Lead Opinion
Certiorari. The record brought here is that of the St. Louis Court of Appeals in the case of Ludwig Schulz, Admr., v. St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern- Railway Company,
“The petition charges negligence of the defendant in operating its train, in that it approached the crossing in question without giving the statutory signals. The answer is a general denial and a plea of contributor negligence, which plea was denied by plaintiff’s reply.
“The deceased was 24 years of age and unmarried, and left surviving him, besides his father, four brothers and two sisters, ranging in age from 20 to 38 years and all self-supporting. The deceased was employed as *211 a farm hand at $25 per month, in addition to which he 'was given his room and hoard and feed for his horses. The place of his employment was situated about three-quarters of a mile southeast of Munson’s Station, which station was maintained by defendant company mainly for the purpose of picking up cans of milk that were shipped from that point by the farmers in the neighborhood to St. Louis. For a long time prior to the date 'of the accident defendant had a train from the south, known as the £milk train,’ stop at the station at the hour of 6:30 a. m. The deceased usually drove a team hitched to a two-wheel cart, loaded with two or three cans of milk, from the farm to said station each morning in time to make the milk train.
“Defendant’s tracks, in approaching Munson’s Station from the south, make a curve, and pass under an overhead railroad bridge about a quarter of a mile south of the station, and there the tracks enter into a deep cut. From said bridge, however, up to and beyond Mun-son’s the tracks run in a straight line. There are embankments on either side of the tracks from the said overhead railroad bridge, which continue almost up to the crossing in question. The two platforms of which the station consists lie to the west of the tracks and south of the road crossing, so that the deceased, coming as he did from the east, in order to reach the platform had to drive his team across the tracks toward the west and then turn his team some 25 to 30 feet to the south, to deliver his.cans of milk. It appears that the road, some hundred feet before it reaches the railroad crossing, ascends a short steep hill, requiring turning first to the left and then to the right; the hill, according to one of the witnesses, being on an incline of 33 per cent, and the top of the hill ending practically at the railroad’s right of way and on a level with the tracks. At a point where the road enters the right of way of the railroad of the defendant company is an unused gate, the distance therefrom to the center of the tracks being approximate *212 ly 30 to 40 feet. By reason of the embankment lying to the south of the road and close up to the tracks, a man driving a wagon and approaching the tracks from the east cannot see southward along the tracks a distance of 150 feet until the horses would have their feet on the railroad tracks, and ‘then you could see a train for the first time coming from the south. ’
‘ ‘ The deceased was killed at about 6:25 o ’clock in the morning of December 21, 1914, by a limited fast train of the defendant company at the road crossing at Munson’s Station, as the deceased was driving his milk cart across defendant’s tracks. . . .
“At the time of the accident it was still ‘very dark,’ and ‘there was a very dense fog that morning.’ And according to one of the witnesses who was in a position more favorable than the deceased, the noise of the approaching train was not heard until the locomotive thereof was within 120 feet of the crossing. The train was some 20 minutes late and was trying to make up time, and passed Munson’s Station at about 50 miles per hour. The only witness for plaintiff who' saw the accident and ‘had a good unobstructed view’ from the point in the center of the said road along which the deceased was driving his team, and who stood at a point about 75 yards west of the crossing, testified that he did not see the headlight of the locomotive until ‘right after it got close to the platform and not before,’ and when the heads.of the horses were ‘about six or seven feet’ from the tracks. And because of the high embankments on either side of defendant’s tracks to the south for at least a quarter of a mile, the rays of the headlight of the locomotive were kept within the scope of the railroad right-of-way cut, and even the engineer of the locomotive, who was a witness for defendant, testified that he did not see the ‘team and rig’ until his engine was within 100 feet of them.
“The passenger train which caused the injury was a fast ‘limited’ train which was behind time, and passed *213 Munson’s Station within a few minutes of tlie time of the scheduled stop at such station of what we have above referred to as a milk train.
. “In determining the question of whether deceased was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, the fact that the slow milk train regularly blew its whistle before reaching Munson’s Station, and that it was due to stop at about the time this limited train passed, forms an element in the situation to be reckoned with, and when taken in connection with the facts that the road crossing at this point is highly dangerous, not affording the driver of a team a view to 150 feet to the south until his horses’ front feet are actually upon the railroad tracks, that on the occasion in question the noise of the train was not heard until it was within 120' feet of the platform, that the rays of the electric headlight of the train were not visible until ‘right after it got close to the platform and not before,’ the night being very dark and a dense fog prevailing, that the train in question was a ‘limited’ running at the rate of 50 miles an hour, and failed to give the statutory signals at so dangerous a crossing at a time when a slow milk train was due to stop at that very point — we are unwilling to conclude that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.”
IJpon these facts the court held (1) “defendant was negligent in failing to give any warning by bell or whistle in approaching this crossing, and, therefore, in light of Section 3140, Revised Statutes 1909, plaintiff made out a prima-facie case . . . ; the statute supplying the causal connection” between this negligence and the injury; (2) that deceased was not guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law; and (3) that, under other facts stated, a remittitur should be ordered to reduce the recovery to $2,000.
