186 Mo. App. 608 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
— This is a suit under the wrongful death statute for damages accrued through the alleged negligence of defendant. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal. ' ’
Plaintiff’s decedent, George "Whitesides, was run upon and killed on defendaht’s railroad track by its locomotive and train, on the night of August 15, 1910, at a point' in Lincoln county, about 2287 feet north of Oasis station. At the time of his death, Whitesides was an unmarried man, strong, robust, possessed of all of his faculties, and aged twenty-nine years. Thereafter Josiak Whitesides, his father, was duly appointed administrator of his estate by the probate court of Lincoln county, and prosecutes this suit as; such under the statute. Although there is no evidence tending to prove that decedent was using the highway before the collision, it appears he was run upon by the engine while on the public crossing on the railroad; but evidently he came there after walking up- the track between the rails — at least, all of the circumstances tend to so show the fact to be. He was run upon, it is believed, somewhere about eleven o’clock at night by defendant’s northbound fast passenger train, number 15, after having been last seen shortly before walking on the track to the northward, at a point about 635 feet farther south.
There is no direct evidence tending to prove the fact of collision, but it is to be inferred from a considerable blood spot on the railroad track, about the middle of the public road crossing, and the further fact that decedent’s body was found the following
It is argued the court should have directed a verdict for defendant because there is no evidence tending to prove the locomotive engineer was remiss in his duty in failing to observe decédent on the track in a position of peril in time to have averted the injury. On the other hand, it is urged that it was the duty of defendant to be on the lookout at the place for persons on the track, and that the engineer might have seen White-sides walking northward between the rails for a sufficient distance to have enabled him to stop the train and avert a collision; also that defendant was remiss in its duty in failing to sound the statutory signal for the public road crossing where decedent was run upon. In the last analysis, the argument must be determined through, reference to such legitimate inferences as are afforded by the meager facts in evidence, for the direct proof touching the real substance of the controversy— and that is relating to the position and conduct of the decedent, including the ability of the engineer to see and act in the premises for a moment or two before the collision — is slight, indeed.
It appears decedent lived with his father on a farm near to, but west of, the crossing of the public highway where he was. run upon, and that he was entirely familiar with the railroad and the regular trains thereon. On the evening in question, he had made a trip to Old Monróe and returned to Oasis on defendant’s train, number 7, about 101:15 o’clock at night, when he disembarked therefrom at the little station. The community is a rural one in the Mississippi river bottoms and adjacent to the neighboring bluff lands, about fifty miles, north of St. Louis. Oasis station, maintained there by defendant, is a mere shelter for passengers, at which some of defendant’s trains stop on signal for the accommodation of
The railroad track was inclosed by a fence on either side, and the station house more or less inaccessible except from the east, from whence it is reached by means of the private road connecting with the public road running north and south, above referred to. The evidence tends to prove that, because of these facts, the people of the neighborhood had, ever since the station was established, used the railroad track for a distance of 2287 feet between Oasis station and the crossing of the east and west public road to the north as a passway to and from the station, and this was done with the forbearance and consent of defendant. This user of the tracks by the public, it appears, too, attended the situation in connection with the arrival of train number 7 about ten o’clock at night, for it appears persons returning home on that train, as decedent did, were wont to walk north, as he did, up the tracks to the public road crossing, although, of course, some of them left the station by means of the
On the arrival of train number 7, on which decedent returned from Old Monroe, he was met at Oasis station by one Ed Perris, a colored work-hand in the employ of his father. Though Perris worked on the farm of the elder Whitesides, it appears he resided at another place near by. Perris says he had requested George Whitesides., decedent, to procure for him a quart of whiskey at Old Monroe and had awaited the coming of the train at the Oasis station in order to receive it. It appears that Perris had received an injury to his foot that afternoon — that is, he had either sprained or broken it, as he says — and it was in such a condition as to be both painful and almost useless for the while. When decedent alighted from, the train he carried two baskets, and it is said these were laden with bottles of beer to be used as a treat for the threshers. Ed Perris met him at the station and the two sat down and talked for a considerable while. The .time is, not definitely stated, but Perris insists that neither took a drink of the whiskey or the beer, and the evidence is, that decedent was not addicted to drink in the least. Indeed, the witnesses say he was a sober, industrious young man and all disclaim knowledge of his having taken a drink of intoxicating liquors in several years. While Perris and decedent tarried at the station, it is said Perris was nursing his swollen foot, until they finally started homeward up the' track. Perris walked with two sticks and decedent carried the
On the following morning, the body of decedent was found on the railroad right of way, lodged against the cattle-guard fence west of the tracks and north of the public road, as before stated, with evidences of collision about .it, in that the skull was crushed, one shoulder “caved in,” and one hip bruised. Moreover, a considerable blood spot was found on the railroad track near the west rail but about the center of the crossing of the public road.
