152 Mo. App. 468 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit for damages based on the alleged negligence of defendant in the running of a passenger train over a street crossing in the city of Brunswick. Plaintiff prevailed in the circuit court Avhere she recovered judgment for seven thousand 'five hundred dollars, and defendant brought the case here by appeal. Plaintiff, who Avas seventeen years old at the time of her injury (September 12, 1904), drove to
The negligence pleaded in the petition consists of the acts of running the train through the city at an ex-, cessive rate of speed; in failing to give any crossing signal or warning of the approach of the train and in failing to stop or give warning signals after the enginemen saw, or should have seen that plaintiff was in peril. The last mentioned charge of negligence was abandoned by plaintiff in the instructions asked by her and the cause was submitted on the issues raised by the other pleaded acts of negligence and the averment of contributory negligence in the answer. To support her allegation of excessive speed, plaintiff pleaded and proved an ordinance of the city prohibiting the running of trains within its limits at a greater speed than ten miles per hour and evidence introduced by plaintiff tends to show that this train was about twenty minutes late; was running approximately forty miles per hour and that the bell was not rung nor the whistle sounded for the crossing.
Defendant earnestly contends that notwithstanding this evidence its request for a peremptory instruction should have been given on the ground that plaintiff’s contributory negligence unquestionably is established by
Facts in evidence pertinent to this contention thus may be stated: The main track on which the train ran comes from the west to Quincy street on a tangent and practically on a level grade. Immediately north of the right of way and on the west side of the street was a large tobacco warehouse, the southeast corner of which was thirty-five feet north of the center of defendant’s main track. Between this track and the warehouse was a switch track, the north rail of which was about fifteen feet from the corner of the warehouse, and the south rail was about eight feet north of the north rail of the main track. West of the warehouse and nearer to the railroad was a lumber yard fence which plaintiff claims was an obstruction to her view in that direction but defendant’s witnesses deny that the fence constituted such obstruction. Plaintiff could not see the track to the west until she emerged from behind the warehouse and she claims that as soon as she passed that obstruction she stopped and looked westward. She could see only about four hundred feet down the track, and no train was in sight. Looking eastward she observed an engine moving back and forth on the switch track and, satisfied that it was not coming to the crossing, started forward. At that time her horse was at the switch track. She did not look again to the west until her horse had crossed the switch track, the space between the tracks, and was on the main track when, looking westward again, she saw the passenger train coming at high speed and close to the crossing. By vigorous whipping she urged the horse to a faster gait and had almost succeeded in getting over the crossing when the engine struck the extreme rear of the vehicle. Until she began whipping him, the horse traveled in a slow walk, probably at a speed of from two and one-half to three miles per hour, and as he traveled about thirty-five feet from
Defendant introduced in evidence a plat prepared by a surveyor and drawn to scale and also some photographs which appear fairly to represent the scene of the accident. It also introduced the county surveyor who testified to the accuracy of the plat and said the lumber yard fence did not offer any obstruction to the vision of one looking westward, down the track from a point in the street opposite the southeast corner of the warehouse. The plat shows, however, and the witness stated that a person driving south would emerge from behind the warehouse at a point thirty-six feet north of the center of the main track and from- that point could see only four hundred feet westward along the main track. Three feet further south he could see eleven hundred feet and three feet still further he could see sixteen hundred feet.
These are the facts on which defendant bases the contention that we should declare' as a matter of law that plaintiff’s statement that she could see only four hundred feet along the track when first she looked is unworthy of belief for the reason that it is at war with the plain physical facts of the situation. In support of this position we are cited to the following cases: Schaub v. Railway Co., 133 Mo. App. 444; Gumm v. Railway, 141 Mo. App. 306; Schmidt v. Railway, 191 Mo. 215; Green v. Railway, 192 Mo. 131; Walker v. Railroad, 193 Mo. 453; Stotler v. Railroad, 204 Mo. 619 ; Hayden v. Railway Co., 124 Mo. 566; Huggart v. Railroad, 134 Mo. 673; Sanguinette v. Railway, 196 Mo. 466; Boring v. Railway Co., 194 Mo. 541; Reno v. Railway Co., 180 Mo. 469; Kelsay v. Railway Co., 129 Mo. l. c. 372.
We regard the question of whether or not the lumber yard fence was an obstruction to plaintiff’s westward. view of the track as a debatable issue of fact. Credible witnesses for plaintiff say it was such obstruc
The next .and most serious question arising from the demurrer to the evidence is that of plaintiff’s conduct in going into a position of peril without looking but once in the direction of the train. Some six or seven seconds passed during her progress from the place where she stopped to the point where she passed into the danger zone. It has been held repeatedly that a railroad track is such a dangerous place that a traveler crossing it must be attentive to his safety from the time he approaches the first danger line.until he passes over the last. To be within the limits of reasonable care, he cannot take a last look from a place of safety and then shut his eyes and ears and go on blindly trusting in Providence and the belief that the railroad company will observe due care in the operation of its trains. Having
But the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded on account of prejudicial error in the second instruction given at the request of plaintiff as follows: “The court instructs the jury that plaintiff had a right to presume that defendant in the running of its train would obey the law, both in regard to the giving of signals as set out in these instructions, and in regard to the speed of its trains as defined in other instructions herein. If therefore you shall find and believe that the plaintiff in approaching defendant’s track, and about the time she reached a point opposite the factory building referred to in the evidence, either stopped her buggy or slowed up to almost a standstill, and looked as far to the westward as she could see from
.In that instruction the court invaded the province of the jury in declaring as a matter of law that plaintiff was reasonably careful if she stopped at a point twenty or twenty-five feet from the danger line, looked and listened and could not see or hear the train. A reasonably careful and prudent person in the situation of plaintiff might or might not have looked again before going into a place of peril but that was a question for the jury. As we said before, the duty of attentiveness in such cases is a continuing duty and the instruction clearly ignores that rule. It is a very serious question whether plaintiff was justified under ail the facts and circumstances in evidence in relying as much as she did on deceptive appearances and certainly the court was not warranted in indulging a dogmatic conclusion that as a matter oC law she acted with reasonable care during a period when, by merely looking in the right direction, she could have seen the danger and avoided it.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded