Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Cross

49 P. 599, 58 Kan. 424, 1897 Kan. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 10, 1897
DocketNo. 9964
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 49 P. 599 (Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Cross, 49 P. 599, 58 Kan. 424, 1897 Kan. LEXIS 119 (kan 1897).

Opinion

Allen, J.

At Reading, a small town in Lyon County, the tracks of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company are crossed by the three streets of the town which run north and south. There are three railroad tracks crossing these streets. The north one is a side-track called the passing track. Next is the main track, on the south side of which the station house is located. South of this is what is called the house track. The town of Reading is built on both sides of these tracks. At about three o’clock in the afternoon of December 10, 1892, a freight train going west was run onto the passing track and stopped so as to obstruct the crossings of all three of [426]*426these streets. There is testimony showing that this obstruction continued for twenty-five or thirty minutes, leaving no opening on either street for persons desiring to cross. After the freight train had been so placed on the passing track, a west-bound passenger train was run in behind it on the same track. In front of it were a number of empty cars, thus nearly filling the track between the switches. While these trains were standing on the side track, a passenger train going east passed them on the main line. Elmer Cross, a son of the plaintiffs, had been waiting on the north side of the passing track for twenty or twenty-five minutes to cross to the south side where his home was with his parents. He was a boy thirteen years of age. At about the time the east-bound train passed, he had started to go around the rear end of the freight train. The west-bound passenger train had backed onto the main line, and was proceeding west, with its steam cocks open emitting a cloud of steam, as the boy attempted to pass the rear end of the way car of the freight train. The freight train then commenced backing, without any signal by bell or whistle and without any guard on the rear end of the train, striking the boy and dragging him for a considerable distance along the track, killing him almost instantly. It appears that these crossings were frequently blocked by the defendant’s trains for considerable periods of time ; that persons desiring to cross were in the habit of climbing over, crawling under, and going around the trains; and that the employees of the Company, in charge of this particular train, knew that they were accustomed to do so.

It is insisted on behalf of the Railroad Company that its demurrer to the testimony offered by the plaintiffs should have been sustained, and that there can be no recovery on the facts disclosed. It is urged that [427]*427Elmer Cross was a trespasser on the grounds of the Company, because the place where he was killed was not a street crossing or other place where he had a right to cross the defendant’s right of way ; that there is no evidence indicating a wilful or wanton injury, and that the defendant owed him no duty which it did not perform.

Under the facts disclosed in this case, we think the question was properly submitted to the jury as to whether there was not a license given to the public to pass around the company’s trains while the street crossings were obstructed. It was certainly unreasonable for the defendant to keep its trains standing across all the streets of the town for so long a time and deny the public any opportunity to cross. It being known by the employees on the train that people were in the habit of going around its trains, it was incumbent on them to move the train with reference to such known practice, to give proper signals when starting, and to have some one at the rear end of the backing train to guard against accident. The testimony of the train hands discloses that it was understood by them to be the duty of the rear brakeman to be on the hind end of the way car when the train backed. There is testimony showing that no one was there. It is said that the evidence offered by the plaintiff does not show how Elmer Cross came to his death. None of the plaintiff’s witnesses saw him when he was struck by the way car. The first they knew of the casualty was when he was being taken out from under the cars, after several cars had passed over him. Whether the plaintiff’s testimony was sufficient to take the case to the jury, it is unnecessary to decide, for any lack of proof on that point was afterward supplied by the defendant. A brakeman on the west-bound passenger train testified that he saw Elmer on the track before [428]*428the way car struck him, and that there- was no one standing on the rear end of the way car.

On the merits of the case, we think there was ample proof showing negligence on the part of the Company ; and that it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the boy was guilty of contributory negligence, but that the question was one for the jury.

The averments of the petition with reference to the blocking of the streets by the defendant at this particular time, and also its custom of doing so, and the custom of people to cross its tracks over, under, and around its trains, were proper, and the court did not err in refusing to strike them out. Evidence in support of them was also proper.

Instructions were asked by the defendant limiting the amount of the recovery of the plaintiffs, who were the parents of the boy who was killed, to the net earnings of the boy during his minority. The instructions asked are erroneous. While the plaintiffs would have no right to take the boy's earnings without his consent after he should reach his majority, it might well be that the ties of natural affection would be sufficiently strong to cause him to do them even more service after his majority than before. A recovery by parents for the death of a son after his majority is not at all uncommon. In the case of St. L. & S. F. Rly. Co. v. French (56 Kan. 584), a judgment for forty-five hundred dollars in favor óf a widowed mother, fifty-nine years of age, for the death of a son thirty-four years of age, was affirmed by this court. The judgment in this case is for four thousand dollars — five hundred dollars less than in the case cited. We think the substance of the ninth and twelfth instructions was included in those given by the court, although in different language. The eighth instruction is criticized, and the part singled out, in which it is stated, I instruct you [429]*429that the defendant was negligent in blocking up the streets for such an unreasonable time,” is objectionable. The language which immediately follows it, however, shows that the court did not intend to convey the idea that a verdict against the Company might rest on this act of negligence. The whole instruction reads as follows :

“8.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 P. 599, 58 Kan. 424, 1897 Kan. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railroad-v-cross-kan-1897.