Burns v. Joyce and Walters

161 S.W.2d 655, 236 Mo. App. 725, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 159
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1942
StatusPublished

This text of 161 S.W.2d 655 (Burns v. Joyce and Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burns v. Joyce and Walters, 161 S.W.2d 655, 236 Mo. App. 725, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 159 (Mo. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

*729 BLAND, J.-

-This is an action for wrongful death. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $3000, and defendants have appealed.

The suit was brought by the plaintiff, the widow of John Edward Burns, to recover for his death, which was caused by his being struck and run over by one of defendants’ northbound trains on a public highway crossing about a mile and a. half or two miles north of the village of Parnell.

Defendants’ tracks run north from Parnell to the crossing in question and are straight and level. The crossing can be seen plainly from Parnell during daylight. The home of deceased and his family was located to the west side of the railroad tracks and near thereto and about three or four hundred yards north of the crossing. South of the crossing, and on the east side of the tracks about 1461 feet south of the planks on the crossing, there is a whistling post. Between deceased’s residence and the crossing there was a wagon bridge on the highway and a railroad bridge in the tracks. A public highway extends to the north from Parnell. It intersects the railroad tracks at a point where the crossing in question is located. The public road south of the crossing lies to the east of the tracks and as *730 it approaches the crossing from the south it goes over the tracks at an angle and proceeds on north to the west of the tracks. There are board planks at the crossing thirty-two feet five inches in length. They lie at an angle with the tracks in order to conform to the road in its passage over the tracks. Vehicular traffic cannot pass over the tracks except on the planks. There is a heavy growth of weeds and brush extending south from the planks in the crossing over the entire right of way except between the tracks, themselves, and a narrow strip of cinders along the end of the ties. There is no traveled roadway or footpath through the weeds and brush. It is hard to walk through them. Nine out of ten people traveling along the right of way walk on the tracks. The others walk on the cinders at the end of the ties. Use of the right of way as a footpath is a common occurrence. Deceased frequently used it in going to and from Parnell. The crossing is a much used one. The tracks as they approach the crossing from the south are built on an embankment. The gauge of the track is 56Yz inches. The overhang of the locomotive involved in the collision is eighteen inches on each side. The ties are eight feet in length.

Deceased, a man forty-eight or forty-nine years of age and in good health, met his death on September 5, 1941. On that day he was engaged in building a com granary in Parnell. He left home about 6 o’clock A. M. to go to work that morning. He carried his lunch in a syrup bucket. He wore a hat but no coat.

Plaintiff’s witness, New, testified that he lived a block west and not quite a block north of defendants’ depot in Parnell; that about 6:54 P. M. of the day in question he saw deceased coming from the end of the produce house and go north on the tracks with his dinner bucket in his hand; that he watched him, he would say, five minutes; that the last time he saw deceased the latter was probably half of a quarter up the tracks; that about twenty-five or thirty minutes thereafter he saw a northbound freight train, described as the meat train, go through Parnell; that this train comes through Parnell about 7:10 P. M. This was the first'train over the tracks after deceased was seen walking northwardly upon the tracks. New was the last person to see deceased alive. New further testified that the meat train went through about dusk; that at that time a man walking on the tracks could be seen for approximately a half a mile.

There was evidence that the day in question was a nice, warm, clear day; that the meat train on the day in question passed through Parnell at. 7:10; that it passed over the crossing in question about 7:13 P. M., and that it gave no warning of its approach to the crossing.

Ordinarily deceased arrived at his home at the end of his day’s work, about 7:30. On this particular evening he was expected between 7:00 and 7:30 for supper with his family. The family waited on this particular evening but he did not come home. The *731 next morning about 7 :00 A. M. defendants’ section crew discovered Ms dead body north of the crossing planks.

According to the testimony of the engineer and fireman, witnesses for defendants, the train approached the crossing at a speed of forty or forty-five miles per hour. They were in their proper positions on the engine and in a position to see ahead. It was dark enough for the train to have its lights on. With the aid of the lights they could see a man on the tracks or right of way for a distance of at least 800 feet. However, on account of the position of the engineer and fireman in the cab seventy feet back of the front end of the locomotive their view in front of the locomotive was obstructed the first 120 feet ahead of it. Both of them testified that they were waching the crossing but saw no one on it or approaching it. They testified that the whistle on the engine was blown at the whistling post. They also stated that the locomotive bell was ringing, the automatic bell ringer having been started when they left St. Joseph; that the train could have been stopped within 1600 to 1800 feet; that when the train reached Des Moines a routine inspection was made of the locomotive engine and there was no evidence upon it of it’s having struck a man or an animal; that the next day the engineer received word that a train had struck deceased at the crossing and he examined the engine and found nothing on it to indicate that it had struck anything; that had it struck a man there would have been evidence on the engine of the collision.

The engineer testified that the pilot was four inches above the rails and nine inches above the ground; that if a person'in the center of the track were struck by the engine he would be carried by the pilot two or three seconds before he would fall to the ground; that if the side of the pilot struck him he immediately would be thrown away from the tracks.

Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that on the morning of September 6th, there was blood on the fourth or fifth tie south of the planks and about five feet south of the south end of the planks on the crossing; that the place where the blood was “looked like there had been something hit there ... a hard lick and blood left on the tie. ’ ’ There was no blood south of this point. One of defendants’ witnesses testified that he saw tobacco scattered around' this blood and that an empty tobacco sack was at that point. Deceased’s pipe and pencil were found at the south end of the second or third crossing plank. His pocket knife, entrails, blood and hair were found along the crossing planks. His shoe was found on the road just north of the crossing planks. The main part of his body was found between the rails Mnety-three feet and six inches north of the crossing planks. His hat was found on the west side of the tracks about 100 feet north of the planks. His dinner bucket, was found on the west-.side of the tracks 116 feet and eight inches north of the crossing planks. The lid *732 of this bucket was found 140 feet north of the planks and on the west side of the tracks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 S.W.2d 655, 236 Mo. App. 725, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-joyce-and-walters-moctapp-1942.