This is a suit for damages accrued to • plaintiff on account of personal injuries received through defendant’s negligence in failing to construct a sufficient approach to a public road crossing on its railroad. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
It appears plaintiff was traveling in a carriage on the public highway and approaching the crossing of defendant’s railroad when an embankment on which the approach to the crossing was constructed gave way and occasioned her injury. The horse, the carriage and plaintiff were all precipitated from the embankment to the lower ground, more than seven feet below. As a result of the overturning of the carriage, plaintiff received two broken ribs, two sprained ankles and other painful injuries.
The suit proceeds on our statute which requires railroad corporations to construct and maintain good and sufficient crossings and approaches thereto where their railroads cross public roads open for public use. So much of the statute as is relevant here is as follows:
“Every such corporation shall construct and maintain good and sufficient crossings, where its railroad crosses public roads or town streets, now or hereafter to be opened for public use, which crossings shall be constructed of the materials and in the manner following : On each side of each rail shall be laid and securely spiked to the cross-ties a plank of not less than ten
A subsequent provision of the statute gives a right of action for damages to a party injured against the-railroad company resulting from its neglect in omitting-to construct or maintain the crossing as required. For-the same provisions touching the same subject-matter,, see also another section of the statute as amended. [Sec. 9554, R. S. 1899, Amended Laws 1905, p. 106, and as amended sec. 9554, An. St. 1906.]
The petition counts upon the statute as though the railroad company had failed and neglected to construct both the crossing on its tracks and the approaches thereto as required by the statutes. Among other things, it is alleged that defendant constructed a high embankment across Avhiek the public road approached the crossing on its tracks, and that such approach Avas constructed in a negligent manner in that it wras only about ten feet Avide and thrown up of loose sand and dirt AAdiich Avas supported on the side by decayed and insecure timbers. It is averred that wdiile plaintiff was approaching the crossing of the track on an approach so negligently constructed to the road crossing, one of the decayed timbers mentioned gave Avay and precipitated her to the injury complained of. The proof show^s defendant’s railroad is constructed on an embankment about eight or ten feet high and that it had constructed an embankment therefrom in the public road as an ap
The principal argument advanced for reversal of the judgment is that though the approach to the crossing failed to meet the requirements of the statute and was both negligently constructed and maintained, defendant
Prior to our statute on the subject, it had been decided in many cases that a user by the pixblic for more than ten years established the way as a public road by prescription. [Zimmerman v. Snowden, 88 Mo. 218; Roberts v. Q. O. & K. C. R. Co., 43 Mo. App. 287; Dow v. K. C. & S. R. Co., 116 Mo. App. 555, 92 S. W. 744; State v. Walters, 69 Mo. 463.] It is true our statute, sec. 9694, Revised Statutes 1899, sec. 9694, An. St. 1906, has introduced an element as to the establishment of roads by prescription requiring public money to be expended thereon in order to defeat the right of the owner of the fee with respect to occupying the lands over which the road passes. It provides in effect that no lapse of time shall tjivest the owner of the title to his land unless, in addition to the use of the road by the public for ten consecutive years, there shall have been public mon
Though no proceedings were ever had in the courts for the-purpose of establishing the road on which defendant had constructed the crossing and though no public money was ever expended thereon, it was as much a public road within the meaning of the statute enjoining the duty to construct crossings and sufficient approaches thereto as if established by the county court. [Sikes v. St. L. & S. F. R. Co., 127 Mo. App. 326, 105 S. W. 700.] Where there has been a lawful establishment of a highway, whether by dedication, prescription or otherwise, before the railroad is constructed, such railroad is not only required but may be forced to construct and maintain the necessary crossings therefor under the statute. [St. L. & S. F. R. Co. v. Gordon, 157 Mo. 71, 57 S. W. 742.] It is entirely clear that the statute imposed the duty declared upon the defendant and that it had breached the same by omitting to exercise ordinary care in constructing and maintaining a-sufficient approach to the crossing as required.
Plaintiff requested no instruction other than one touching the measure of damages which was given and defendant complains of this, not because the instruction was erroneous as to the measure of damages, but because it failed to require a finding on the issue of negligence and define its liability. It is said the court erred in giving an instruction for plaintiff on the measure of damages without also giving one for him defining the issue of negligence and submitting the entire case to the jury. It is the rule that an' instruction which predicates lia
The jury awarded plaintiff a verdict of two thousand dollars and it is argued the award is excessive. We are not so persuaded. It appears plaintiff is a lauy about forty years of age. Two of her ribs were broken, both ankles were sprained and it seems one foot was otherwise considerably injured, for it remained much discolored a long time. Plaintiff was unable to walk for several months. She was scratched and bruised and her nervous system considerably shocked. The testimony shows she was confined for eight weeks to her bed and compelled to use crutches for about three months when she walked. She suffered, too, great pain of body and anguish of mind.
The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.