188 Mo. 657 | Mo. | 1905
This is an action to recover $5,000 damages for the death of the plaintiff’s husband on May 11, 1900, caused by a fire engine, of which he was the driver, colliding with a guard or fender connected with a crossing gate at the northwest comer of Broadway and Poplar streets in the city of St. Louis. The plaintiff recovered judgment for $5,000, and after proper steps the defendant appe'aled.
The suit was originally instituted against the city of St. Louis and the defendant railway company. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the city of St. Lduis, but against the defendant railway company.
The petition alleges that the city of St. Lonis is a municipal corporation, and the defendant railway company, a corporation organized under the laws of Missouri ; that Broadway is a public street or highway in the city of St. Louis; that plaintiff was the wife of George Seibert, deceased. , The petition then alleges that:
“Plaintiff further states that long prior to said 11th day of May, 1900, the said defendant, Missouri Pacific Railway Company, by and with the permission of the said defendant, city of St. Louis, erected and has ever since said time maintained, a large massive cast-iron structure on and in that part of said Broadway intended for driving purposes, and about four feet east of the west curb of said Broadway, just north of said Poplar street, in the city of St. Louis; that said defendant Missouri Pacific Railway Company, by and with the permission of the said defendant city of St. Louis, long prior to said May 11,1900, placed two large, massive, wrought-iron rails or bars, one on either side of said cast-iron structure hereinbefore described,' in such position that one end of each of said iron bars was embedded in the said public street known as Broadway, at least one foot east of the said iron structure, and at least five feet east of the said west curb of said Broadway, and the other end slanting westwardly to the said iron structure at a point distant two or three feet above the paved surface of said street.
“Plaintiff further states that by reason of said position in said street, the said cast-iron structure and wrought-iron rails or rods, were, from the time they were so placed in said street, a dangerous obstruction to the use of said street as a public driveway, and that the defendant city of St. Louis, knew that the said iron structure and wrought-iron rails were dangerous to persons driving on said street; that said
‘ ‘ The plaintiff says that the death of said George Seibert was caused by the negligence of the defendant said Missouri Pacific Railway Company in erecting and maintaining said obstruction on said street, and also in so maintaining the same in said street without maintaining a danger light on or near the same at night, and by the negligence of the defendant city of St. Louis, in permitting said defendant Missouri Pacific Railway Company to erect and maintain said obstruction in said street, and in permitting said defendant Missouri Pacific Railway Company to maintain said obstruction in said street by night without maintaining on or near the same a danger light or lights as aforesaid.”
The answer of the city of St. Louis was a general denial, with a plea of contributory negligence on the part of the deceased. The answer of the defendant railway company admitted that it had, with the permission of the city, erected and maintained crossing gates
The replies to the answers were general denials.
The case made is this:
The defendant railway company has a track on Poplar street which runs east and west and crosses Broadway. Broadway runs north and south. On the 7th of April, 1893, the Municipal Assembly of St. Louis enacted an ordinance containing the two following sections:
“ Section' 1234. Every person, association or corporation running or operating engines or cars propelled by steam upon its railroad track or tracks, along or across any ■ street, avenue or road in the city of St. Louis, now, or which may hereafter be used for wagon travel, shall erect, at all cross or intersecting streets, avenues or roads' so used, or which may hereafter be used, a gate or gates, made of wood or iron or other suitable material, and unless said gates are opened and closed automatically, such persons, associations or corporations shall keep a watchman to operate such gate or gates who shall close the same immediately before the passage of any engine, car or train of cars, and
“Provided, however, that this ordinance shall not apply to any cross or intersecting avenues, streets or roads, that are now, or that may hereafter, he bridged over and across the railroad tracks;
“And provided further,' that this ordinance shall not apply to any cross or intersecting streets, avenues or roads on which are laid tracks used exclusively for switching purposes or for switch tracks.
“Section 1235.' Any person, association or cor-, poration failing to observe and comply with the provisions of section twelve hundred thirty-four, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor -and upon conviction thereof, in the police court of the-city, shall be fined not less than $100' nor more than $500 for each and every offense, and every day’s violation thereof shall constitute a separate offense.”
Pursuant to the requirements of said ordinance, and under written direction and authority of the city, the defendant railway company on the 8th of December, 1899, erected crossing gates at the intersection of Broadway and Poplar streets in the city of St. Louis. Such gates consisted of a mechanical appliance inclosed in an iron box at each of the four corners of the said intersecting streets. Such mechanical appliances were connected with and operated four wooden arms. The whole appliance was operated by a man, who had a station on one of said intersecting corners. On the approach of a train said arms were lowered so as to extend from each of said corners toward the center of the street and thus form a barrier or gate, as it is called, on each side of the railroad tracks. After the .passage of a train, the operator, by use of said appliances, raised the arms to an upright position, thereby
The whole projection, including said protection, extended five feet two inches eastwardly from the west curb line of Broadway. As above stated, there was one such box and protection on each of the four comers of Broadway and Poplar streets. Broadway is a very wide street, and between the outside limits of said boxes and their projections, there was a free, open space of thirty-nine feet for public use and travel. In the center of the street there is a double track electric street railway.
