The assignments of error made are; (1) that instruction numbered 4, relating to damages, given at plaintiff‘s request, is erroneous; (2) that the trial court erred in refusing an offer of proof made by defendant; (3) argument of plaintiff‘s counsel; and (4). that the verdict for $50,000 was so grossly excessive as to evidence passion and prejudice on the part of the jury, and that the judgment for $30,000 entered by the trial court, after remittitur, is still clearly excessive. Of these in order.
Plaintiff‘s instruction relating to damages is in part as follows: “If you find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant and further find that the deceased was not guilty of negligence contributing to his death, then you are instructed that you should assess the damages (if any) in this case at such sum (if any) as will fairly and reasonably compensate the wife and child of deceased for the pecuniary loss (if any) which you find from the evidence they sustained as a direct result of his death.” The instruction then lays down the applicable rule under the provisions of the
Referring to the first part of the instruction above set out appellant complains that it is too general. It tells the jury that if they find “in favor of plaintiff” and that “deceased was not guilty of negligence contributing to his death” they should “assess the damages . . . at such sum as will fairly and reasonably compensate the wife and child of deceased for the pecuniary loss . . . which they sustained as a direct result of his death.” The same complaint against the instruction made by appellant in its oral request to the trial court is renewed here. The instruction though general is correct; the measure of damages, under the circumstances defined, being such an amount as would reasonably compensate the wife and minor child of deceased for the pecuniary loss which they sustained as a direct result of his death. It is stated, in Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Kelly, Admr., 241 U. S. 485, 489, that, in this kind of a case, “The damages should be equivalent to compensation for the deprivation of the reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefits that would have resulted from the continued life of the deceased.” Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Holloway, Admr., 246 U. S. 525, was an action by the administrator of a deceased employee; “killed . . . while engaged in the performance of his duties,” brought under the
Appellant advances the claim that its oral request, heretofore set out, that the trial court require plaintiff to modify or supplement her instruction on damages to conform to certain views of defendant; stated in general terms, relating to damages and the computation thereof, was a request for an instruction embodying those views which the court refused. Such request is of no effect whatsoever and did not amount to a request for an instruction upon the matters referred to therein. Our statute (
Appellant criticizes the concluding part of the instruction, wherein the jury is told, in connection with the preceding direction in reference to proportional damages in the event they find deceased was contributorily negligent that; “Unless you believe and find from the greater weight of the credible evidence . . . that deceased was guilty of negligence contributing to his death . . . your finding on that issue should be in favor of the plaintiff and no amount should, on that account, be deducted from the actual damage . . . you find plaintiff sustained from said death.” (Italics ours.) Appellant says the administratrix was the plaintiff and that “there was no proof that the estate sustained any damages” and therefore “there was no amount from which the jury could deduct anything for contributory negligence of the deceased.” While the wording is inaccurate we cannot conceive how the jury upon the whole instruction could have possibly been misled thereby. The instruction plainly tells the jury that the full measure of damages is such sum “as will fairly and reasonably compensate the wife and child of deceased for the pecuniary loss they sustained as a direct result of his death” and that plaintiff administratrix was entitled to recover such sum “if deceased was not guilty of negligence contributing to his death.” Clearly we think, a jury would understand the words “actual damages plaintiff sustained from said death;” in the connection in which they are used, to refer to that sum as previously defined in the instruction. Appellant‘s assignment of reversible error in the instruction must be disallowed.