It is argued that plaintiff made a prima-facie case for the jury through showing that decedent was run upon at a public road crossing because of the failure of defendant to sound the whistle or ring the bell attached to the locomotive — that is, give the statutory signal eighty rods before reaching the crossing — for it is said such conduct is negligence per se. Besides the considerations which point the statutory obligation to give signals on approaching the crossing of a public highway as one inuring only in favor of those persons using the crossing in connection with the use of the highway, it is to be said that plaintiff’s right, in so far as this argument is concerned, is to be denied on the grounds of contributory negligence. Although through the omission of the signals required the statute supplies the causal connection between the injury and the remission of duty, the contributory negligence of the injured party may defeat the right of recovery if such appears. [See McGee v. Wabash R. Co., 214 Mo. 530, 544, 545, 114 S. W. 33; Maginnis v. Mo. Pac. R. Co., 182 Mo. App. 694, 165 S. W. 849.] Here decedent was a young man, possessed of all of his faculties, and entirely familiar with the situation as well as the
But it is argued, though the judgment may not be sustained on the theory involved in the failure to give the statutory signal when approaching the crossing, there is enough in th® evidence to support a recovery under the last clear chance rule. The last clear chance doctrine proceeds on the hypothesis that the injured party himself was negligently, or, it may be otherwise, as through misfortune, in a position of peril and that such peril was either discovered or discoverable by the defendant in exercising due care, in time to have averted the injury through utilizing the appliances at hand to do so. The rule is utilitarian in character, in that it proceeds according to the precepts of humanity to make for the safety of others in enjoining diligence on the part of one who may, by exercising care, avoid a hurt to another through the prompt employment of the appliances at hand and in the circumstances of the particular case. It therefore reckons with the negligent or other unfortunate situation of the party in peril as remote in the chain of causation and treats with the duty and its breach on the part of the person in charge of the dangerous instrumentality as the proximate cause of the injury, in those cases where it suf-' ficiently appears the position of peril was ascertained or ascertainable through due care on the part of those
This being true, it must appear, not only that decedent was upon, the track in a position of peril for a sufficient length of time when run upon, but that he was observable there by.the engineer, while exercising due care to that end, for a sufficient length of time and at such distance to have enabled him to avert the injury through prompt action with the means at hand for that purpose, and at the same time allowing for the safety of those on the train. Moreover, this much must appear from the facts and circumstances in evidence or the legitimate inferences therefrom-, and this, too, without piling inference on inference, for such may not be allowed. In other words, though reasonable inferences may be drawn from facts in evidence and utilized in support of the verdict, other and additional inferences and presumptions of fact based alone upon, or afforded by, prior inferences may not be utilized as evidence, for' such inferences are illegitimate. [See Hamilton v. Kansas City Southern R. Co., 250 Mo. 714, 157 S. W. 622.] Negligence is a positive wrong which must be established by facts and circumstances including inferences, but may not be presumed. [Witting v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co., 101 Mo. 631-640, 14 S. W. 743.] No one saw decedent on the railroad track at the time he was run upon, but he was seen by Ed Perris 635 feet south of the crossing, walking in the middle of the track northward toward the place where he met his death. This fact, when considered in connection with the further fact that a considerable blood spot was on the track in the center of the public road crossing, affords ample evidence, but through inference only, that he was upon the track when run upon, also that he was then — at that instant — in a position of peril. The fact of the blood spot on the, crossing and the fact that decedent’s skull was crushed and shoulder
But after allowing these inferences and considering, too, that decedent was seen on the track “one telephone pole” north of Dyer’s crossing not more than five or eight minutes before, can it be legitimately inferred that defendant’s locomotive engineer could,, by exercising due care, have seen Mm in a position of peril in time to have stopped the train and averted the injury from which he died? In this connection, the evidence is to be regarded as sufficient to establish a user of the track with a license on the part of defendant sufficient to affix the obligation on the part of its engineer to look out for pedestrians walking there. The engineer says he did not see a man on the track, at all and had no knowledge of a collision until he was told about it afterward; but be tins as it may, the case is to be viewed as though he could have seen decedent immediately before the collision by exercising care to that end. But when and where the engineer should have seen the decedent is another question and one concerning which we are not eMightened by the record. Defendant is presumed to have exercised due care unless the contrary is. made to appear. Plaintiff introduced no proof tending to. show either how far a man might have been seen by the engineer at the time or in what distance the train could have been stopped. The oMy evidence concermng these questions in the record is that given by defendant, to the effect that the train could have been stopped in not
The judgment should be reversed. It is so ordered.