The city of St. Louis has a fire engine house located on the west side of Broadway opposite Valentine street, about two hundred feet north of Poplar street. In said engine house are located two fire engines, numbered 15 and 39, with their respective hose reels, and also a truck or hook and ladder. The engine No. 15 occupies the south room of the engine house. The truck or hook and ladder is stationed in the middle room, and engine No. 39, in the north room.
Under the rules of the fire department, when an alarm of fire comes from a portion of the city south of said engine house, it is the duty of engine No. 15, of which the deceased George Seibert was the driver, to leave the engine house first, cross Broadway to the east side thereof, so as to permit the truck or hook and ladder to come out of the engine house and go south
The deceased, George Seibert had been a driver of a beer wagon in the city of St. Louis for many years. For some time before the date of the accident, he had been a driver of a fire engine belonging to the city. For eleven days before the accident he had been the driver of engine No. 15. He lived at 2739 Arsenal street, which was south of the engine house, and at least once each day he went from the engine house southwardly to reach his home in order to get his meals.
The crossing gates at Broadway and Poplar were plainly visible from the engine house, at which the deceased was stationed. About three o’clock in the morning of May 11, 1900, an alarm of fire was sounded in the engine house, calling them to a fire south' of Poplar street. Obedient to the rules of the department, the deceased drove engine No. 15 out of the engine house and across Broadway to the east side thereof. Seeing that the truck had not come out of the engine house, the deceased then recrossed Broadway to the west side thereof and proceeded southwardly at the rate of speed at which fire engines proceed in the city of St. Louis, which was as fast as the horses could run.
The engine weighed 9,700 pounds. There was an electric arc light suspended in the middle of the intersection of said streets, which lighted the locality so that the crossing gates and their appurtenances could be easily seen at a distance of from eighty to one hundred feet, and the light was burning at the time of the accident. When the engine reached the intersection of Broadway and Poplar streets the front wheel, on the right-hand side of the engine, struck -the north fender or rail protecting the box containing the appliance for
For the purpose of this case this is a sufficient statement of the facts. At the close of the plaintiff’s case and again at the close of the whole case the defendant demurred to the evidence. The court overruled the demurrers and the defendant excepted, and now relies chiefly upon the ruling of the trial court in this regard as ground for reversal of the case.
I.
' The crucial question in this case is, whether the construction and maintenance, by the defendant railroad company, of the safety gates, with the appliances for operating the same, together with the two bars of railroad iron protecting said boxes, all located inside of the street line, and constructed and maintained in obedience to the requirements of an ordinance of the city of St. Louis, constitute a nuisance on a public street, so as to render the defendant liable for damages caused by a collision therewith.
The general rule of law is, that the city has no power to place, or to cause or permit any one to place, a nuisance or obstruction upon a public highway, which renders the highway dangerous to travellers thereon. The- question, therefore, in this case is, whether the erection' and maintenance of the crossing gates, with their necessary appliances and protections, within the limits of the street, constitutes such an obstruction as to amount to a nuisance on the street within the meaning of the general rule of law stated. In other words, whether the city of St. Louis had the legal right to enact the ordinances hereinbefore set out, requiring the defendant railroad company to erect and maintain such crossing or safety gates, as a police regulation, and to authorize, or permit the same to be located within the lines of the street.
The power of the city of St. Louis in this regard is to he found in paragraphs 2,11, and 14 of section 26 of article 3 of the city charter. Paragraph 2 confers the power upon the mayor and assembly, “to establish, open, vacate, alter, widen, extend, pave, or otherwise improve and sprinkle all streets, avenues, sidewalks, . . . and to regulate the use thereof.” Paragraph 11 confers the power, inter alia, to grant to persons or corporations the right to construct railways in the city, . . and to regulate and control the same as to their fares, routes and frequency of .trips, and the repair of their tracks and the kind of their rails and vehicles. Paragraph 14 confers power to pass all ordinances, not inconsistent with the provisions of the charter or the laws of the State, as may he expedient in maintaining the peace, good government, health and welfare of the city.
These express grants of power are ample to support the ordinance requiring the erection of such safety gates where railroads cross public streets. But without such express grants, the power to pass such police regulations is an inherent power necessary for the protection of the lives and persons of the citizens using the public streets. ■
In Belcher Sugar Refining Co. v. St. Louis Grain & Elevator Co., 101 Mo. 204, in speaking of structures on public highways (in that case it was an elevator on a public wharf), the court said: “We do not say that the State has the power to confer upon the city the right to turn the wharf to purely private uses, or to charge it with burdens not contemplated by the condemnation, without additional compensation; but there is a wide field over which the Legislature is supreme, and many structures may be justified under legislative sanction which would otherwise be a nuisance.”
