162 Mo. App. 618 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This action was originally brought by plaintiff, respondent here, against the St.
The amended petition, after describing these platforms, but not as particularly as we have done, proceeds to aver “that the said platform or passageway at their said depots (referring to the Frisco and Cotton Belt), and between their said depots is and was .■at all times herein mentioned, under the mutual reciprocal control and management of defendants, and is iand was used by passengers arriving and departing, •and arranging for arriving and departing, and by persons having other business to transact with said defendants there, and that all these conditions existed on and prior to the 18th day of February, A. D. 1909.” It is further averred in the petition that on the above
In giving a synopsis of the petition in the case we have, for the sake of brevity and to avoid repetition, incorporated in it in describing the locality, some of the facts that are proven by the uncontroverted evidence in the case.
The trial was before the court and a jury. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case each defendant interposed demurrers which being overruled and exception saved, defendants introduced their evidence and plaintiff introducing evidence in rebuttal defendants again interposed demurrers. That of the Frisco was sustained but that, of the Cotton Belt was overruled and after being instructed by the court, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the Frisco but found against the Cotton Belt and assessed plaintiff’s damages at the sum of $800'. Judgment followed accordingly and after interposing a motion for new trial and saving exceptions to that being overruled, the St.
It may he said of the case that plaintiff proved all the facts averred in his petition, as also the facts which we have set out and which were not specifically pleaded, with one very marked exception. That exception covers the allegation to the effect that this defendant was one of those who owned and maintained the passageway upon which the accident occurred, and that this passageway upon which the accident ococcurred and at the point on it at which the accident' occurred, was under the control and management of this defendant, in conjunction with its codefendant. It is clear that without this fact appearing by the evidence in the case, plaintiff should not have recovered as against this defendant.
The duty of railroads or, for that matter, of others owning premises to which the public generally or the customers or patrons or persons visiting the premises have been invited or permitted, has been treated of at great length by accepted text-writers as well as by the courts. In addition to the text-writers cited by ■the learned counsel for the respective parties, reference may be made to 3 Elliott on Railroads (2 Ed.), chap. 52; 4 Ibid., chapters 59 and 67. The law on the matter is well epitomized by Mr. Justice Harlan, speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States, in Bennett v. L. & N. Ry. Co., 102 U. S. 577. The syllabus to that case, said to have been written by the learned justice, is that “the owner or occupant of land who induces or leads others to come upon it for a lawful purpose, is liable in damages to them — they using due care — for injuries occasioned by the unsafe condition of the land or its approaches, if such condition was known to him and not to them, and he negligently suffered it to exist, without giving timely notice thereof to them or the public.” In the body of the opin
The duty railroad companies of this state owe to passengers, with respect to the safety of a place of landing, is so clearly set out by Judge Goode, speaking for this court, in Fillingham v. St. Louis Transit Co., 102 Mo. App. 573, 77 S. W. 314, his opinion quoted from with approval by our Supreme Court in Rearden, Admr. v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co., 215 Mo. 105, 114 S. W. 961, and the duty of railroads to see to the safe condition of their platforms, even as to those persons who used them but who have completed their journey and could no longer be said to be passengers, is so fully discussed by Judge Cauleiedd, speaking for this court, in Munro v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Co., 155 Mo. App. 710, 135 S. W. 1016, that it is unnecessary for us to discuss it here. Nor is it necessary in this case to go into the law governing the relation of carrier and passenger, for in the case at bar when this plaintiff had arrived at Delta station, carried there as a passenger by the Cotton Belt, appellant here, and was safely landed from its train and had left the platform of that road in safety, the relation of carrier and passenger no longer existed between him and the railroad. Plaintiff had left his baggage, or part of it, in the depot of the appellant, checking it there, but while the check issued was that of the railroad, the relation of the railroad to the baggage and to the plaintiff then became that of ware
A witness testified that he was the porter for the three railroads, “hired by the men who are employed in the offices there to do the porter work. I am not employed as porter for the railroad. I am hired by them for transferring freight. Baggage is transferred independently to the travelling public. They pay for it. The company does not hire me to do that. I am not required by the company, or - either of the companies, to move baggage.” But he further testified that he had “a kind of contract with the Frisco to transfer their freight to the Iron Mountain and Cotton Belt. The crews of the Iron Mountain and Cotton Belt themselves transfer their freight to the Fris
The demurrers asked-by this defendant at the end of plaintiff’s case and at the end of the whole case should have been given. The judgment of the circuit court against the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company, appellant here, is reversed.