Berry v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

26 S.W.2d 988, 324 Mo. 775, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 436
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 19, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 26 S.W.2d 988 (Berry v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway 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 v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 26 S.W.2d 988, 324 Mo. 775, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 436 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

The judgment herein was based on the Federal Employers' Liability Act. It is an action for damages for personal injuries resulting in the death of plaintiff's intestate, caused by a collision between two trains operated by defendant. The petition comprised three counts, but the third count passes from consideration as it was dismissed by plaintiff at the close of the evidence. The first count prays damages for expense, loss of earnings and conscious pain and suffering of deceased from date of injury, to-wit, June 15, 1923, to date of death, to-wit, November 23, 1923. The second count asks pecuniary loss for his death. The trial resulted in a verdict of $10,000 on the first count, and $5,000 on the second count, and defendant appealed from the judgment entered thereon.

The evidence presented warrants the finding that defendant, on June 15, 1923, was a common carrier by railroad, engaged in interstate commerce. Plaintiff's intestate, on the day mentioned, was a locomotive engineer in the employ of defendant. He was assigned to engine 516, commonly called train 516, as engineer. To train 516 was assigned the duty of switching cars in the Red Plant district, adjacent to Webb City, Missouri. On the morning mentioned, plaintiff's intestate, driving engine 516, together with its crew, left Joplin, Missouri, about six:twenty A.M., and proceeded to the Red Plant switching district to switch freight cars. There the train engaged in switching cars, some of which were loaded with chat to be hauled and used in the repair of defendant's roadbed in other states. The switcher also hauled some empty cars that morning, but the record shows nothing further in regard to them. Just previous to the collision, later mentioned, which occurred that morning about ten:thirty-five A.M., switcher 516 proceeded to a siding switch to wait to permit a passenger train to pass on the main line. After the passenger train had passed, the conductor of train 516, knowing that an interstate freight train, which was four hours late, designated as train 331, was likely to be moving southwardly on the main line toward them, without informing plaintiff's intestate of that fact, ordered him to drive the engine, to which was coupled the *Page 783 caboose, on the main line northwardly to Oronogo, near Webb City, to a switch called Waring, to move eight or nine empty ballast cars, to place them on siding to be later loaded. The conductor of train 516, as the train left the siding to go to Oronogo to move the empty ballast cars, stationed a brakeman there to flag a local train coming from Joplin. The brakeman testified that, while train 516 was backing up from Oronogo to the siding to permit the passenger train to pass, he heard the superintendent of defendant say to the conductor of 516, "We have got it pretty well fixed up in the west end; we would like to get out as many as we can today for the south end." When they spoke of the west end, Kansas was meant, and by the south end, Oklahoma. On the morning in question, two trips had been made to Oronogo by train 516, and it had moved cars loaded with rock and chat and placed them on sidings to be put in transit. This company chat was loaded at one of the spurs at Oronogo. At that time washouts on defendant's lines had occurred in Oklahoma and Arkansas and between Joplin, Missouri, and Neodesha, Kansas. The purpose of train 516 in going to Oronogo, at the time of the collision with train 331, is shown by the following:

"Q. What were you going there for? A. To get some empty cars; empty ballast cars.

"Q. Where were you going to put them? A. I think I was going to put them on the Good track; place them on some of them tracks down there.

"Q. To be later loaded? A. Yes."

The conductor of train 516 testified that that was all company chat that he had lined up that day.

After the passenger train passed the siding, train 516, on order of its conductor, left the siding and proceeded northwardly on the main line, and, while so proceeding, a collision occurred between train 516 and train 331, an interstate freight train, running southwardly. Train 331 was about four hours late.

A rule of defendant provided that freight trains, within yard limits, must move prepared to stop, unless the main track is seen, or known, to be clear. As train 516 proceeded to Oronogo, it was running on a curve where the vision was obscured by trees and underbrush to the right of the right-of-way. The telegraph poles were 152 feet apart. Various witnesses estimated the vision on this curve at from four to seven telegraph poles, or from 600 to 1050 feet. The effect of the testimony of Engineer Allison, who on occasions ran engine 516, plaintiff's witness, was that an engineer on an engine going north, at any place on this curve, could see at least four telegraph poles, or 608 feet. The speed of train 516, as it ran, was *Page 784 estimated at from twelve to twenty miles an hour. Train 331 comprised an engine, caboose and thirty-six loaded cars, and was on its way to Kansas. It was running thirty-five to forty miles an hour as it passed Waring crossing, which was 1200 to 1500 feet north of the point of collision. Another witness stated that it was running from twenty to thirty miles an hour. The collision occurred 150 feet south of the north end of the curve, opposite milepost 323 plus 20. The track, going south, from Waring crossing to the north end of the curve was straight. A service application of the airbrakes on train 331 was made about 1100 feet from the point of collision, which slightly reduced its speed. A second service application of the brakes was made 500 feet farther south. An emergency or third application was made 150 feet from the point of collision, and the train was then going thirty miles an hour. Train 331 crashed violently into train 516, injuring plaintiff's intestate. Train 331, after colliding, moved the length of its engine, or, as one witness said, from ten to fifteen feet. The roadbed, ties and rails under the engine of train 331 were torn up, but that under train 516 was intact. By a service application of the brakes train 331 could have been stopped, going thirty-five to forty miles an hour, in from 1500 to 2000 feet, which was a reasonable stop, and by an emergency application it could have been stopped in 800 to 1000 feet. An emergency stop is never entirely safe to a freight train the length of train 331. From train 331, around the curve, the vision extended 900 to 1050 feet. Train 331 going at twenty miles an hour would require for a service stop 800 to 1000 feet, and for an emergency stop, 600 feet. A locomotive engineer testified that the circumstances called for an emergency application of the brakes. The engineer of train 331 testified that he made a service application of the air and an emergency application when notified of the approach of train 516. Train 516 was within its rights in using the main track, as was also train 331. At Oronogo junction, about a mile and a half north of the point of collision, the crew of train 331 were told that train 516 was within the Red Plant district and to look out for it, as it was expected to proceed to Oronogo to switch cars. It was the custom and duty of train 331 to blow the whistle frequently in that district while running, but train 331 did not whistle on this occasion. The engineer of train 331, defendant's witness, did not remember when he last blew the whistle previous to the collision.

The evidence in behalf of defendant tends to show that the collision occurred opposite milepost 323 plus 20. The point of collision was within the switch limits. As they started, the conductor of train 331 said to the engineer: "We want to keep a close watchout down here, because the switcher is down here somewhere." The *Page 785

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W.2d 988, 324 Mo. 775, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-mo-1930.