59 Mo. App. 626 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
This is an action brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover damages for
The alleged injury happened at the City of Jefferson, where the defendant has one'main track and four side tracks, the latter being located on the north side of the main track. The side 'tracks extend from depot of defendant at said city west about two blocks, or about one thousand feet, where they join the main track. Something like one-half mile west of the depot there is a public ferry landing on the Missouri river. Pedestrians, averaging about fifty per day, having occasion to pass to and from the said ferry to the defendant’s depot for a number of years, had usually traveled over and along defendant’s tracks instead of going, as they might have done, around through the city. There is a shoe' factory and a foundry situate on the south side of defendant’s main track, two blocks west of the depot. There were sometimes as many as eighty-five girls employed in the shoe factory and nine men in the foundry, many of whom daily passed over the defendant’s tracks in going to and returning from the place where employed.
It was not controverted that the defendant’s tracks between its depot and the west énd of its side tracks had been in daily use by pedestrians for a number of years before the date of the plaintiff’s injury. Plaintiff on the day of the receipt of the injury had crossed on the ferry from the north side of the river, intending to go to the defendant’s depot, thereto meet his daughter, expected to arrive on the defendant’s 1 o’clock passenger train. Instead of taking a circuitous route from the ferry to defendant’s depot through the city, he proceeded east, along and over defendant’s track, until he reached a point within the defendant’s switch limits, where, while walking on the defendant’s side track, just north of its main line, he discovered an engine
The employees of the defendant in charge of the engine testified that they did not see the plaintiff, either in passing along the side track west nor in approaching the water tank east of ■ the switch. The defendant’s tracks west of the depot to the switch were
The case went to the. jury on substantially these facts, resulting in judgment for plaintiff, from which defendant has appealed.
The principal question which we are obliged to consider arises out of the action of the trial court in the giving and refusing of instructions. The court, at the instance of plaintiff, told the jury that, although he was guilty of negligence in walking upon defendant’s track, yet if the jury believe from the evidence that while so upon the track said Powell became in imminent peril of being struck by defendant’s locomotive and tender, and the defendant’s employees in charge of said locomotive and tender became aware of his peril of being struck in time to have enabled them, by the exercise of ordinary care, to stop said locomotive and tender, and to have averted the injury to the said plaintiff; or, if the jury believe that said employees, by the exercise of ordinary care, could have become aware of his peril in time to have done so, and that they failed' to exercise such care and stop said locomotive and tender, and that by reason of the failure to stop said locomotive andtenderthe
The court infused to instruct the jury, at the request of the defendant, to the effect:
1. If they believed, from the evidence, that the plaintiff, at the time he was injured, was walking upon or too close to one of defendant’s tracks in its yards or depot and switch grounds in Jefferson City, and not at a point where such track crosses any public road or street, or where the same runs in or upon such public road or street, then he was a trespasser upon such track and the defendant’s servants in charge of the engine which struck owed him no duty whatever, except not to willfully injure him; and, unless the jury believe from the evidence that defendant’s servants in charge of the engine which struck him actually saw him in a position of danger, or knew that he was in such dangerous position, in time to have stopped the engine before it struck him, by ordinary effort and exertion on their part, then the, plaintiff could not recover.
2. That a person walking up a railroad track at a place other than where it runs across a public road or street or in and upon such road or street, does so at his own peril, and it is his duty to keep a constant watch both by eye and ear for the approach of engines from every direction, and if he fails to see or hear an engine approaching him and is struck by it while so walking upon such track, without being actually seen by the persons in charge of and running such engine,
3. That it was wholly immaterial whether the agents and servants of defendant, managing the engine which struck the plaintiff, could' have seen him if they had been on the lookout for him, or at what rate of speed the engine was running when it struck plaintiff, or whether the whistle was sounded or the bell was rung.