*214
decisions relied on are Bauer v. Railway,
It is argued Section 3140 is essentially penal and must he strictly construed (Parish v. Railway,
II. Did the Court of Appeals bring its opinion into conflict with controlling decisions of this court when it ruled deceased was not guilty of such negligence as would bar this action?
*218 From Boyd’s hotel in Renick a walk, long used by the public, led across the tracks to the Wabash Depot. Boyd met all passenger trains. On September 26, 1887, a train was due which usually crossed the walk in question at a rate of thr.ee or four miles per hour and stopped at the depot. On this date an excursion train, running on the time of the regular train, approached from the west, did not check its speed and passed the depot at the rate of 45 miles per hour. Boyd heard this train whistle, came out of the hotel and proceeded down the 'walk to the depot in a run or “trot” and, without changing his gait, went upon the track immediately in front of the engine and was struck and killed. He was in possession of all his faculties. The court stated the train was in plain view and its sound in Boyd’s hearing from the moment he left the hotel; he both heard and saw the train “in a general way” but did not stop to ascertain its rate of movement or whether it was the regular train due, with whose speed at the crossing he was familiar; he seems to have- acted upon his first impression. The court held the engineer had a right to presume Boyd would not attempt to cross in front of the train and that there was no time to act to save him after he entered the danger zone.
That case differs from this in that Boyd saw the train and yet risked and lost his life by acting upon his first impression, which was that the • approaching train was the regular train then due, which always slowed down for the depot and stopped there.' It was held it was Boyd’s “duty to look and listen if he could see or hear the train, ,for the purpose of avoiding injury by it, and if at any time he might have stopped his progress and avoided injury, then he was guilty of contributory negligence.”
In the case at bar the Court of Appeals states facts which would have justified a finding that Schulz could not have seen or heard the train which killed him until it was almost upon him and until too late for him to save himself. The particular part of the opinion under *219 consideration, however, does not seem to proceed upon this theory. It does not occur to ns just how deceased’s knowledge of the regular arrival and stopping* of the millc train could have affected him if he heard no train at all. Unless he heard some train it is difficult to understand in what way his knowledge that the milk train slowed down and stopped at Munson’s Station could have influenced his action. The railroad at this point is a main line and, of course, deceased knew many trains other that the milk train passed over it. If he heard this train it was not also necessary for him to see it in order for him to be advised of its approach. If after hearing it he went upon the track in front of it in the dark and fog without any effort to ascertain what train •it was or where it was with relation to the crossing, it would seem to follow that he negligently staked his life upon its being the milk train, due five minutes later, and upon its stopping at the depot, and lost. If he did not hear the train, his knowledge of the milk train’s custom to stop is irrelevant. We think the ruling comes within the rule of the cases cited and the portion of the opinion objected to should he quashed. An examination of the cases cited in support of the ruling leads to the conclusion they are inapplicable.
In French v. Railroad,
In Brott v. Electric Railroad,
*221 In Stearns v. Railroad, 75 N. H. 40, it was lield that the question of contributory negligence was for the jury on evidence tending to prove the deceased would have crossed the railroad trade in safety hut for the fact the train was running at twice the speed permitted by rules, and to warrant the inference deceased drove upon the track in a reasonable belief that the train was moving at the customary speed, with which he was familiar. Neither this decision, nor others cited to the point, apply to the facts of the case.
We do not find in the list of cases cited one which deals with a state of facts like that presented by the opinion before us. Those cases state the general rules of law in crossing cases, but in none of them was there occasion to deal with a situation like that before the Court of Appeals. The facts of the opinion show there was evidence tending to prove the railroad runs through a deep cut almost to the crossing; that the train could not have been seen by deceased had he stopped; that it was dark and there was a fog which, with the embankments, prevented deceased from seeing.the rays of the headlight; that the noise of the train could not have been heard until the train was within one hundred and twenty feet of the platform; that the train could not have been seen by deceased until it reached about the-same point; that his horses would then have been stepping on the track; that the train would cover the intervening distance in two seconds. There "is no direct evidence on the question whether deceased listened. The evidence does indicate he could not' have heard if he had listened at a time when he was not entering upon the track. The evidence indicates he could not have seen, had he looked, in time. The signals-were not given, according to the jury’s finding. On the facts in the opinion the question seems to become one whether deceased was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law by reason of his failure to stop and go forward to see whether the track was clear. We are cited to no case in this court which holds this to be a duty in all cases — or in any case where the situation resembles that here. The case is more like Petty v. Railroad,
IY. The result is that the part of the opinion considered under “ (2) ” in Paragraph II, supra, is quashed, and the writ in all other respects quashed. Williams, Graves, Goode and Williamson, JJ. concur; Woodson, J., concurs in separate opinion; Walker, G. J., concurs except in subparagraph “2” of Paragraph II, from which he dissents.
Concurrence Opinion
