Ashby v. Illinois Terminal Railroad

132 S.W.2d 1076, 235 Mo. App. 454, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 136
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 S.W.2d 1076 (Ashby v. Illinois Terminal 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
Ashby v. Illinois Terminal Railroad, 132 S.W.2d 1076, 235 Mo. App. 454, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 136 (Mo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*457 HUGHES, P. J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff as the result of being struck by one of defendant’s cars near the station of defendant on its elevated track at North Market Street and Broadway in the City of St. Louis on the twenty-first day of January, 1937. Upon trial to a jury plaintiff obtained a verdict in the sum of $7500. Judgment was rendered in accordance with the verdict, and defendant appeals to this court.

The defendant maintains parallel tracks on North Market Street elevated above the street; the north track being used for westbound cars and the south track for eastbound cars. Over the intersection of North Market Street and Broadway the top of the concrete viaduct, on which the tracks were laid, is enclosed and the spaces between the rails and tracks filled with concrete and rock to prevent debris or objects falling to the street below. On the north and south side of North Market Street, and beginning about thirty-seven feet west of the west side of the concrete viaduct over the intersection are platforms alongside the tracks and somewhat higher than the tracks for the use of passengers getting on or off defendants’,cars. There is no connection between these platforms, the space between the tracks being open. The north platform is for the use of passengers using defendants’ westbound ears, and the south platform for those using the eastbound cars, the entrance being from the street by separate stairways. The plaintiff had ridden the defendants’ cars before, but from another station and had never before been in the *458 North Market Street station, and did not know that there was a separate stairway leading to the north and south platforms. On the day of his injuries he was intending to take one of defendants’ eastbound cars. He went up the stairs that were on the north side of the track which placed him on the north platform which was for^the use of westbound' cars. He immediately discovered that he was on the wrong platform, and he saw the eastbound car which he wanted to take standing alongside the platform on the south side. The plaintiff testifies that he stepped down from the north platform to a plank alongside the north rail of the track and motioned to the motorman on defendants’ car and pointed to the east, and that the motorman nodded his head and pointed toward the viaduct and motioned- his finger in that direction. There is no evidence that the motorman again actually saw plaintiff before he was struck by the car. But plaintiff says he- proceeded east a distance of about thirty-seven feet to the concrete viaduct; crossed over the viaduct to defendants’ eastbound track, and turned facing the car at the platform and walked towards it,' in order to reach the south platform and board the car, and the motorman was all this while looking to the south and did not see him. When plaintiff was within about fifteen feet of the front end of the car, the' car suddenly started -forward striking him and throwing him from the track so that he fell to the street below and' received thé injuries complained of. -

The motorman testifies that he never saw plaintiff at any time on the north platform or near thereto, and that he never signaled or motioned or nodded his head to him, but was at all times facing the south and watehing passengers getting on and off the car; and when all the passengers had boarded the car and while looking at the car doors to the south he started the car, and then looked forward and saw plaintiff hi the middle of the track about four feet ahead of the car, whereupon he applied the brakes and stopped as quickly as he could.

Defendant’s evidence shows that over the stairway entrance -to the north platform in large letters are the words ‘ ‘ TO ST. LOUIS, ’ ’ and between the tracks and in plain view from the north platform is a-sign in large letters with the words “YOU ARB FORBIDDEN TO CROSS THESE TRACKS;” and at the east end of the north platform a sign which reads, “DO NOT GROSS TRACKS: DANGER.”

There was other testimony corroborative of plaintiff’s testimony and the motorman’s testimony, but with the view we take of the ease it would serve no useful purpose to lengthen the opinion by quoting it.

I. It is clear that if plaintiff were relying on primary negligence, his own testimony forecloses any right of recovery because of his contributory negligence. A railroad track on level ground is of itself a warning of danger. [Laun v. Railroad, 216 Mo. 563, 116 S. W. 553; Drycz v. Mo. Pacific Railroad, 238 Mo. 33, 141 S. W. 861.] *459 Much greater is it a warning of danger when elevated approximately thirty-five feet above street level as this was. It would be difficult to conceive of a clearer case of contributory negligence on which no two minds would differ, than plaintiff was guilty of, when, in order to reach the south platform, he walked east on the open track about thirty-five feet to the viaduct; crossed the viaduct and walked west upon an open track thirty-five feet above the street and immediately facing him was the car he knew was taking on passengers preparatory to proceeding towards where he was. Suppose the motorman had motioned him to take that route, a man using ordinary care for his own safety would not have done so. [Aufdenberg v. The St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co., 132 Mo. 565, 34 S. W. 485.]

II. However, plaintiff is not necessarily precluded from a recovery because of his contributory negligence if in view of all the facts, or in view of his own testimony if believed by the jury, he may invoke what law writers denominate the humanitarian rule; which is simply that rule of legal, moral and social duty which forbids one to destroy the life or limb of another even though that other fails to use ordinary care for his own safety. The motorman testifies that when he first saw plaintiff he was four feet in front of the car, but he also says he had run thirty-four feet before looking forward, and that he could have stopped the car with the appliances at hand in eight to ten feet. Certainly if he had looked he would have seen plaintiff thirty-four feet in front of him, and of course in a perilous position. At least it would be a question of fact for the jury to determine whether the motorman saw plaintiff or by the exercise of ordinary care would have seen him. Plaintiff, under the circumstances was a potential passenger, a licensee or an invitee, and can only recover for injuries received by reason of the motorman failing to exercise ordinary care to avoid injuring him after the motorman discovered his peril or might reasonably have discovered it. [Oatman v. St. Louis-Southwestern Railway Co., 304 Mo. 38, 263 S. W. 139.]

If any credence is to be placed on plaintiff’s testimony he was in no sense a trespasser; he was invited to take the route he did take in order to become a passenger on defendant’s car; in other words, he was an invitee, or a potential passenger, and acting on directions of the motorman, who at the time was acting for the defendant in assisting persons getting on and off the ear. But whether plaintiff, under all the facts, was a.n invitee or potential passenger, or a trespasser, and whether .the motorman was acting in the scope of his employment, and whether he saw or by exercising ordinary care could have seen plaintiff’s peril, was an issue for the jury. [Hinkle v. C. B. & Q. Railroad Co. (Mo.), 199 S. W. 227; Whiteaker v. Railroad, 252 Mo. 438, 457, 160 S. W.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Illinois Terminal Railroad v. Hughes
144 S.W.2d 142 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W.2d 1076, 235 Mo. App. 454, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashby-v-illinois-terminal-railroad-moctapp-1939.