Brock v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad

51 S.W.2d 100, 330 Mo. 918, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 484
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 13, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 51 S.W.2d 100 (Brock v. Mobile & Ohio 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
Brock v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad, 51 S.W.2d 100, 330 Mo. 918, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 484 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

This is an action for damages for the death of Will Brock, a section foreman employed by defendant. Brock was killed in a collision between a motor car used by the section crew, and one of defendant's trains near Berkley, Kentucky. His widow, Tennie Brock was appointed Administratrix and instituted this action in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis under the Employers' Liability Act. Plaintiff had verdict and judgment for $10,000 and defendant appealed.

Brock was foreman of a section crew employed in the maintenance of defendant's track on a section, about six miles in length, extending north and south from the town of Berkley, Kentucky. This is a single track and a part of defendant's main line over which it operated trains in interstate commerce. The section crew traveled to points where work was to be done on a motor car propelled by a gasoline engine. The railroad track at Berkley runs north and south. North from Berkley the track crosses two trestles, runs through deep cuts and curves to the northwest and then to the northeast. The two trestles are about 600 feet apart and between them the track runs in a cut. The north trestle, at the north end of which the collision occurred, is referred to in the evidence as the second trestle. This trestle is about 100 feet long and at the highest point is about thirty-five feet above the ground. About 200 feet north of the north end of the second trestle the track curves sharply to the northeast through a deep cut and around a high embankment on the east side thereof. This northeast curve around the embankment is about 800 feet in length. On the morning of the collision the section crew composed of eight men, including the foreman Brock, left Berkley sometime after seven o'clock, on the motor car, for Laketown, a town four miles north of Berkley, to lower a boiler at the pumping station there. Defendant's southbound train No. 15 was scheduled to pass Berkley at four o'clock A.M. but on this morning was running late and had not passed Berkley at the time the section crew started north along the single track. The station agent at Berkley did not go on duty until eight o'clock and there was no telephone connection with other points along the railroad nor was a block system in use. When they started north from Berkley the section crew did not know that train No. 15 had not passed. As the motor car, proceeding north, entered upon the south end of the second trestle southbound *Page 925 train No. 15 came into view around the embankment about 200 feet north of the north end of the trestle. Some of the section men at that instant jumped from the motor car as it ran upon the south end of the trestle; others including the deceased remained on the car as it was driven at increased speed across the trestle in an attempt to reach a vantage point for escape at the north end where the men remaining on the car, except Brock, did escape by leaping from the speeding car an instant before it collided with the on-coming train. Brock was killed in the collision.

Plaintiff having abandoned all other assignments of negligence made in her petition the case was submitted to the jury on the one assignment that defendant's employees in charge of the train negligently failed to sound a whistle as the train approached the curve and at intervals while rounding it in violation of a long standing custom to sound the whistle in such manner as trains traveled around this curve and that Brock's death resulted in whole or in part from such negligence of defendant's employees. The defendant made a general denial of the allegations of the petition, pleaded assumption of risk and that deceased's own negligence in violating a rule of the company, designed for the protection of section men in such a contingency, precluded a recovery. Counsel for appellant do not assign error in the admission or rejection of evidence or in the instructions but state in their brief: "we are assigning only the one ultimate error, that of refusing the peremptory instructions requested by the defendant." In this connection appellant's contentions may be summarized as follows: (1) That the violation by the deceased of a standing rule designed to prevent the occurrence of such an accident was the primary cause of the collision and bars a recovery. (2) That there was not sufficient substantial evidence of the alleged custom to sound the whistle as trains approached and passed through the cut and around the curve "to justify a submission of the case" to the jury. (3) That even if the evidence be sufficient to support a finding that such a custom existed it does not appear that "the custom was intended to apply to a class to which section men belonged." (4) That there is not sufficient pleading or proof that decedent "knew of the alleged custom to warn and relied upon it." (5) That it appears as a matter of law that Brock "assumed the risk and danger of the collision." In this summary we have enumerated appellant's arguments in the order in which they are presented in its brief, however, as we view this case, a determination of the second, third and fourth propositions is necessary to a proper discussion and disposition of the first proposition.

[1] In considering whether there was any substantial evidence tending to show the existence of the custom alleged and relied upon *Page 926 by respondent we must accept as true all evidence in the record relating thereto which is in respondent's favor and also every reasonable inference favorable to her which can be drawn from the evidence. [2] Looking to the evidence tending to show the custom relied upon as the basis of plaintiff's cause of action we find one of the section men, Lepchenski, upon inquiry relating, as is apparent, to the practice alleged to have prevailed of sounding a warning whistle as trains passed through the cuts and around the curves immediately north of Berkley, testified, that trains "have all whistled" in such "curves and cuts." A public road crossed the railroad track about three-fourths of a mile north of the north end of the trestle where the collision occurred, and was known as Gamble crossing. The whistling board for Berkley station was about one-fourth of a mile north of the north end of the trestle and 308 feet north of the north end of the curve. This signal board had formerly been located south of this trestle and between it and the first trestle north of Berkley but sometime during the preceding year had been moved to the point north of the second trestle. Witness Sams testified that he "lived three-fourths or a half mile" from the point where the track curves through the cut and around the embankment; that "the trains always whistle as they travel that track and the curve there;" that he had observed the operation of trains at that point for fourteen years; that trains whistled for Gamble crossing and from the crossing "all the way to the trestle" and that they "whistled from two or three hundred yards north of it to the trestle." Witness Collier stated that he had lived in the vicinity of this trestle, where the collision occurred, for two years preceding the collision and had observed that during that period trains "whistled before they went around the curve and all the way down." It is a reasonable inference from the testimony of this witness as a whole that this statement is to be understood as meaning that trains whistled before entering the curve and all the way from there to the trestle. Witness Woods testified: "I have been around the vicinity of that trestle all of my life and have seen trains going through there" (meaning through the cut and around the curve) and that the trains whistled for the cut and curve north of the trestle. Witness Long stated that he "had lived a half mile from the scene of the collision for about four years." We quote from his direct examination:

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W.2d 100, 330 Mo. 918, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-v-mobile-ohio-railroad-mo-1932.