Plaintiff brought suit against the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and the Kansas City Belt Railway Company for damages on account of personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants. He dismissed the Belt Railway Company from the action during the trial and recovered judgmеnt against the appealing defendant in the sum of two thousand dollars.
The main contention of defendant is that the court should have directed a verdict in its favor. Under the terms of a written contract, plaintiff delivered two cars of cattle to the Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf Railroad Company at Hartshоrn, Indian Territory, for shipment to the market at Kansas City. The contract was not introduced in evidence and we are not advised of its terms, but it appears from the evidence that a through shipment was contemplated bv a route' which required the initial carrier to deliver the cars to the Kansas City Southеrn Railway Company at Howe, Indian Territory, for transportation to the Kansas City Terminal Yards of that company located at Sheffield, a town on the eastern border of Kansas City, and required that company to deliver them at Sheffield to the Belt Railway. A stock pass was issued to plaintiff by the Choctaw Company which entitled him to free transportation to Kansas City on the trains that carried his cattle, and he used the pass to Sheffield. The caboose in which he arrived at that point was stopped close to the tracks of the street railway company and plaintiff could have gone to the stockyards on a street car, but he elected to ride on the Belt Line train which picked up his cars of cattle. That train carried no caboose or other passenger car and consisted of an engine and forty-five freight cars. The engine was at the east end of the train and plаintiff’s two cars were at the opposite end. Plaintiff placed himself on the top of the second car from the end with the knowledge
“Q. Was it necessary for someone to go with the ""cattle to look after them? A. Not altogether. I ship sometimes without sending anyone. Q. You could have come up' just as well on a passenger train? A. Yes, but it just cost me a little piece of money . . . Q. You had shipped suffiсiently to know that the cattle would be handled by the railroad company and the stockyards company and assigned to the pen for the commission man to whom they were consigned, didn’t you? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that you could not help or hinder that in any way even if you were there? A. Yes, sir. I like to be there. Q. And you knew that thosе cattle would not be offered for sale until the next morning, didn’t you, if they got in here at four or five o’clock in the evening? A. Yes, sir. Q. You knew that; so there was nothing you could do at the quarantine yards that afternoon, was there? A. I could have went over and seen them unloaded and see what kind of condition they were in and ordered them fed.”
Shortly after the Belt Line train we have described started on its westward journey, it approached the track of defendant which runs north and south, stopped when
We do not hesitate in saying that, under the conceded facts in evidence, defendant’s engineer was guilty of gross negligence in the manner in whicht he approached the crossing. It will not do to excuse his conduct on the ground that he had his engine under control, and, in fact, stopped where he would have stopped had he known of the presence of the other train. His ignorance of the fact that another train had become possessed of the right of way and was using it, stamps his action in failing to signal and in proceeding to the crossing without any intention of stopping, with inexcusable negligence. Knowing, as he did, that his fireman was not on the lookout and that he himself could not see toward the east, for all practical purposes, he just as well might have attempted to run the crossing blindfolded, as far as knowing of the approach of a
We give our approval to the following extract from the opinion of Judge Shiras in Railroad v. Stoner, 51 Fed. Rep. 649: “Aside frоm ■ the provisions of any specific rule upon the subject, the law requires of parties charged with the control and management of trains moving upon intersecting lines of railway, that as they approach a crossing, they must exercise due care to secure the safe passage of thе train over the same, and in that respect they owe this duty not only to those whose persons or property may be upon the train controlled by them, but also to those who may be upon the train of the other intersecting line.. In the performance of this duty, it is incumbent upon the parties in control of thе train that they shall exercise a proper lookout for the approach of another train and they must also have their own train under proper control so that if need arises it can be promptly stopped. The trainmen know and are bound to know that all points where railway lines cross at grade are places of danger and they must, in the handling of trains intrusted to them, exercise the care which the presence of this known danger demands of them. Certainly it would be negligence of the grossest kind to attempt to make a crossing without taking pains to see whether there was another
The next question to engage our attention is whether the negligence of defendant we have just discussed constituted a breach of any duty defendant owed to plaintiff. The component parts of negligence are (1) a legal duty to use due care, (2) a breach of that duty, (3) the absence of distinct intention to produce the precise damage, if any, Avhich actually follows. Bindbeutal v. Railway,
In Whitehead v. Railway, 99 Mo. l. c. 269, the Supreme Court said: “The proрosition that the defendant owes no duty to one riding on a freight train un
The judgment is reversed.
