65 Mo. App. 479 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
The plaintiff sues for injuries sustained in boarding a moving train on July 2,1894, at a station called Saginaw, between Joplin and Neosho, Missouri. He alleges that the conductor negligently commanded him to “jump on,” and that relying on the judgment of the conductor, he obeyed and was thus injured. The answer is a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. A verdict and judgment for $2,500 was rendered for plaintiff, from which defendant appeals.
The first error assigned is the refusal of the court to sustain defendant’s demurrer to the evidence. This involves a review of the evidence adduced by plaintiff only, since it was not aided by that given for defendant. Plaintiff’s account of the accident in his examination in chief is as follows:
“Q. When you came to Saginaw, describe to the jury how that track runs and what direction? A. North and south. When I got there, the freight train was on the right track; the passenger side tracked until the freight train started, pulled out and left the platform clear. I saw Mr. Austin and Jim Wills standing there. I said to Ollie Cravens: ‘Let’s go over there, I want to see Austin.’ He said: ‘I don’t know whether we will have time.’ I walked down to front end of the passenger car, and asked if we would have time to step over here a few minutes. ' I motioned to Ollie to come, and I was busy engaged in talking to Austin. The freight cleared the track, and the passenger backed and I expected it to stop. The engine passed me and baggage car; did not think but what it would stop. About that time the conductor was standing between the smoker and baggage car. He said: ‘You fellows jump on.’ ' He said some other word before that. I obeyed him under impulse. If I had known, I could have waited and got on and not got hurt perhaps. It was*483 coming toward me when I grabbed bold of the car; it was coming from the north. The handhold of the car struck me right there, that is the only way I can explain.
“Q. What was you doing when it struck you? A. Getting on.”
On cross-examination plaintiff testified to wit:
Q. Which hand did you take hold of the railing with? A. I think the bottom part with my right hand, and I bumped right up against it. The car was running south, and I was going north.
“Q. You did not jump with the train? A. No.
“Q. You did not jump against the car? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And, as you think, grabbed hold of the railing to the body of the car with both hands? A. Yes, sir.”
Ollie Cravens, who left the passenger car while it was standing on the side track with plaintiff, testified as follows: “I saw the passenger train back up and. start on south on main track. I was watching, seeing what was being done. It pulled on down toward the platform; I had no idea until I saw the conductor on the platform, had no idea but what the passenger train would stop there. The conductor saw us three standing there and he kind of stuck his head out a little before we got there and said: ‘Jump on, this train won’t stop.’ At that Jim Wills jumped on rear platform of smoker, Heaton on front platform of ladies’ coach. The train seemed to start up a little fast about that time. I had to wait for the rear platform of ladies’ coach.”
Plaintiff estimated the speed of the train while passing the platform to be from six and one fourth to seven- and one fourth miles per hour. Other witnesses in his behalf gave the following estimates: Baker,
The rule governing cases like the present is thus expressed by the' supreme court: “To attempt to get on or off a train in rapid motion would be an act of gross negligence; but it is generally held that the courts will not, as a matter of law, declare a person guilty of contributory negligence who attempts to get on or oft a train while it is moving slowly, especially at a platform. The question of contributory negligence in such cases is one of mixed law and fact, and should be determined by the jury, under the guide of proper instructions, in the light of all the attending circumstances.” Fulks v. Railroad, 111 Mo. loc. cit. 340. In applying the above rule the supreme court decided that a husband could not recover for injuries to his wife, sustained by alighting from a train moving at the rate of four to fifteen miles per hour, whose speed slackened until it was fully stopped at a car length from the point where she jumped off, and where it further appeared she was warned not to get off. Nelson v. Railroad, 68 Mo. 593. It has been said also that it would be negligence per se for a person to board a train moving at the rate of eight miles per hour. Murphy v. Railroad, 43 Mo. App. 342. In New York, upon a second appeal, it has been held that a plaintiff, who got on a train of cars moving at the rate of one to two miles per hour at the command of the conductor to “jump on,” could not recover for injuries sustained thereby. It was further held that such a remark of the .conductor only amounted to a statement that the train would not stop. Hunter v. Railroad, 126 N. Y. 18.
For want of any rule fixing the limit of speed of a
Defendant’s train of cars, after backing on the main track from the switch, started toward the platform at the station, not for the purpose of stopping there but of continuing its journey. It was undisputed that there was a descending grade at this point, and plaintiff testifies that the train was passing the point where he stood on the platform at the rate of six and one fourth to seven and one fourth miles per hour. It is further shown that plaintiff was a man of vigor and youth, and a constant traveler upon railroads. His own testimony shows that he sprang upon the approaching train by leaping toward, not with, its motion. He
It is well settled that an act done upon the impulse of the moment upon a reasonable apprehension of impending danger will excuse conduct otherwise negligent in the actor; and the same is true of an act done in obedience to the command of a lawful superior, or in reliance upon his judgment. Neither of those features existed in the present case. The plaintiff was in a position of absolute safety on the platform. He knew the train approaching the platform would not stop there, because not only was. such notice conveyed to him by the remark of the conductor to “jump on” (Hunter v. Railroad, 126 N. Y. supra), but his own witness and attorney, who was standing at his side, states that the conductor warned them that the train would not stop. Under these circumstances it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the voluntary act of the plaintiff in boarding the train, as described in his own testimony, while it was traveling at an increasing rate of speed and had already reached a speed of six and one fourth to seven and one fourth miles per hour, was pure recklessness, depriving him of any right of recovery in this action. In accordance with the view herein expressed it is aptly said by the court of appeals of New'York: “To alight from, or to board a train in motion, is a negligent and hazardous
As there is not in the evidence given by plaintiff, or that of his witnesses, a single fact from which a logical inference could be drawn negativing the recklessness of the conduct of plaintiff in boarding the train of defendant, there was nothing issuable to submit to the jury, and the court should have directed a verdict for defendant.
The judgment in this case is reversed.