We come now to appellant‘s assignment that argument of plaintiff‘s counsel to the jury was “highly prejudicial and aroused the passions and prejudices of the jury which inhered in the verdict” and that “the trial court erred in denying defendant‘s motions to discharge the jury and declare a mistrial” on account thereof. In this connection we shall first review the evidence, and certain incidents of the trial, bearing on one of the issues of fact not heretofore mentioned. In his opening statement to the jury plaintiff‘s counsel stated: “There is one other matter that I do not know whether counsel relies upon or not in this case, it does not appear in the pleadings. When this death occurred a deputy coroner was called, of course, and . . . subsequently there was a coroner‘s inquest where all of the members of this crew testified to facts surrounding this occurrence. . . . Subsequently to that, the depositions of all of these crew members was taken, and the final and last deposition taken was of the man McCormack. . . . In the testimony of the crew members at the coroner‘s inquest . . . there is not a single suggestion that Mr. Hancock was not comporting himself in the usual way and with his usual efficiency that day, and it was not until the last deposition was taken, the deposition of the man McCormack charged with the negligence in the case that we came upon any claim indicating that this accident happened contrary to the theory which I have presented here today, and McCormack then for the first time said that he saw Hancock take a drink that day and that he thought that he was a little bit under the influence of liquor. . . . Now the evidence in this case, gentlemen, will show that that charge of intoxication made by McCormack alone of all concerned is absolutely baseless. The other crew members, McCormack‘s own associates that day, will testify that that is not true, as will other men who saw Hancock that day in performance of the hazardous and difficult duties of railroading, they will testify that there wasn‘t a suggestion of anything like that in his conduct from the beginning to the end. . . . I say again that that is no defense if the facts are as I have stated them to you, but we will defend the good name of the dead man by evidence which will be overwhelming.” The only reference to the foregoing matter appearing in the opening statement of defendant‘s counsel was: “Now Mr. Madden talked to you about this matter of drinking. It is true that Mr. McCormack testified in his deposition that he saw Mr. Hancock taking a drink and there was a coroner‘s inquest—Mr. McCormack wasn‘t asked
It will be recalled Hancock was killed about nine-thirty A. M. Apparently anticipating that McCormack, as a witness for defendant, would testify, as he had in his deposition, that about ten minutes before Hancock fell to his death he saw him take a drink of whisky, in its direct case, plaintiff called the following witnesses who testified they had seen Hancock during the morning and testified to his condition, as they observed it. Two employees of a coal company, two employees of a petroleum company and an employee of a transfer company, who testified they were in the yards that morning in connection with their employment, each stated that he had talked with Hancock that morning between nine and nine-thirty o‘clock and variously stated; “I did not see the slightest evidence of intoxication,” or “that he had been drinking” and “he appeared sober.” Two employees of a cement company and another employee of the transfer company stated that they were well acquainted with Hancock, were in the yards that morning, where their employment frequently took them, and that while they did not talk with Hancock that morning they saw him about his work and “he performed his duties just like he always did.” A truck driver for a coal company testified he “talked with Hancock about five minutes before he was killed” and “he didn‘t look like a man who had been drinking and I didn‘t smell nothing on him.” Two Kansas City police officers testified that in response to a radio call they arrived at the scene of the accident within a few minutes after Hancock was killed; one, O‘Bryant, who remained there but momentarily, leaving to call the coroner and the homicide squad, stated: “I saw no evidence of liquor” and “did not smell liquor;” the other, Propst, said; “I did not examine the body” and “did not see any bottle of liquor around there.” No examination was made nor was the body moved until the deputy coroner and the police homicide squad arrived. The engineer of the switch engine Barnes was called as a witness, by plaintiff. On direct examination he said: “I saw no evidence of intoxication on the part of Hancock that day.” On cross-examination he stated that, after the accident he went “under the tank” (as the writer recalls, Barnes was the only person who went under the tank prior to the arrival of the deputy coroner and the police homicide squad) and “while I was down there beside him I smelled liquor.” Ferguson, the fireman, Bryning, a switchman and Rapier, a switchman, all members of the switch crew of which Hancock was foreman, were
