HENRY EVERETT HATON, Appellant, v. ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY, a Corporation.
Supreme Court of Missouri, Division One
November 16, 1934
76 S. W. (2d) 127
Our conclusion, therefore, is that our writ of certiorari granted in this case should be quashed. It is so ordered. Ferguson and Hyde, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by STURGIS, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
Plaintiff resided at Falling Springs, Illinois, about eight miles south of East St. Louis. Shortly after two o‘clock, Sunday afternoon September 15, 1929, accompanied by two companions, Otto Swalls and Homer Daniels, plaintiff left East St. Louis intending to go to his home at Falling Springs. Plaintiff was driving his brother‘s automobile, a Dodge touring car. Swalls was in the front seat with plaintiff and Daniels alone in the back seat of the automobile. Plaintiff drove south on Chartrand Avenue and then turned southwestwardly over the railroad crossing. When the automobile was upon the third or westernmost track it was struck by the northernmost one of two railroad freight cars which had been uncoupled from a cut of cars south of the crossing and “kicked” north over the crossing. The automobile was crushed and plaintiff injured.
Plaintiff testified that as he was driving south on Chartrand Avenue he saw one of defendant‘s locomotives and a train of eight or ten freight cars moving south on the westernmost of the three railroad tracks over which Chartrand Avenue passes at this crossing; that there was no other train in sight; that at about the time he turned the automobile toward the west or southwest and was approaching the east side of the crossing the rear or northernmost car of the train passed over the crossing; that the train stopped south of the crossing with northernmost car about thirty feet south of the south side of the crossing; that he brought the automobile to a complete stop about twenty feet east of the first or east track; that he stopped the automobile at that point for “a minute and a half or two minutes” during which time “I was watching to see if there was any train coming in and to see what this train that had stopped was going to do;” that he didn‘t “see any trainmen on this train” or on the ground or around there; that there was no watchman or flagman, or other person, on, at or near the crossing; that he looked both to the right and left (north and south) and there was no train in sight except this train standing on the third track south of the crossing; that he then drove onto and proceeded across the crossing driving in low gear, at not more than three or four miles an hour, and continued driving at that slow speed until as the automobile was going upon, or had just gotten upon, the third track he for the first time discovered the two railroad cars which had been “kicked” north moving toward the automobile whereupon he tried
On the part of the defendant the evidence was that this engine and cut of cars was engaged in a switching movement; that the train came from the switch yard north of the crossing passed over the crossing and stopped south thereof with the rear or northernmost car about eighty feet south of the south side of the crossing; that it was intended to “kick” the two rear cars north over this crossing and cause them to run onto a switch track north of the crossing; that the “kicking” movement was made by a quick movement of the train northward and the uncoupling of the cars which were to be cut off permitting them to run of their own momentum; that as the engine and cars passed south and over the crossing the switch foreman in charge of the switching operation took a position at the west side of and on the crossing “to protect the crossing;” that the train was stopped but “a few seconds before it started back; only as long as it takes to stop an engine and start it;” that when the train stopped the foreman from his position on the crossing “gave a kick signal for a back up movement” and the engineer immediately started the back up and kick movement sounding the whistle as he did so; and that as the train moved northward the two rear cars were uncoupled, by a switchman who was riding on the west side of the train, and allowed to run uncontrolled over the crossing. The switch foreman testified that he saw the automobile come upon the east side of the crossing; that two other automobiles had stopped east of the crossing awaiting the completion of the train movement; that plaintiff‘s automobile “ran around” the two automobiles that were standing east of the crossing and that he gave plaintiff a signal to stop and that thereupon plaintiff brought his automobile to a complete stop; that he then gave the kick signal and the backing and kicking movement commenced. According to the foreman‘s testimony the automobile stopped upon or a few feet east of the middle track. Defendant‘s evidence was that the automobile stopped “for merely an instant” and then started forward moving slowly and that the backward or “kick” movement of the train had already started and was underway when the automobile started up and “we could not have stopped those two cars after that.” And the switch foreman testified that when the automobile “started up I tried to stop him (plaintiff) a second time by hand signals and also shouting at him to
Each of plaintiff‘s given instructions numbered 1 and 2, but on separate and distinct theories, authorized a verdict for plaintiff. Instruction 2 was to the effect that if the jury found that “defendant‘s agents and servants knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care could have known that plaintiff‘s said automobile was on said crossing and was approaching the track used by said train . . . and knowing such facts . . . kicked standing cars and caused them to run across said crossing without a locomotive engine attached thereto and failed before doing so to give the plaintiff any warning by bell, whistle or otherwise that said cars were about to be so moved across said crossing; and . . . that defendant‘s said agents and servants in kicking said cars across said crossing without a locomotive engine attached thereto and without first giving any warning by bell, whistle or otherwise, if you so find, failed to exercise ordinary care and were negligent and that as a direct result of such negligence, if any,” plaintiff‘s automobile was struck by said cars and plaintiff injured the “verdict will be in favor of plaintiff and against defendant.” No complaint is made of this instruction and it clearly requires a finding which under the law applicable to the situation, as we shall presently point out, makes defendant liable. Plaintiff‘s case was in fact predicated upon the theory of this instruction, that is, that the defendant‘s employees made this kicking movement and caused the cars to run uncontrolled, over the crossing without, before doing so, giving any warning of such movement.
