152 Mo. App. 577 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
(after stating the facts as above). — I. As to the last chance doctrine, it may be said that there is not a scintilla of evidence proving, or tending to prove, how far the car was from the point of the collision when the plaintiff emerged from behind the northbound car and entered the danger zone, nor is there any evidence as to the distance in which a car running at the rate of speed this car is said to have been running (twenty miles an hour), could have been stopped, and there was, therefore, no showing that the car could have been stopped in time to have averted the collision, after plaintiff placed himself in a position of peril. The humanitarian or last chance doctrine is realistic in its operation, and seizes hold of conditions that actually exist at the time of the injury, and does not apply to conditions that could or should exist; and, in order to recover under it, it devolves upon the plaintiff to prove that after a situation of peril arose, the defendant by the exercise of ordinary care could have averted the injury to the plaintiff and failed to do so. As we said in the case of Wilkerson v. St. L. & S. F. R. Co., 140 Mo. App. l. c. 316, 124 S. W. 543: “As there are no tangible facts or circumstances to show where the deceased went on the track or so near it as to imperil his safety, there is no proof that the engineer could have stopped his train in time to have averted the accident, and there being a failure to prove negligence, no liability would attach to the defendant company.” To the same effect is Zurfluh v. Peoples Ry. Co., 46 Mo. App. l. c. 642, where the St. Louis Court of Appeals said: “Now the difficulty which we encounter is, that the plaintiff’s evidence fails to show how far away the car was, when he started the second time to cross the track, and within what distance the car could have been stopped. It seems to us that it was absolutely neces
II. Plaintiff testified that he was standing behind the north-bound car near the west rail of the northbound track, and that he looked north from behind the car to see whether there was a car approaching on the south-bound track; that he could then see about forty feet only, the north-bound car preventing him from seeing farther than this along the track. After taking this look, he crossed the intervening space between the tracks —about five feet — going west, without looking, and he did not look again for an approaching car until he was upon the south-bound .track, at which time the car which struck him was so close that a collision was unavoidable. He testified that at this time it was light enough to have seen an object fifty or one hundred yards away if it was large enough, and his counsel in their brief state: “Although it was dark, plaintiff does not contend that he conld not have seen a car more than forty or fifty feet if no obstruction had been in the way.”
The law in regard to pedestrians entering upon the tracks of a railroad company, under the circumstances shown by the plaintiff’s own testimony in this case, is that while ordinary care does not usually require a traveler to look and listen constantly at all points of his approach to the railroad crossing, it does require that he should look just before going upon the .track or so near thereto as to enable him to cross before a train within the range of his view going at the usual rate of speed would reach the crossing. [33 Cyc. 1013.] Under the conceded facts which we have detailed, coming from the mouth of the plaintiff, we have a case exactly parallel to that of Giardina v. St. L. & M. R. R.
III. But plaintiff’s counsel contend that he was not guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law as “he took care to see he would be safe from a car running at lawful rate of speed and he had a right to assume that cars would not be running at a reckless and unlawful rate of speed.”
A person has nO' right to assume the existence of a certain state of facts, when, by exercising ordinary care, he could discover the true state of facts; and a person who looks, while some distance from the track, to see whether or not a car is approaching and sees none, has no right to go blindly forward without again looking, in reliance upon the presumption that a car will not approach at a high rate of speed. As said in Gumm v. The K. C. B. Ry. Co., 141 Mo. App. l. c. 314, 125 S. W. 796: “Plaintiff argues that she was justified in presuming that the train was not running to exceed six miles an hour. No presumption gave her the right to fail to make reasonable use of her senses for her own safety, and she had but to look from her place of safety
IY. In no event could it be presumed in this case in excuse 'of plaintiff’s contributory negligence that he relied on an observance of the speed ordinance since he did not testify he was familiar with the provisions of such ordinance and relied upon the same. The rule is, that courts will not assume an injured person relied upon the observance of speed regulations where he tes
From what has been said it follows as night follows day that the judgment of the trial court sustaining the demurrer to the evidence was the only one authorized by law, and it is hereby affirmed.