170 Mo. App. 663 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
In this ease an employee of one railroad sues another railroad for damages caused by being run over by a freight train of the defendant at the crossing of the two roads.
Plaintiff was returning from his work as a section hand on the Burlington road riding on a hand car, and was on his way to the tool house to put away the hand car and tools. The defendant Rock Island railroad runs south along and about the middle of Eighth street in the city of St. Joseph. The Burlington railroad comes from the east on Renick street till it reaches Ninth street (the next street east of and parallel to Eighth), and there the railroad makes a sharp turn to the southwest and crosses Eighth street at an angle of about forty-five degrees. Prom the point where the north line of the Burlington railroad crosses the east line of Eighth street to the crossing of the two railroads is about forty-one feet, and from the point of intersection of the Burlington north track with the east line of Eighth street directly west to- the Rock Island east track is thirty-one feet. In the angle formed by the east line of Eighth street and the west or north line of the Burlington track were a number of sheds and a tall growth of weeds which entirely obscured the view of persons walking down the Burlington track or riding on a hand car, until they crossed the east line of and emerged into Eighth street.
As intimated above, plaintiff was a section hand not in the employ of the defendant but in that of the Burlington. He had worked for the Burlington for seventeen years, but, until two days before the injury, his place of work had been elsewhere on the main line, and he had not been at the crossing above mentioned more than four or five times in two years previous to the injury and was not much on the track in question during the seventeen years.
As a result of the collision plaintiff’s leg was crushed, necessitating its amputation, his arm crippled and his scalp cut open from some portion of his crown down to the eyebrow. He was in the hospital something over forty-three months. The jury returned a verdict for $5000.
It is urged that a demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. That, as plaintiff was a section hand, defendant owed him no duty to look out for him or to give him warning except where he is actually seen to be in peril and oblivious to danger. But this overlooks the fact that in this case plaintiff was not a servant of defendant. He was a stranger. The mere fact that his business happened to be that of a workman upon a railroad would not relieve defendant of the duty to stop and whistle for the crossing, or to ring the bell, or to observe the speed ordinances. The duty to do these things was imposed upon the defendant for the benefit of those likely to use the crossing whether they be priest, prophet, saint or devil. Their calling in life could make no difference. In fact, being a railroad man, the plaintiff would be more apt' to know of
The point is also made that the failure of the brake on the hand car to work properly was the cause of the injury. The jury, however, found that the failure of defendant to stop for the crossing, to whistle, or to ring the bell, and the high speed, were the proximate causes. The fact that the brake did not work effectively may not have enabled the plaintiff to escape the results of defendants’ negligence, but the latter, and not plaintiff’s inability to escape, was the proximate cause of the injury. The contradictions and difference between the evidence offered in behalf of plaintiff and that introduced by defendant were matters for the jury to settle. ¥e must take its judgment as to which side was right. Hence the judgment is affirmed.