Berry Ex Rel. Nay v. Kansas City Public Service Co.

108 S.W.2d 98, 341 Mo. 658, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 108 S.W.2d 98 (Berry Ex Rel. Nay v. Kansas City Public Service Co.) 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
Berry Ex Rel. Nay v. Kansas City Public Service Co., 108 S.W.2d 98, 341 Mo. 658, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 458 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff, a young lady eighteen years of age at the time, was injured, on October 22, 1933, when a street car of the defendant Kansas City Public Service Company, upon which she was a passenger, and a freight train of the defendant St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company collided at a crossing of the street car and railroad tracks "in the Sheffield district in the east part of Kansas City." Plaintiff, by next friend, brought this action against both the Kansas City Public Service Company (hereafter referred to as the Public Service Company) and the Trustees of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company, a corporation (hereafter referred to both as the Frisco and the Railway Company). The cause was instituted and tried in the Circuit Court of Johnson County and plaintiff had verdict, and judgment thereon, against both defendants, for damages in the amount of $20,000. Defendants have separately appealed.

We are not called upon to rule a demurrer to the evidence and a condensed statement of the facts will be sufficient to present the issues involved. At this crossing two east and west street car tracks (an eastbound and a westbound track) cross a single north and south Frisco railroad track. The crossing is not in a street intersection and the railroad tracks are not upon and do not cross any street or road at this point. The street car was westbound and traveling on the north street car track. The freight train composed of an engine and tender, 22 freight cars and a caboose, was northbound. These east and west street car tracks also crossed north and south tracks of the Missouri Pacific Railway 187 feet east of this Frisco crossing. As will presently appear Section 4896, Revised Statutes 1929, was invoked in this case. That section reads: "It shall be the duty of every street railway company or corporation operating a street railway across the tracks of a railroad company to bring its cars to a full stop at least ten and not more than twenty feet before reaching the tracks of the railroad company. And it *Page 665 shall be the duty of the conductor, or some other employee of the street railway company, to go forward to the tracks of such railroad company for the purpose of ascertaining whether a train is approaching such crossing." The Public Service Company had a large sign board at the right or north of its westbound track, and about twenty-two feet east of the Frisco track, upon which was painted in large lettering, "Stop — Railroad Crossing — Be sure you have clear track before crossing." It is admitted that this warning or demand was directed to the operators of its westbound street cars. The street car was in charge of one man who both collected fare and operated the car. The collision occurred in the nighttime at about one o'clock A.M., October 22, 1933. Accompanied by her cousin Ruby Snow, plaintiff boarded this westbound car at Fairmount Station. At the time plaintiff had a room on Prospect Street in Kansas City. She had been visiting her sister at Fairmount and was returning to her room. Plaintiff testified that the street car did not stop at the crossing of the Missouri Pacific tracks and continued west at about the "usual speed" of a street car and without any checking or slackening of speed onto the Frisco track where it was struck by the engine of the northbound Frisco train. She said the operator did not stop the car before going upon the Frisco track. The Frisco engineer stated that he saw the street car approaching the crossing when it was yet about seventy-five feet east of the Frisco track and that it did not stop before going onto the Frisco track. The Public Service Company employed a watchman at this crossing during the daytime and until midnight in the nighttime. Both the operator of the street car and the trainmen knew there was no watchman on duty at this time of night. The evidence was that street cars customarily stopped before going onto the crossing. The Frisco engineer testified that he had "run trains over that line since 1918" and had never before observed a street car fail to stop before crossing the railroad track. The operator of the street car testified he brought the car to a full and complete stop with the front or west end of the car about six or eight feet east of the railroad track from which point he could see the headlight, if lighted, of a locomotive approaching from either the north or south; that the car was stopped and stood at this point for about ten seconds; that he looked both north and south for a train; that he heard no whistle or bell and saw no headlight and thereupon he started the car, had attained a speed of about five miles an hour and that the car, which was forty-eight feet in length, had gotten about "two-thirds" over the crossing when it was struck by the Frisco engine. A Mr. and Mrs. Gillmore testified they saw the collision. Mr. Gillmore was called as a witness by plaintiff and Mrs. Gillmore by defendant Public Service Company. Both said that before going onto the railroad *Page 666 track the street car was brought to a full stop a short distance east of the railroad track. Plaintiff and defendant Public Service Company adduced evidence that as the Frisco train approached the crossing the headlight on the locomotive was not lighted and that no warning by bell or whistle was sounded. The Railway Company had evidence that the automatic bell on the locomotive rang continuously as the train approached the crossing; that the bell had been started ringing at a point several miles from the crossing and had thereafter rung continuously: that the usual and customary blasts of the locomotive whistle were given: and that the headlight was in good condition, was lighted as the engine approached the crossing, and at all times that night prior thereto. The only evidence of the speed of the train as it approached the crossing was the testimony of the trainmen of ten or twelve miles an hour.

[1] Plaintiff's petition charged general negligence and failure to exercise the highest degree of care as to defendant Public Service Company. As to the Railway Company specific negligence was charged in the following respects; failure to slacken speed and operation of the train over the crossing at a high and dangerous rate of speed; failure to keep a proper lookout; failure to ring the bell as the train approached the crossing in alleged "violation" of statute; failure to sound a whistle as it approached the crossing; failure to keep a "headlight burning" in violation of Section 4845, Revised Statutes 1929; and humanitarian negligence, in that, the trainmen "failed to stop" the train "and failed to slacken the speed thereof when they saw or could have seen, plaintiff and the car . . . in a position of imminent peril, and plaintiff oblivious of her danger, in time, . . . to have avoided the collision." The separate answer of each defendant was a general denial. Plaintiff went to the jury on general negligence as to defendant Public Service Company and abandoning the other charges of negligence against the Railway Company, enumerated in her petition, by her instruction numbered 1 submitted as the only grounds of recovery against it; failure in the following respects; (1) to ring a bell, (2) sound a whistle, (3) to have the headlights lighted, and (4) to slacken speed, as the train approached the crossing. The Railway Company's complaint of error in the instruction will be discussed later.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.2d 98, 341 Mo. 658, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-ex-rel-nay-v-kansas-city-public-service-co-mo-1937.