Defendant‘s evidence relative to this issue consisted of the testimony of two police officers, Nichols and Kurth, members of the homicide squad, a deputy coroner who made the autopsy, and McCormack. Nichols testified that when he and Kurth arrived “the body had not been disturbed;” that he assisted a deputy coroner in removing the body; that “when we got underneath the tender to take the body from across the rails and lay it out to the side of the track I smelled a fairly strong odor of liquor;” that he saw the deputy coroner make a search of deceased‘s clothes; that the deputy coroner “went through the pockets a watch, handkerchief and two or three other little articles were taken from his front pockets and in his hip pocket they found the neck of a whisky bottle, the bottle was broken. I smelled that piece of the bottle and it smelled of whisky;” and “there was an odor of whisky about the body and the bottle was taken off the body.” Kurth stated that “while the deputy coroner was searching the body I noticed the smell of liquor, the smell of alcohol” and “the neck of a whisky bottle lying on the ground beside the body.” Dr. Hall, the deputy coroner who performed the autopsy, testified, on direct examination: “The stomach was loaded with undigested food and there was an odor of alcohol about the body . . . I could get a trace of alcohol. I did not make a chemical analysis so I could not say there was alcohol in the stomach. There was an odor that made me form an opinion that there was alcohol to a certain degree in the stomach.” The written report of the autopsy which Dr. Hall made stated: “Alcohol in the stomach.” On cross-examination the witness gave an opinion and made a statement of finding as follows: “If sufficient alcohol had been taken into the system shortly before death to cause intoxication at the time of death the stomach lining would have been red and inflamed but I did not find anything of that character at all.” We quote that portion of McCormack‘s testimony relating to this matter in question and answer form. Direct Examination: “Q. Just before you made that movement (the switching movement in which Hancock was killed) had Mr. Hancock been on the footboard there at the east end of the engine with you? A. Yes sir. Q. Mr. McCormack did you see him take a drink there? A. Yes sir. Q. Did you protest against him taking a drink? A. Not
We must now, of necessity, quote verbatim the portions of the opening argument of plaintiff‘s counsel to the jury of which appellant complains. The first part of the alleged prejudicial argument is directed to the question of damages to be awarded in the event the jury finds for plaintiff. Plaintiff‘s counsel stated: “The question that you gentlemen will have to decide is was this man killed in whole or in part on account of the negligence of this company and its employees. . . . Under the
Plaintiff‘s counsel in his opening argument to the jury first gives attention to the question of damages and purports to discuss the instruction on damages. He tells the jury in effect that if they find for plaintiff that it is their duty under the instruction “to bring in the full amount in the case,” and it is later made plain that thereby
If the foregoing constituted the limit of counsel‘s transgression in his opening argument to the jury in view of the fact that no request was at the time made for further or other action on the part of the trial court and that the erroneous argument went alone to the question of damages we would perhaps be justified in endeavoring to correct the matter by considering appellant‘s alternative assignment that the judgment even after the remittitur required by the trial court is still excessive, but plaintiff‘s counsel, as appears from the argument set out above, turned to another phase of the case which bears in a somewhat direct way on the question of liability and disregarding the repeated ruling of the trial court and departing from the record persisted in a highly inflammatory argument calculated to stir resentment against defendant‘s counsel and arouse the passion and prejudice of the jury against defendant.
This was a close case on liability. The jury was required to choose between the conflicting version of plaintiff‘s sole eyewitness Reinhardt and defendant‘s sole witness McCormack. If the jury believed Reinhardt, and that the casualty occurred as he related, defendant would be liable. As we noted, supra, defendant adduced substantial evidence tending to show that Reinhardt was not present at the scene of death but at the time was delivering an electric refrigerator in Kansas City, Kansas. On the other hand if the jury believed McCormack‘s version, that he did not move from his position next to the drawbar and that Hancock fell in attempting to get on the footboard “apparently” missing the “grabiron,” defendant was not liable. No one so far as this record shows, neither counsel for defendant nor any witness in the case, stated, charged or claimed, that Hancock was drunk: On the part of defendant, McCormack testified merely that he saw Hancock take a drink of whisky about eight or ten minutes before he fell; two police officers testified to the odor of whisky about the body and the broken whisky bottle; the deputy coroner reported alcohol in the stomach; and the engineer called as a witness for plaintiff, on cross-examination, testified that when he went under the tank he noticed the smell of whisky about the body. Plaintiff made no objection to any of this evidence, conceding its competency. Defendant evidently went on the theory that whisky even in small quantities may tend to affect one‘s alertness, sense of timing and balance, that at least such are the reactions in many instances, and offered this evidence as a circumstance, for what it was worth, bearing upon its explanation of the casualty, that is,
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by FERGUSON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
