Bennett v. Terminal Railroad

145 S.W. 433, 242 Mo. 125, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 145 S.W. 433 (Bennett v. Terminal 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
Bennett v. Terminal Railroad, 145 S.W. 433, 242 Mo. 125, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 11 (Mo. 1912).

Opinions

BOND, C.

Plaintiff, seventeen years of age, was an employee of a contractor who had been engaged by defendant to install for it a block system of signals for use in its tracks and yards in St. Louis and at other points. Plaintiff had been doing this work for six weeks or two months. It was the custom of defendant to provide for plaintiff and persons in the same service a “plug” train which would take them to their work across the river in the morning and bring them back in the evening. This train stopped at a point in the city of St. Louis near which Eighth street extended to double tracks owned by defendant. The street did not cross these tracks but lay entirely south of them.

On the 8th of July, 1908, plaintiff, in company with his foreman and others, returned on this train to its stopping point, about 5:20 p. m. After they debarked, plaintiff was told by his foreman that the pay train would not be in that afternoon, and probably on that account the men would not be paid on that day. Plaintiff then observed that two of the men who had come over with him and who had left while he was talking to his foreman were about to enter into a curve which the defendant’s two tracks describe at that point, and through which, over an elevation beginning at the point where plaintiff was standing, they proceeded across trestle works for about four blocks and then six blocks due west until they reached the union station. Plaintiff’s employers kept an office in the yards at the union station, where plaintiff and his fellow-workman were paid, and plaintiff says he [129]*129intended to use these tracks as a pathway to said office. At the point where plaintiff stood there was an embankment about two feet above the surface, which was the beginning of the elevation of the two tracks, which increased until the trestles were reached. It was upon this embankment and the succeeding trestles plaintiff had seen the other men proceed. When plaintiff started to follow them, he says, “And in going on the highline I looked east and saw this train bearing down westbound, and with that I stepped on the north track and was standing there with the intention of letting that pass;” that he was then struck by the tender of an engine which was backing eastwardly on the said north track and pulling a train of freight cars, causing the injury sued for — the loss of an arm and severe bruises about the jaw and face-.

The only time plaintiff looked to the west was when he observed his two companions taking that direction. He then saw nothing of the approaching freight train coming eastwardly over the north track, and he never saw that train at any time until it was so close to him that he could only make one step southwardly as he was struck by the tender of the engine. Plaintiff’s exact language is as follows: “The only recollection I have of the train coming in an opposite direction is when it was just about on top of me; then I have just a faint recollection of seeing it and making an effort to jump when it struck me, and that is as far as the recollection goes.” Plaintiff stated that during his employment he had been nearly every day in the defendant’s yards. He stated further, “But it was a known fact to be careful of trains because we had talked about that often.” At the time plaintiff was hit, he testifies he was ten or fifteen feet distant from the curve of the two tracks; that he did not remember whether he could “see around it or not;” that his im[130]*130pression was that the distance between the two tracks where he stood was eight or nine feet. The engineer in charge of the eastbound freight train was a witness for plaintiff, and testified that whilst his train was coming east at a distance of 340 feet he saw two men on the south track; that these men walked east on the south track; that he did see either of them afterwards; that the tank of the tender obscured his view for a certain distance; and that he did not see the plaintiff when he was hit.

Defendant adduced evidence tending to prove that plaintiff was seen by a man who was stationed on the east end of the tender of the engine that was drawing the freight train eastwardly on its north track at a distance of 150 to 250 feet; that he was then standing at a point between the north and south tracks close enough to the north track to he injured if he remained stationary until the freight train reached that point; that the two tracks at that point were ten or eleven feet apart; that when the plaintiff was seen, the whistle blew and the hell was rung; and the plaintiff turned and looked “and stepped into the clear” when the freight train had reached a distance of about seventy-five feet from him; that the plaintiff’s injury was caused from his having run sidewise for some distance apparently to get on the moving train coming west-war dly over the south track, and having moved backwards just as the tender of the eastbound train reached the place where he was.

Another witness for defendant testified that he came over that afternoon with plaintiff on the “plug” train, and that plaintiff proposed to him that they catch the westbound train and ride in it over the south track to the union station; that he warned plaintiff to look out for the freight train coming eastwardly over the north track, which witness called a “drag train;” that plaintiff answered “all right;” that there[131]*131upon he went eastwardly and about one hundred feet from plaintiff found an open vestibule and got on the steps' of the westbound train which had been stopped awaiting a signal before proceeding to the station; that it immediately moved westwardly in response to a signal, and as he approached the place where plaintiff was standing he “hollered” to him to look out for the eastbound train on the north track; that plaintiff seemed not to hear him, and he observed plaintiff back towards the eastbound train when it was only three or four feet distant from him; that plaintiff seemed to be looking for the opening of a vestibule door so he could catch the westbound train; that he saw the tender of the eastbound train at the southeast corner when it “knocked him a somersault;” that witness then jumped off the train on which he was riding and went back to the place of the injury.

Defendant requested a peremptory instruction to find in its favor. Defendant also excepted to the ruling of the court excluding its offer to prove that at the point where plaintiff was hurt the distance between the trains was ten or eleven feet, and .that a person could stand safely in that space without being hit by two trains passing him at the same time in opposite directions.

A verdict was rendered for plaintiff for $10,000, from which defendant duly appealed.

OPINION.

I. The questions presented are:, First, the correctness of the action of the trial court in overruling the demurrer to the evidence; second, the correctness of its ruling excluding the testimony as to the width between the two tracks at the point where plaintiff was injured.

If there is material evidence tending to prove a cause of action, although conflicted by other evidence; [132]*132or if an inference can be legally drawn from -undisputed evidence which tends to prove a cause of action, although a contrary inference might be legally deduced; then the plaintiff has a constitutional right to have the jury decide which of the two conflicting theories of fact shall prevail. This rule marks the line of division between the duty of the court to declare the law and the power of the jury to find the facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 S.W. 433, 242 Mo. 125, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-terminal-railroad-mo-1912.