133 Mo. App. 444 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Plaintiff sued to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant. He had judgment in the sum of eight hundred dollars and defendant appealed. The injury occurred on August 1, 1905, at the intersection of defendant’s railroad and Holmes street in Kansas City. The street runs north and south and crosses defendant’s tracks — two in number — at a right angle. At about half past six o’clock in the evening, plaintiff, accompanied by a Mr. Hageler, drove south on Holmes street in a one-horse buggy and, as they neared the crossing, looked for some warning of the approach of a train. Defendant maintained a watchman at this place but no gate. Plaintiff and his companion observing that the watchman was not present looked up and down the railroad, saw no train, and drove forward to the crossing. When the horse reached the south track, Hageler became aware that a passenger train was coming from the west and was so close to the crossing that a collision was inevitable. He exclaimed in German, “We are done,” and at this, plaintiff glanced up, saw the train for the first time and attempted in vain to escape by hurrying the horse. The engine struck the hind end of the vehicle and threw the plaintiff out, inflicting severe personal injuries. It is alleged in the petition that ordinances in Kansas City in force at the time required defendant to maintain gates at this crossing and to keep a watchman there and forbade the running of trains at a higher rate of speed than six miles per hour. The negligence charged is “first, in failing to provide gates, or to have a watchman or other person stationed at said crossing to give warning to
We are of opinion that the court erred in refusing defendant’s request for an instruction peremptorily directing a verdict in its favor. The evidence, in its aspect most favorable to plaintiff, convicts him of negligence in law and demonstrates beyond peradventure that his own negligence directly contributed to his injury. In giving our reasons for this conclusion, we concede for argument, that defendant was negligent in not having gates at the crossing and a watchman there at the time in question to warn travelers on the street of the approach of trains; and further, that defendant Avas negligently running its train at from twenty to twenty-five miles per hour in violation of the city ordinance. But these concessions do not avail plaintiff anything since the indisputable facts of the situation show that the injury would have been avoided had he exercised reasonable care for his own safety.
The tracks of defendant are laid in Second street and run straight east and Avest. A two-story building Avas at the northwest corner of the intersection of the íavo streets. The north rail, of defendant’s north track was 24.2 feet from the south Avail of this building, and the north rail of the south track was thirteen feet farther south. About two hundred feet west of Main street, the tracks run through a cut. The foot of the bank on the north side Avas about six feet from the north track and about twenty feet from the south track and the face of the bank sloped bacltAvard from its base. Plaintiff and his companion testified that they drove the horse in a walk Avhile approaching the crossing.
With facts and circumstances such as these before us, we must reject as wholly barren of any probative value the statement of plaintiff and his companion that they looked to the west as soon as they came from behind the building and. saw no' train. If they looked, they must have seen the train since, as we have said, it could not have been more than two hundred feet away and there was no obstruction to their line of vision.
It has been decided again and again by the courts of last resort in this State that when the testimony of witnesses is clearly incompatible with the indisputable physical facts and laws of the situation, courts will not hold such testimony sufficient to raise an issue of fact, but will disregard it as a thing palpably false. Plaintiff either did not look in the direction of the advancing train or, looking, did not give heed to what he saw.. In either case, he was guilty of negligence which will preclude him from a recovery in this action.
On the subject of whether plaintiff was entitled to assume that the train would not be run at an excessive rate of speed, we repeat what we said recently in Grout v. Railway, 125 Mo. App. l. c. 559: “He was justified in indulging in this presumption but as we have recently declared in a number of cases, this did not absolve him from the performance of the duty of attending to his own safety. He had no right to rely solely on a presumption, but should have used his senses to acquaint himself with the actual circumstances open to his observation, and had he done this, it is very clear, he would not have entered into danger. Had he looked at the car with any degree of attentiveness, he could have seen that it was coming at a high rate of speed, and had he looked again before entering the sphere of danger, he would have known that it was highly dangerous for him to attempt to cross. The thing that brands his conduct as censurable in law is the fact that with the car in striking distance, and with every opportunity to protect himself, he blindly risked his life and limb on a mere presumption that others would be more careful than he.”
The judgment is reversed.