—This is an action for damages claimed to have been sustained by plaintiff in consequence of having been run into, knocked down ■ and injured by a train said to have been in charge of and operated along the line of defendant’s road by that company. It is averred in the petition that while plaintiff was walking along the railroad tracks of defendant, between Zeta and Day, in Stoddard county, plaintiff walking toward the south, that a cold and brisk wind was blowing from the southeast toward the northeast, and plaintiff having his coat collar turned up to protect his face and ears, and wearing a cap with a windbreak and ear muffs pulled down over his ears and the back part of his head for the protection of his neck and ears from the inclemency of the weather, the part of the railway track along which he was walking being level and straight in a nearly north and south course for a long distance, and when plaintiff was
The answer, after a general denial, pleads contributory negligence, to which plea a general denial was filed by way of reply.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $300, from which, interposing a motion for new trial and excepting to that being overruled, defendant has duly perfected appeal to this court.
This case, on appeal, has been submitted to us by counsel for appellant on printed brief and argument, no counsel appearing here for respondent, no brief or argument being filed in his behalf. The only errors assigned are to the overruling of defendant’s demurrer to the evidence and to the overruling of the motion for a new trial. "While the evidence is rather voluminous, we have read all of it with great care. Without setting it out, it is sufficient to say of it that there was substantial evidence tending to sustain the allegations of the petition. Hence we are unable to agree with the learned and industrious counsel for appellant that the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. Those counsel claim that this case falls within the principles announced by our Supreme Court in Frye v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co.,
No complaint is made of the instructions given by the court, save the contention that no instructions whatever should have been given, except one for a verdict for defendant. We cannot say, considering this point, that the verdict of the jury is unsupported by. substantial evidence. The men in charge of that train, testifying for defendant, said that before they reached plaintiff, they saw him lying on the side of the track, his head some eighteen inches from the rail and that the engine had not touched him. Witnesses for defendant also gave testimony tending to show that plaintiff was intoxicated at the time. But in the face of the positive evidence of plaintiff himself, that the train did strike him, the testimony of his witnesses as to the use of the tracks, and of witnesses who saw him and said he was not intoxicated, the matter was for the jury and we must accept its'verdict as conclusive.
Over and above this are the facts in evidence.that this accident occurred between three and four o’clock in the afternoon, in broad daylight; that the track ran through open country, no woods, no cuts, to obstruct the view; nothing to prevent those in charge of the train from seeing plaintiff for a distance of some nine hundred feet before the train reached him; the train, a freight under perfect control, going at about fifteen or twenty miles an hour ; no evidence whatever tending to show that the bell was rung or the whistle sounded at. this crossing, this crossing some four hundred feet from where plaintiff is said to have been struck. Under every rule requiring ordinary care, and irrespective of the fact that this track was then used as a pathway for travelers, even admitting that defendant’s employees, running its trains over it, had a right to expect a clear track, there was evidence
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