Plaintiff‘s right to recover and defendant‘s liability is determined and governed by the law of the State of Illinois, the lex loci, and the humanitarian rule which we recognize in this State cannot be invoked and has no place in the case (Cox v. Terminal Railroad Assn., 331 Mo. 910, 55 S. W. (2d) 685) nor under the pleadings and evidence can liability be predicated on any theory of last chance which it may be claimed is recognized by the courts of Illinois. The pleadings do not include any charge of wantonness or willfulness. [Carson, Pirie, Scott & Co. v. Chicago Ry. Co., 309 Ill. 346, 141 N. E. 172; Cox v. Terminal Railroad Assn., supra.] However, plaintiff offered and the trial court gave an instruction, the vital and pertinent part thereof being, that if defendant‘s employees in charge of the engine and cut of cars “knew or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known that plaintiff‘s automobile was dangerously near and upon the track on which the train stood . . . and caused said cars to be kicked and to run uncontrolled toward said crossing at the time plaintiff‘s said automobile was dangerously near and was
This instruction appears to be an attempt to incorporate and combine to some extent the elements of the last chance rule and the humanitarian doctrine, as we recognize that doctrine in this State, but as we have pointed out neither is applicable under the law of the State of Illinois and the pleadings and evidence in this case. But given as it was in conjunction, and upon an equal footing, with the instruction telling the jury it could find defendant guilty of negligence if it found that the kick movement was made without any warning thereof being given, the instruction is confusing and misleading, and in effect contradictory, as tending to convey the impression that though defendant gave the warnings as shown by its evidence nevertheless a movement of that character over a public street crossing constituted negligence and authorized the jury to find defendant guilty of negligence even though adequate warnings were given. It permitted the jury to find that such a movement was negligence regardless of the attendant circumstances. Appellant says “there is weighty authority to sustain the proposition that the kicking of railroad cars across a street or highway within the confines of a city is negligence per se.” It is said in some texts that it had been held that the “kicking of cars” or making “flying switches” at a public road or street crossing in a populous town or city is negligence per se. However, we think, that upon an examination of the cases cited it will be found that in most instances the train movement involved was made without an adequate warning being given and without taking precautions to protect the crossing. It is true such movements are generally considered as being hazardous and dangerous and as demanding that care and precautions commensurate with the hazard created be taken to properly protect the crossing. We find the authorities listed and the general rule of law applicable to such a situation well stated in 3 Elliott on Railroads (3 Ed.), pages 533-534 as follows:
“It is frequently said that it is negligence per se to make a ‘flying switch’ or ‘kick’ a car over a crossing, or to push a train backward over a crossing, without warning and in the absence of a lookout. It is doubtless true that there are many cases in which but one reasonable inference can be drawn, and the court can say, as a matter of law, that it is negligence to make a ‘flying switch’ or ‘kick’ a car over a crossing where people are likely to be, as, for instance, in a populous city, without giving any notice or taking other precautions to protect them, or to back a train over such a crossing without warn-
ing or other precautions. It may, therefore, not be incorrect to say that such conduct, without taking any precautions, is ordinarily negligence per se. But we think that much must depend upon the peculiar circumstances of each particular case, and that it is going too far to say that making a ‘flying switch’ or ‘kicking’ or backing cars, is negligence per se, or as a matter of law, under any and all circumstances. It is certainly not negligence, if proper precautions are taken, and whether the company has taken such precautions and used reasonable care under the circumstances is generally a question of fact for the jury.”
We are of the opinion that the giving of the instruction was error and that the order of the trial court granting a new trial on that ground should be and same is affirmed. Sturgis and Hyde, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by FERGUSON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
