169 Mo. 592 | Mo. | 1902
— This is an action by plaintiff, the mother of Roy Wencker, deceased, a minor, to recover from defendant the statutory penalty of $5,000 for his death,
The accident happened at the village of Augusta, St. Charles county, Missouri, where the track of defendant’s railroad runs east and west. The depot is on the north side of the track. During the five years immediately preceding the day in question, the plaintiff had furnished daily lunches to trainmen of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railway. During the last two years of this time these lunches in baskets had been carried to the train, sometimes by one, sometimes by the other of two sons of the plaintiff, Eritz and Eoy, aged respectively fourteen and eleven years. Eoy Avas in the habit of carrying them in summer, and had been doing so daily for six weeks next preceding the day in question. Both boys had been often directed by Conductor Stone, mentioned below, and by other conductors, to put the lunches in the caboose, and take away the empty baskets. It was necessary, and they had long been accustomed, to get aboard trains for that purpose. On October 4, 1897, about two o’clock in the afternoon, Eoy Wencker was standing on the depot platform near the east end, holding a basket of lunch and a jug of coffee prepared for the trainmen on the west-bound local freight. That train, consisting of freight cars, with a caboose on the rear end for the accommodation of passengers and trainmen, drew up to the depot and ran along till the front end of the'caboose passed within three steps of Eoy and' stopped three or four steps west of him. When the train stopped, Conductor Stone stepped off the front platform of the caboose and, without warning to any one on or about the platform, walked Avestwardly on the platform. Immediately thereafter, Eoy, being wholly unwarned of any danger stepped upon the platform or steps of the caboose with the basket and jug in his hands. A sudden movement of the car backward threw him under the ear immediately in front of the caboose,
This constituted the plaintiff’s evidence in chief, and on its submission the defendant prayed the court to give the following instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence :
“The court declares the law to be, that upon the pleadings and evidence in this case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and the finding must be for the defendant.”
This instruction was given by the court and the plaintiff duly saved her exception thereto, whereupon plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit, with leave to move to set the same aside. Her motion for a new trial and to set aside the non-suit having been overruled, and judgment of nonsuit entered against her, plaintiff took an appeal to' this court.
The 'first question to be disposed of, and the one which goes to the very foundation of this litigation, is as to whether or not defendant by the negligence of its servants proximately caused the death of Roy Wencker, for if not, plaintiff was not entitled to recover, whatever the circumstances, which led up to his death, may have been.
There are many definitions of negligence, but generally of the same purport. Judge Cooley defines it as “the failure to observe, for the protection of the interests of another person, that degree of care, precaution and’ vigilance which the circumstances justly demand, whereby such other person suffers injury.” [Cooley on Torts (2 Ed.), p. 572.]
In the ease of Heaven v. Pender, Law Reports, 11 Q. B. D. l. c. 507, it was said: “Actionable negligence consists in the neglect of the use of ordinary care or skill toward a
The question for solution is what duty defendant owed to deceased if any.
It is not claimed that there was any mismanagement of the train, nor was there, the sudden movement of it which caused the accident being the result of the “running out of the slack” which necessarily occurs in freight-trains when brought to a stop by manipulation of the engine and brakes. Nor is there any pretense that the “running out of the slack” was' unusual or extraordinary, but it seems to occur in almost every instance when a freight train is stopped by those in charge of it. The question then recurs, what duty defendant owed the deceased to notify him what danger might be apprehended by him from the running out of the slack.
As he did not enter upon the car with the intention of becoming a passenger, and there was no contract either express or implied to that effect, nor recognition of him by the conductor in charge of the train as such, he was not a passenger and defendant owed him nO duty as such, but he was at most a mere licensee to whom the defendant owed no-, duty other than not to negligently or wantonly injure him.
He had for the six weeks next preceding the time of the accident carried lunches to the conductors and placed them’ in the cabooses attached to the trains respectively of which they had control, under the continuation of an arrangement between the father of deceased and said conductors made during the father’s lifetime, to which defendant was not a party nor in any way interested or concerned.
In Sweeny v. Railroad, 10 Allen 372, it was said: “In order to maintain an action for an injury to person or property by reason of negligence or want of due care, there must be shown to exist- some obligation or duty towards the plain
The deceased’s business being with the conductor and not with the defendant, in our opinion, the facts fail to show that
Erom these intimations we are of the opinion that plaintiff was not entitled to recover, and that no error was committed in sustaining the demurrer to- (the evidence. The judgment is affirmed.