Allinson ex rel. Allinson v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad

347 S.W.2d 902, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 592
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 1961
DocketNo. 7880
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 347 S.W.2d 902 (Allinson ex rel. Allinson v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allinson ex rel. Allinson v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, 347 S.W.2d 902, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 592 (Mo. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

STONE, Presiding Judge.

About 6:30 P.M. on Saturday, December 20, 1958, plaintiff Gerald D. Allinson, then sixteen years and three months of age, and a neighbor youth, Rondóle Lee Lewellen, who had just turned his sixteenth birthday, left their farm homes southeast of Appleton City, Missouri, in a 1952 Chevrolet sedan owned by plaintiff’s father. With plaintiff driving, they headed for Rockville where they had “dates” at 7 P.M. But, this youthful pleasure trip quickly turned into a nightmare of disappointment and disaster when, on farm-to-market Route P, a two-lane highway with a blacktop surface, the Chevrolet crashed into the side of a Katy freight train standing on a country crossing, sometimes called the Lindale crossing. For injuries then sustained, plaintiff brought this suit against defendant railroad and in due time obtained a verdict and judgment for $3,500. On this appeal, defendant’s initial contention is that its motion for a directed verdict at the close of the evidence should have been sustained because (a) plaintiff failed to make a sub-missible case of actionable negligence on the part of defendant and (b) plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.

At the Lindale crossing, Route P is an east-and-west road intersected by two sets of defendant’s tracks, about 39 feet apart, running in a general northerly-and-southerly direction. The east set of tracks is a switch track or siding, and the west set is the main line track. For a west-bound motorist approaching the Lindale crossing from the east, as was plaintiff on the occasion under discussion, Route P is straight for almost one mile; and, for some 500 feet east of the crossing, the highway is practically level. From the railroad crossing sign erected by the State Highway Department on the north shoulder of Route P ' about 450 feet east of the crossing to the main line crossing, defendant’s surveyor found a difference in elevation of only .59 foot (or about 7 inches), the investigating trooper of the State Highway Patrol agreed that “to the naked eye it’s practically level,” and plaintiff himself estimated only an inconsequential upgrade (for a west-bound motorist) of “I’d say a couple feet” which, as he readily conceded, did not tilt the headlights of the west-bound Chevrolet enough to interfere with his vision ahead or to cast the headlight beams away from an object on the crossing. In the first 100 feet west of the main line crossing, there is (looking west) a sloping downgrade, but not an abrupt drop, of 2.67 feet.

At the time of accident, the main line crossing was blocked by one car of a northbound 156-car freight train, which had stopped with about 27 cars south of the crossing and had been cut near the head [904]*904or north end of the train for switching operations. Plaintiff described the car on the crossing as “a dark object” — “either a coal car or a box car.” His companion “thought it was a box car” — “some kind of dark color” — “it could have been black or brown or something, I don’t know for sure.” Plaintiff’s witness Brown, eastbound on Route P who approached the crossing from the other side and “just came to a normal stop” some 20 to 30 feet from the standing train, said that the crossing was blocked by a red box car. In any event, the blocking car was not a flat car. Contrast Carson v. Baldwin, 346 Mo. 984, 144 S.W.2d 134. Admittedly, there was no light on the train near the crossing and no flagman at the crossing. In fact, none of the train, crew saw the collision or even knew of it until the station operator at Appleton City .informed them by radio while the train was running near LaDue, Missouri.

Plaintiff’s testimony affirmatively showed that there was no fog, mist or other atmospheric condition which limited or affected his vision on the evening of this accident. In short, it was “a normal night” for driving. The Chevrolet sedan driven by plaintiff had four-wheel brakes “in good working condition” and headlights “working properly” on both high and low beam which, at and immediately prior to the accident, were on high beam. Young Lewel-len, his companion at the time and his witness upon trial, confirmed the fact that the Chevrolet had “good headlights”— “they was regular, they was in good condition,” and that, approaching the crossing, the headlight beams were not tilted up or down by the topography of the highway and he had “normal view” ahead. Plaintiff had traveled this same road “many times before,” both during the day and at night and both west-bound and east-bound. As he neared the crossing, he knew that he was approaching it, knew that there were two sets of tracks, and knew “the lay of the land on the west side of the tracks.” Proceeding west on Route P, plaintiff had been driving the Chevrolet (so he stated at the trial) at a speed of about 45 miles per hour; but, realizing his approach to the crossing, he had slackened speed to 30-35 miles per hour before he reached the first set of tracks, i. e., the switch track or siding. This slackening of speed must have been accomplished simply by lifting his foot on the accelerator, because plaintiff insisted that he did not have time to get his foot on the brake pedal after he first sighted “a dark object” on the main line crossing as the Chevrolet was passing over the switch track or siding, no more than 39 feet distant. Plaintiff did not see the obstruction on the main line crossing a sufficient length of time prior to the crash to recognize it or to know that he was about to run into the side of a train. Young Lewellen “saw it just a split second before we hit it * * * just about the same time we hit it, really” but, in that split second, thought that it was a train. Plaintiff said that he had been looking “straight ahead,” and his companion said that, although he had been “just talking mostly,” he also had been “looking down the road.”

The only reason suggested by plaintiff upon trial, or by his counsel upon appeal, for plaintiff’s -failure to have observed the train in time to have stopped safely was that, while he was traveling “the last thous- and or twelve hundred feet” before reaching the crossing, plaintiff and his companion saw what appeared to be the headlights of an east-bound automobile on the other side of the crossing, and that thereby (in the language of his brief) “plaintiff was given the impression (mistaken though it was) that the way was clear; that is, an illusion of safety was created wherein plaintiff was deceived as to the actual situation.” There was evidence that, due to the downgrade (looking west) of 2.67 feet in the first 100 feet west of the crossing, the headlights of an automobile, headed east up that grade, would shine under a freight car standing on the main line crossing and would be visible to a west-bound motorist (such as plaintiff) on the opposite [905]*905side of the crossing. Plaintiff testified that he saw “two lights almost together” — “you could barely see both of them there.” When he first saw these lights, plaintiff had no idea how far they were from the crossing. He thought that they were moving at first, but he could not say whether they continued to move until the moment of collision. The testimony of young Lewellen, plaintiff’s companion, concerning these lights was to the effect that, when he first saw them, they looked “like any normal car lights” and “might have been about the same or a little closer” to the crossing than the Chevrolet driven by plaintiff. “It seems to me (Lewellen) like they were moving, but they might have been not very much.” Lewellen thought that these lights remained visible to him until the time of accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
347 S.W.2d 902, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allinson-ex-rel-allinson-v-missouri-kansas-texas-railroad-moctapp-1961.