Borrson v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad

172 S.W.2d 835, 351 Mo. 229, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 599
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 7, 1943
DocketNo. 37799.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 172 S.W.2d 835 (Borrson v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas 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
Borrson v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, 172 S.W.2d 835, 351 Mo. 229, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 599 (Mo. 1943).

Opinions

This is one of three actions under the wrongful death statute, Sec. 3652, R.S. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., sec. 3652, growing out of a collision between appellant's eastbound freight train and a truck driven by Robert Jean White, with whom his wife, Myrtle Ann White, and their two year old son Raymond Arthur White were riding. It occurred on December 20, 1939 at a railroad grade crossing over Caulk's Hill road in St. Charles County. All three truck passengers were killed. In each action there was a judgment for the plaintiff for $10,000, from which the railroad company appealed. One of them was brought by the present respondent Alice Borrson as guardian of the surviving minor children of the couple, for the death of their mother. The judgment in that case was affirmed by Division 2 of this court last May, as reported in 161 S.W.2d 227. The same plaintiff brought the instant action, No. 37,799, for the death of the father. The third case, No. 37,798, 351 Mo. 214, 172 S.W.2d 826, was brought by the same Alice Borrson as administratrix of the estate of the infant decedent for his death. These two cases were consolidated for oral argument here, but were tried below separately and are submitted on separate records and briefs. The facts are closely parallel, but there is some difference in them as well as the assignments of error in the briefs, which necessitates the writing of separate opinions.

Respondent's petition contained several assignments of negligence including: failure to maintain watchmen, crossing gates or other *Page 232 protective devices at the crossing; and negligence under the humanitarian doctrine. But after the evidence was in she abandoned all other pleaded assignments and submitted her case solely on the issue whether appellant's locomotive engineer failed to give warning by bell or whistle for 80 rods until the train reached the crossing, as required by Sec. 5213, R.S. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., sec. 5213. This was, of course, primary negligence, to which contributory negligence of the deceased would be a defense under the express terms of the death statute, Sec. 3652, supra. The appellant's answer pleaded contributory negligence on[837] the part of the deceased in failing to exercise the highest degree of care under Sec. 8383, R.S. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., sec. 8383, by stopping, looking and listening, or by swerving or stopping the truck; also defective brakes on the truck, excessive speed, and failure to heed the railroad crossing sign and to see the railroad track. The first and principal assignment made in appellant's brief here is that the trial court erred in submitting the case to the jury because: (1) the evidence shows the deceased truck driver was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law; (2) and there was no substantial evidence that the statutory warning signals were not sounded by the locomotive engineer.

Stating the facts in the light most favorable to the respondent, there was evidence from which the jury might have inferred that the deceased had never been over Caulk's Hill road before. His fifteen year old daughter testified he had not "to her knowledge;" and Mr. Gross, Supervisor for the Farm Security Administration in St. Charles County, testified from a conversation he had with the deceased about two hours before the collision that the latter did not know the location of his destination on the fatal trip. However, it also appears in respondent's evidence that the deceased had been living and farming for 5½ years near New Melle, which the public records of the State Highway Department (of which we take judicial notice) indicate is in the same general part of St. Charles County. Respondent's evidence further shows deceased was an experienced truck driver. Before he began farming he had been a driver out of St. Louis for the Anderson Motor Company, engaged for two years in long distance truck hauling to eastern states and to different (but not all) points in St. Charles County. Prior to that he had been an automobile mechanic.

More important is the testimony of respondent's aforesaid witness Gross as to the purpose of deceased in making the trip. He came to Gross's office in St. Charles about 11 o'clock that morning inquiring where he could buy some live stock. Gross directed him to a farm on Bon Homme island (so-called) which was accessible to truck traffic on the north side of the Missouri River over the Caulk's Hill road and another. In so doing Gross instructed the deceased to take State Highway No. 94 from St. Charles and go southwest *Page 233 to the village of Harvester, and thence turn left or south following the Caulk's Hill road until he crossed the railroad tracks which were more or less "right at the edge of the upland and bottom land." Then he was to take another intersecting public road running east and west parallel with the south side of the railroad track, and leading to the farm he was seeking. Three times in his direct and cross-examination Gross repeated the statement that he told the deceased the railroad and the parallel east and west highway would be "at the edge" of the bottom land and upland; or where they "connected," or "came together."

The evidence on both sides further shows without dispute that the Caulk's Hill road runs south from Highway 94 and Harvester, and for about 660 feet with a fall of about 146 feet passes through the bluffs or hills on the north side of the Missouri River, to a wide area of flat land called Green's Bottom lying between the river and the foot of the bluffs, with the railroad track hugging the latter. As the road nears the track it is substantially level, but for the last 35 or 40 feet rises to meet the railroad grade. It is an all-weather road of stone or gravel and 16 feet wide. The railroad runs east and west, but on a convex southerly curve both east and west of the grade crossing, and still further west about 1200 feet it curves northerly. The track is on an embankment some 5 or 6 feet above the average level of Green's Bottom. The hill or bluff on the west side of Caulk's Hill road is 175 feet high and covered with trees and dead vegetation, which tend to deaden and deflect over into the river valley the sound of trains coming from the west. Also the hill is so close both to the railroad and the highway that motorists coming down the latter cannot see eastbound trains until fairly close to the railroad track. Witnesses testifying for respondent and appellant gave distance limits of vision westwardly up the railroad track from various positions on the highway, on or north of the grade crossing.

The respondent, who went out to the scene of the collision on January 1, twelve days after it occurred, testified that from a position 23 feet north of the grade crossing she could plainly see a man or train coming from the west down the railroad track, but she did not state how far [838] west. Respondent's witness Hemsath, a neighboring farmer, also testified that when "approaching" the grade crossing from the north along the Caulk's Hill road one could see west "some distance" along the railroad track, the implication being that the distance was 300 feet, but he was not definite about that. Respondent's witness Tony Roth, another local farmer, thought the view west up the track from a point 15 feet north of the grade crossing wouldn't be any more than 300 feet, but said he "couldn't swear to that." He said he couldn't see up the track 300 feet from his *Page 234 mailbox there, which is the one nearest the track and about 30 feet north therefrom. (See photograph Ex. 6.)

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W.2d 835, 351 Mo. 229, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borrson-v-missouri-kansas-texas-railroad-mo-1943.