83 Mo. 386 | Mo. | 1884
This is a comm on law action against the defendant for negligently running over and killing a cow and a heifer belonging to plaintiff on the 13th of October, 1879, at a highway crossing. It was commenced before a justice of a peace, thence taken by appeal to the .circuit court in which a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff were rendered in the sum of $30, from which the defendant appeals. At the close of the plaintiff’s case the court overruled a demurrer to the evidence. The defendant submitted no evidence. The only question presented to us for determination in the
William R. Cloud testified: “Know the plaintiff who lived on October 13, 1878, right where the railroad crosses Caledonia road; know the cattle described in the complaint; they were her’s; they were knocked off the-railroad on October 13, 1878; one was killed and the other died from the injuries; this was at night; I was awake at the time — between one. and two o’clock; was giving medicine to my daughter and bound to be awake at that time; it was a passenger train that killed them; saw the cattle the morning before; next morning saw one of them on the left side of the road and the other on. the right — not far off from the Caledonia road; the fence-where the cattle-guard was broken was on the right side of the track; from every appearance, they were standing or lying close to the cattle-guard when they were struck;. have lived near the road for twelve months ; that night the train was faster than I ever heard before; it went like a dart; I never saw it.”
The defendant objected to the evidence concerning the speed of train because excessively fast running is not averred in the petition and no rate of speed, however great, constitutes negligence, which objections were overruled, and it excepted.
The plaintiff then asked: “Was a bell rung or whistle blown before approaching the crossing?” To which the defendant objected because this was not. alleged as a ground of action and wasjimmaterial, etc., which objections the court overruled, and the defendant excepted. The witness answered: ‘ ‘ Could have heard the bell if it had been rung or heard the whistle if had blown; don’t expect the train passed there at night while I lived there but what I heard it; this night I heard no bell or whistle. The cow was worth $20 and the
Cross-examined: £ £ My house was on the side of the railroad on this side between 30 and 60 feet from the railroad; don’t live there now; had been living there about 12 months. Heard the- cars pass nearly every night; always heard them when they rung the bell or whistled. Train always woke me up. Had been up at 12 o’clock. I did not then lie down for the purpose ■of sleeping. I thought at the time they were going faster than usual. It was on time. Don’t think they ever passed me without waking me. Could sometimes hear trains at a greater distance; a train running does not make more noise than its bell. I have heard the cars running on the road when I was in town and could not hear the bell at such time. When the bell did ring I heard it. I didn’t know the cattle were on the track, was not listening particularly for the bell that night. There was sign on the fence made by the cattle knocked against it. They were knocked through the cattle-guard.”
Benjamin Brown, a laborer on the road, testified that he saw the carcasses before they were hauled off by the section boss: £ £ When I saw them one was lying on the left and the other on the right of the railroad. About
I do not think the court erred in allowing the case to go to the jury on this evidence. It tended to prove that the cattle were killed by the defendant’s train at the crossing. It, also, tended to prove that the servants of defendant, managing the train, failed to ring the bell or blow the whistle, as it approached the crossing. It also appears from the evidence that the cattle had freely approached the crossing a short time before the train arrived. And as the night was light, there was evidently nothing in the condition or situation of the cattle to prevent them from escaping the train if the required signals had been given. These facts make a prima facie case, under the decisions of this court, and it was incumbent on the defendant to rebut it by competent evidence, if possible. Such evidence is presumably within the control of defendant if it has any existence at all. Turner v. R. R., 78 Mo. 578 ; Kendig v. R. R., 79 Mo. 207.
The objection to the evidence relating to the rate of speed has not been considered in the briefs of counsel, the defendant contending only that an unusual rate of speed is not negligence per se. While it may be true that an unusual rate of speed is not negligencep>er se, it has never been held by this court that a train may not be run at such an excessive and reckless rate of speed as to constitute negligence. Whether the rate of speed at which a train is run, at any particular time, is of this character, is a question for the jury, from the evidence bearing upon the rate at which it was actually run. The evidence in this case was pertinent to the issue, and was properly admitted. It has usually been admitted in this class of cases as a part of .the res gestae, its effect being controlled by proper instructions. Maher v. R. R., 64 Mo. 267; Bell v. R. R., 72 Mo. 50; Wallace v. R. R., 74 Mo. 594; Powell v. R. R., 76 Mo. 80.