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, George Keim, and killing him. The answer of defendant is a general denial. On the trial plaintiff ob~ ' tained judgmеnt, which was affirmed by the St. Louis court of appeals, and the caséis before us on defendant’s appeal, and we are asked to' reverse the judgment for alleged error of the trial court in receiving evidence and in giving and refusing instructions.
As defendant’s objections to the evidence offered
It is next insistеd that there is no evidence justifying the court in submitting the case to the jury and none to support their verdict. This objection necessitates a review of the evidence, which, on the part of plaintiff, tended to show that deceased was a butchеr by trade, and 'lived with his family in St. Louis on Thomas and Cooper streets, where he had his shop, and that he also occupied a stall at Lucas Market on Twelfth and Pine streets, where he sold his meat; that he had been engaged in this business for several ‘years, going from his home in the early morning to the market every day except Sunday; that on the twenty-eighth of September, 1878, he left his home soon after four o’clock in the morning to go to the market, and went east on Gratiot street, when, about 4:30 o’clock, he was struck and killed, on the path in Gratiot street crossing defendant’s track, by a train of defendant coming west, which was running at the rate of twelve miles an hour, and, according to defendant’s evidence, without its bell being rung at the time of, and immediately before, the collision took place; that several railroad tracks crossed said Gratiot street diagonally; that between and across them there were foot paths used by persons in passing along and across said street and railroad tracks; that Gratiot street was laid out as early as 1846, and had been continuously used by the public ; that in 1876, the city of St. Louis, by ordinance which defendant accepted, gave it permission to extend its tracks from Tayon avenue to the western city limits, and to сross, among other streets, Gratiot street; that the said ordinance, among other things, provided that defendant should not
He further testified, among other things, as follows : After I crossed High street I noticed a man come suddenly on the track. I hallooed to him to get out of the road, to get off the track ; instеad of making an effort to get off, he threw up his arms and let himself fall right immediately in front of the engine southward across the track with his right arm across the rail. I gave the fiignal to the engineer to stop, with my lamp. Held my lamp out when I saw the man made no effort tо get off, gave the signal; we had already run over him with the engine and I gave the signal to stop, and said we have run over a man, and he put on his airbrake and reversed his engine, and I got out and found we had run over the man with the engine, tender and one cаr.” He farther testified that when he first saw deceased he was fifteen or twenty feet ahead of the engine, “ that he had no hat pn, had one arm on his coat, the coat was either hanging
The fact thаt the train was running at a greater rate of speed than six miles an hour was neither denied by ' the conductor nor engineer, both of whom testified that they could not avoid running over deceased after he was-discovered on the track. The engineеr testified that he was • at .his place on the engine looking ahead, and that as soon as he saw the man on the track and received the signal, he applied the air brake and reversed the engine, and made similar statements as to the аppearance of deceased to those made by the conductor. On being asked if á. man on the track, one hundred feet ahead of the train, were paying attention, could he hear it under the circumstances existing that morning, repliеd: “Well, about the bell being rung, I don’t think he could-hear it without the bell being rung; that the. bell, if rung,.
Nor do we feel authorized, as a matter of law, under the circumstances of this case, to say that deceased was guilty of such сontributory negligence as denied plaintiff ’ s right to recover. The evidence tended to show that deceased, as was his custom, left his home a few minutes before the accident occurred, to go to his place of business, pursuing the customаry route; that the morning was dark and foggy; that there were a number of railroad tracks crossing Gratiot street and a number of foot paths between and across these tracks used by the public ; that deceased was killed on one of these paths in Gratiot street which crossed defendant’s track ; that immediately before the collision, the fireman had ceased
The case of Holman v. Railroad,
It is next objected, that the first instruction, given for рlaintiff, is erroneous, in that it submits a question to the jury, on which there was no evidence, viz: the failure of defendant to ring the beil on the engine. We have adverted to the evidence on that subject in the foregoing part of this opinion, and it is unnecessary tо ■advert to it again, except to say, that it was sufficient to .justify the reference of the question to the jury. .
i It is also objected, that the court erred in refusing ■the fourth, thirteenth and fourteenth instructions, asked by the defendant, which relate to contributory negli•gеnce. It is sufficient to say of this objection, that the ■ court, of its own motion, gave seven instructions, covering every possible phase of contributory negligence, and the instructions were properly refused, for that, if for no other reason. An objеction is also made to the sixth instruction, given by the court, of its own motion, which ■contains the following language: “If the jury find
We have been cited to the case of Rine v. Railroad