It is obvious that these instructions assert opposing theories of the law applicable to the facts of the case which the evidence tends to prove; the plaintiff’s theory being that, if the defendant’s empolyees engaged in managing the engine could, by the exercise of ordinary care have become aware of the plaintiff’s peril in time to have stopped the engine and averted the injury, and, failing to do so, there is liability; while the defendant’s theory is that, unless defendant’s said employees actually knew or saw the plaintiff’s perilous situation in time to have stopped the engine by ordinary effort before it struck him, there was no liability; and, further, it was immaterial whether the defendant’s employees managing the engine could or might have seen plaintiff had they been on the lookout.
The plaintiff, it is clear, was at a place on the defendant’s tracks where he had no right to be. And if there was nothing in the surroundings of the place
It has been repeatedly ruled that greater care must be exercised by employees managing a train of cars within the limits of a city, town or village than is required in the country. Frick v. Railroad, 75 Mo. 595; Brown v. Railroad, 50 Mo. 461; Maher v. Railroad, supra; Hicks v. Railroad, 64 Mo. 439; Harlan v. Railroad, 65 Mo. 24. A less degree of vigilance will ordinarily be required between streets of a city, town or village than at a street crossing or where running longitudinally in a street; but some vigilance is even required between streets and theN degree required.must necessarily vary with attendant circumstances. In any case the requisite degree of vigilance may be properly designated by the words “ordinary care;” that is, such care as would ordinarily be used by a prudent person performing a like service under similar circumstances.
Where there is reason to apprehend that the track may not be clear, the liability is not limited to want of care after the discovery of the danger. Williams v. Railroad, 96 Mo. 275, 279 and 281; Guenther v. Rail
The evidence, as has already been stated, shows that the defendant’s tracks at the place where the injury in question occurred had been for years in daily use by pedestrians going to, and returning from, the ferry landing and the factories in the vicinity. The defendant had acquiesced in such use.- It had not objected to the use of the tracks by pedestrians. No notice was there posted forbidding the use of the same, as in Hyde v. Railroad, 110 Mo. 272. The defendant’s tracks had been so long and so extensively used by the public, from its depot west to the ferry landing, that defendant must be held to have had a knowledge thereof. The knowledge that pedestrians were constantly passing over its track, then laid upon its employees, managing its engines and trains, the duty to exercise ordinary care and watchfulness, so as to avoid injuring such pedestrians so frequenting its tracks at that place. If the defendant’s employees, managing the engine which struck plaintiff, had been at their proper places, exercising the ordinary care required of them, after passing from the side track onto the main track, and while moving thereon east, they could have discovered plaintiff, and by sounding the whistle or ringing the bell, have warned plaintiff to leave the track; or, if he heeded not their signals, they could then have stopped the engine in time to have avoided the collision. But instead of exercising such vigilance and care, they hurriedly moved the engine forward at the unlawful speed of ten miles per hour without taking the ordinary precaution to look ahead to see whether the track was clear or not. Their failure to discover the danger in which the plaintiff was, resulted from their carelessness and recklessness; for,
But it is contended by defendant that the plaintiff, by walking on the defendant’s track at the place where he received his injury, was thereby guilty of such contributory negligence as ought to preclude a recovery. The rule is well settled in this state that, notwithstanding the injured party may have been guilty of contributory negligence, a railroad company is still liable for the injury if it could have been prevented by the exercise of reasonable care on the part of the company after the discovery of the danger in which the injured party stood; or, if the company failed to discover the danger through its own recklessness, when the exercise of ordinary care would have discovered it and avoided the injury. Guenther v. Railroad, supra; Fiedler v. Railroad, supra; Lemay v. Railroad, supra; Williams v. Railroad, supra; Dunkman v. Railroad, supra; Frick v. Railroad, supra.
The evidence shows that, when plaintiff saw the engine approaching from the east on the side track, he stepped off that track onto the main track, and then it passed on to the west. If he heard the noise it made while returning eastward to the tank, he must have supposed it was still on the side track and hence did not look back at it and get out of its way. He was, no doubt, unaAvare that it was returning on the main track on which he was walking. He was unconscious of his peril. While it was, no doubt, negligence on his part to walk on defendant’s tracks where he was injured, still, if the employees managing the engine which struck plaintiff, had been in the exercise of ordinary care, they would have discovered the plaintiff’s
We are unable to discover any error materially affecting the merits, so that it necessarily results that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.