A safety gate at a point where a railroad crosses a public street is in no sense a private use of the street, but is clearly a police protection against injuries to persons passing along the street, in consequence of the passage of railway trains over the same, and such gates, therefore, cannot in any proper sense'be said to be a nuisance on the street. It goes without saying that such gate must be closed and opened by machinery, and that such machinery must operate either automatically or by human agency. In either event there must be a permanent displacement of as much of the street surface as is necessary for the occupancy of such machinery. Whether the operating machinery shall be placed within the limits of the street, that is, between the curb lines of the street, or on the sidewalk, which constitutes a part of the street in the legal acceptation of the term ‘' street, ” is a question resting largely within the discretion of the municipal authorities, and the courts will not interfere therewith, nor condemn the municipal action in respect to the place where said ma
As stated, a street; in the legal acceptation, includes the portion provided for the passage of vehicles and also the sidewalks provided for the use of pedestrians. The location of such appliances on the sidewalk impairs the use of the sidewalk for pedestrians, to a certain and perhaps greater degree than the location thereof within the space allotted for the passage of vehicles impairs the use of that portion of the street for the use of the public. Wherever such appliances are located, they necessarily withdraw as much of the street as they permanently displace from public use. But inasmuch as such gates are not only useful but necessary for the protection of the lives of the people, their presence on the street is not an unlawful use of the street for that purpose, nor do they constitute a nuisance, within the legal meaning of the term.
The identical question here involved does not seem to have undergone judicial determination in this State. But the principle involved has been considered and applied with reference to other obstructions on a street, and it has uniformly been held that where the obstruction constitutes a necessary incident to the use of the street for the purposes authorized by law, or where they, as here, are intended for the protection of the general traveling public, they do not constitute a nuisance..
The principle has been applied to piers and abutments on a street or highway for a bridge, and it has been held that the places on the street where such piers shall be located are properly determinable by the mu-.
The same principle has been applied in reference to the construction of a bridge over a navigable stream of water, thereby rendering the navigation more hazardous, but the bridge affording greater facilities to the traveling public. [Miller v. Mayor of New York, 109 U. S. 385.]
The erection of a pier in ‘a street to support the end of a bridge, crossing the Missouri river at Kansas City, Missouri, for railroad and. wagon travel and for the use of pedestrians, was held by this court not to be a nuisance in the street, in Gates v. Bridge & Terminal Co., 111 Mo. 28.
The placing of telegraph and telephone poles in a sidewalk on a street, whereby a certain portion of the street was permanently withdrawn from use by the public, has been held not to bem nuisance on the street. [Julia Building Assn. v. Bell Telephone Co., 88 Mo. 266; Gay v. Telegraph Co., 12 Mo. App. 486.]
Speaking of the liability of a city for acts or neglects of its officers, with respect to the performance of duties imposed for the public benefit, and not for profit or special privileges to the municipal corporation, Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations (6 Ed.), page 256, says: “And as the State is not responsible for the acts or neglects of public officers in respect to the duties imposed upon them for the public benefit, so one of these corporations is not liable to private suits for either the non-performance or the negligent performance of the public duties which it is required to assume, and does assume, for the general public, and from which the corporation itself receives neither private nor special privilege. And the same presumption that legislative action has been devised and adopted on adequate information and under the influencé of correct motives, will be applied to the discretionary action of municipal bodies, and of the State
The duty and right and power to erect such gates carries with it a discretion to determine where such gates shall be erected, and the character of the gates to be erected. This discretion is not subject to judicial review or control, unless it is so exercised as to amount to a practical destruction of the street for street purposes, or to a virtual withdrawal of the street from public use, such as was the case with Dubach v. Railroad, 89 Mo. 488, and Lockwood v. Railroad, 122 Mo. 98. Cases like Schopp v. St. Louis, 117 Mo. 131, have no application to cases of this character, for the reason that the use authorized in that case was for private benefit and not for public good.
The petition in this case charges that the structures, including the iron rails or barriers, were located by the defendant, under authority of the city of St. Louis, and the answer charges that they were placed there in obedience to an ordinance, and pursuant to the direction of the proper city authorities. As above stated, there was a clear, unobstructed roadway thirty-nine feet in width between such structures for the use of the traveling public. The uncontradicted testimony shows that there was an electric arc light suspended in the middle of the intersection of Broadway and Pop
Under these facts there can be no room for doubt that anyone could have safely driven over the street while exercising any degree of care whatever, without incurring the slightest liability to danger from such obstruction, and that the deceased knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, of the existence of such structure on the street, and by the exercise of like care could have avoided a collision therewith. There is no question that the structures were proper structures and were of the character and kind usually employed for such purposes.
The conclusion is, therefore, inevitable that the structures were not a nuisance on the street; that the defendant placed them there in obedience to a positive requirement of a municipal regulation, enacted under the police power conferred by the State upon the city of St. Louis for public benefit and protection, and that they did not constitute such an obstruction on the street as unnecessarily impaired its usefulness as a street or such as would cause injury to anyone using the street while exercising ordinary care. It is likewise apparent that the presence of the structure on the street could not have inflicted the injury complained of, if the deceased had used even the slightest degree of care in the management of his. engine and team.
Upon the whole case made, therefore, it follows