Buddy v. Union Terminal Railway Co.

207 S.W. 821, 276 Mo. 276, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 117
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 821 (Buddy v. Union Terminal 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
Buddy v. Union Terminal Railway Co., 207 S.W. 821, 276 Mo. 276, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 117 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

FARIS, J.

Plaintiff, then approaching ten years of age, was hurt in 1904, by the alleged negligence of defendant. In 1913 he sued defendant, laying his damages at $30,000. Upon a trial had toward the close of the year 1915, proof was adduced pro and con. At the close of all of the evidence defendant asked, and the court nisi gave to the jury a peremptory instruction that under the pleadings and the evidence their verdict should be for the defendant. Thereupon plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave. After an unavailing motion to get this nonsuit set aside he appealed.

Plaintiff in his petition invokes as his sole ground of recovery application of the well-known doctrine of the “turntable cases” to an injury accruing from certain small flat cars left standing unblocked, unlocked and unbraked upon defendant’s track then under construction, under such situation, it is averred, as to make such cars an attractive plaything for children. Defendant’s answer is a general denial, and a plea that plaintiff was when hurt a trespasser upon defendant’s private premises, and that in this situation his injuries were wholly cansed by his own contributory negligence,

[280]*280The facts — and it is already apparent that this case turns wholly upon the facts — run briefly thus: Plaintiff when hurt was nine years and eight months old. He was a pupil in the fourth grade of the Floyd School in St. Joseph. Defendant was then engaged in constructing an extension of its tracks upon its right-of-way at a point about 150 feet distant from this school. In this construction work it used, among others, two small eight-wheeled flat cars, which the evidence on plaintiff’s part shows to have been from 16 to 20 feet long, while that of defendant shows that these cars were at the time standard flat cars from 28 to 20 feet in length. We must, however, perforce the well-settled rule in a case wherein a demurrer to the evidence has been sustained, look only to the plaintiff’s evidence on contradicted points. During the time of the building of this extension these small flat cars stood when not in use upon defendant’s track for a period of from two to three months. Children from the Floyd School, among whom was plaintiff, over the objections of defendant, however, were in the habit of pushing these cars up and down the track, on which there was a slight grade of 3% inches per hundred feet. About the 1st day of June, 1904, while some six or seven or more of plaintiff’s fellow-pupils — whose ages ranged from 10 to 13 years — were engaged in pushing one of these cars on this track they ran it against plaintiff and caughi. and pinched his left leg between the axle of the car and some construction material, namely, piling lying along the track; so that the calf of his leg was torn and the muscles thereof were in part destroyed. Subsequently, and after some three months, the injury wholly healed externally, but left the leg of plaintiff in a slightly undersized and a somewhat weakened condition. Some nine years after this accident and on account of a fresh injury to his toe, blood-poison developed and it became necessary by reason thereof to amputate plaintiff’s leg. Answering categorically, the single expert witness who testified as to the proximate cause of the amputation [281]*281said that “the former injury had nothing to do with the causation of the blood poisoning; the blood poisoning was caused by a subsequent injury nine years later.”

The witnesses for plaintiff — the physician excepted — were schoolmates at the time of the occurrence of the injury to him. Their ages at that time were from 10 to 13 years. Eleven years had elapsqd from the date of this injury till they testified in the case. Much divergence of opinion and much deviation from what must have been the actual facts are to expected. All this we find. Plaintiff’s witnesses all agree that the cars were not fastened to the track, nor locked, nor blocked, nor braked, or even furnished with brakes. On other vital points they varied greatly. In ah effort to fairly present the facts upon the points, (a) how large were these cars, (b) how many pupils it took to move them, and (c) what plaintiff was doing when he was hurt, we excerpt the testimony of all of plaintiff’s witnesses on all these points.

The plaintiff testifying for himself said: Prom the time of my accident, and for two or throe months before, they were in the habit of leaving small flat cars on the track by the school. There were two cars. They were small ordinary flat cars about half, about 16 to 20 feet, between 16 and 18 feet. They were lighter, very much lighter, than other freight cars.” Upon the point of how many children it required to put the car in motion upon this track, he says “six children could move the car.” Touching what he was doing when hurt he says: “When I first saw the car it was probably half a block or a little over below the school, being pushed north by about six or seven children eight or nine or ten years old. I was standing between the ends of the piling when the car gbt me. I don’t remember whether I was pushing or getting ready to push. I started to push the car.”

James V. Riley, approximately ten years old when plaintiff was hurt, testifying for plaintiff, said: “The [282]*282cars were probably sixteen, or eighteen or twenty feet long. They were undersized flat cars.” Upon the point of the force required to move these cars he is not definite, but speaking to the situation in this behalf at the very moment that plaintiff was hurt said: “We were playing with the car at the time he was hurt. Maybe a dozen children had hold of it. We were pushing it north at the time it caught him. He got caught between the boxing and the poles that were lying along the track, between the boxing and the end of the poles. I don’t know what he was doing at the time.”

Charles F. May, who was eleven years old at the time of the injury to plaintiff, said for plaintiff on the. points mentioned, this: “It was a little, small flat car twenty feet long or a little over; it might have been a little shorter. It was light.” Upon the question of the force — hid ' power — required to put these cars in motion or as to what plaintiff was doing he does not testify, but says as to the manner of his being hurt that “he was caught between the piling and the boxing on the east side.”

Leo Baldin, at the time of the injury to plaintiff twelve years old, testifying for plaintiff, said: 1 ‘ The ears were not ordinary flat cars; they were small flat cars, consisting of eight wheels, with no brakes on them, about 18 feet long, of light construction. Five or six or seven children, ten to twelve years old, could push them back and forward there. I was not pushing the car the morning he was hurt. I was on top riding. There were about ten of us around there ranging from nine to twelve years old. I don’t know how many were pushing the car. Too young to remember that.”

Jesse Whaley, who was twelve years old when plaintiff was injured, testifying for plaintiff, said: “The car might have been twenty feet long and might have been more. I don’t believe the car was twenty-eight feet. It might have taken ten or fifteen, or it might have taken a few more to push it. I didn’t count [283]*283them. It had taken as many as were there and if there were forty we pushed it, and if there were ten we pushed it.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 821, 276 Mo. 276, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buddy-v-union-terminal-railway-co-mo-1918.