Ayers v. Wabash Railroad

88 S.W. 608, 190 Mo. 228, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 88 S.W. 608 (Ayers v. Wabash Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayers v. Wabash Railroad, 88 S.W. 608, 190 Mo. 228, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 119 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

Plaintiff was. struck by a locomotive on defendant’s railroad and suffered personal injuries; he brings this suit for damages. The negligence ascribed to the defendant in the petition is failure to sound the bell or whistle on approaching the point where plaintiff was, and failure of the engineer to use the appliances at hand to stop the train in-time to avoid striking the plaintiff after seeing him in a position of peril or after the engineer by ordinary care might have seen him. The petition states that defendant’s track was and had been for many years a well-[233]*233recognized public path for pedestrians, with the knowledge and consent of defendant, and that plaintiff was on the track when he was struck, but it omits to say what he was doing or in what position he was. The answer was a general denial and contributory negligence.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove as follows:

Defendant’s railroad runs north and south through the town of LaPlata. There is a well-beaten foot-path in the track, and for many years the people in that vicinity, men, women and children, habitually used the path in going to and from the town. About a mile south of LaPlata there is a private crossing over the railroad, called Grate’s crossing. From that point, looking south, the track for a half mile or more is level and straight, with nothing to obstruct the view. In the afternoon of a clear day, January 8, 1902, the plaintiff had been to town, became intoxicated and started home walking in the foot-path in the track, going south. When he got as far as Grate’s Crossing he sat down on the west end of a cross tie and then and there all consciousness ceased and his memory of events ended.

A regular north-bound' passenger train, running about forty miles an hour, came along and struck him, inflicting serious injuries. As the engine approached G-ate’s Crossing there was no signal given by bell or whistle; the train ran a quarter of a mile past the crossing before it stopped, then backed and took the plaintiff on. Grate’s Crossing was constructed by cross-ties laid lengthwise the track, with plank on the ties. The plaintiff was sitting on the west end of a cross-tie a few feet north of the crossing.

Sinnock, the only witness for the plaintiff near this crossing at the time of the accident, testified that he was approaching the track from the east, and when he got within about thirty-five yards of the crossing he saw the train coming from the. south and waited for it to [234]*234pass; he did not see the plaintiff until after the accident.

There was evidence tending to show that this train running at the rate of thirty, thirty-five or forty miles an hour, as some of the witnesses thought it was, could have been stopped within three hundred or four hundred feet.

The plaintiff called as a witness the engineer who was operating the locomotive at the time of the accident, and interrogated him on two subjects, that is, asked him how the engine was equipped and what kind of a day it was; then the witness was turned over to the attorney for the defendant for cross-examination, and was examined in regard to the accident, in which examination he stated that when at his post on a level-straight track he could see from a half to three-quarters of a mile ahead, that this track was level and straight for about a quarter of a mile south of Gate’s Crossing, that on this occasion he was at his post on the east side of the cab, looking north, he was running a little over forty miles an hour, at that speed the train could not be stopped shorter than within six hundred or seven hundred feet, that he did not see the plaintiff until he was within one hundred and fifty feet of him, the plaintiff was then lying on the west side of the west rail, his body showing about five or six inches above the rail, as soon as he saw him he used every effort and means at hand to stop, but it was too late, it was then impossible to stop in time to prevent striking him, the position of the plaintiff on the track was such that the witness could not have discerned him sooner than he did.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the court, at the request of defendant, gave an instruction to the jury to find for the defendant; the jury rendered a verdict accordingly and the judgment for defendant followed. The plaintiff has appealed.

The only question for decision is, was the plaintiff [235]*235entitled to have his ease submitted to the jury under instructions authorizing a verdict in his favor under any view of the evidence?

The plaintiff insists that the testimony of the engineer to the effect that he was at his post and looking, yet he did not see him until it was too late and that as soon as he discovered him he did everything possible to avert the injury, is not the plaintiff’s evidence, and did hot justify the court in giving the peremptory instruction. The proposition is that the engineer was the plaintiff’s witness only in reference to the subjects on which he was examined by plaintiff and as to the rest he was defendant’s witness.

The question of latitude allowed in cross-examination of an adversary’s witness has led to the adoption of one rule in some jurisdictions and a different one in others. A distinguished text-writer on this subject calls one the orthodox rule, and the other the Federal rule (3 Wigmore on Evidence, sec. 1885, et seq.), and quotes for the orthodox rule, Fulton Bank v. Stafford, 2 Wend. 483-485: “When a witness has been sworn in chief, the opposite party may not only cross-examine him in relation to the point which he was called to prove, but he may examine him as to any matter embraced in the issue. He may establish his defense by him without calling any other witness. If he is a competent witness to the jury for any purpose, he is so, for all purposes.” For the Federal rule the same text-writer quotes from Judge Story in Railroad v. Stimpson, 14 Pet. 448, 461: ‘ ‘ The answers in controversy were inadmissible upon the broader principle (now well established, although sometimes lost sight of in our loose practice at trials) that a party has no right to cross-examine any witness except as to facts and circumstances connected with the matters stated in his direct examination. If he wishes to examine'as to other matters, he must do so by making the witness his own, and calling him, as such,, in the subsequent progress of [236]*236the cause.” "What is there called the orthodox rule has always been the rule in this State. [Page v. Kankey, 6 Mo. 433; Railroad v. Silver, ,56 Mo. 265; State v. Jones, 64 Mo. 391; State v. Soper, 148 Mo. 234.] The learned author above named, after an exhaustive discussion of the subject, says, in section 1895: “The rule under consideration is concerned solely with the order of presenting evidential material; the assumption is that, the fact may be proved on direct examination at a later stage, and the only question is whether it may be elicited during the earlier stage.” That is really the only essential difference in effect between the two rules. Under what is called the Federal rule the defendant may cross-examine the plaintiff’s witness on the subject of his examination in chief and afterwards when defendant comes to introducing his evidence he may recall the witness and examine him on other subjects, making him as to those matters his own witness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 S.W. 608, 190 Mo. 228, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayers-v-wabash-railroad-mo-1905.