Cable v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad

236 S.W.2d 328, 361 Mo. 766, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 568
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 12, 1951
Docket41399
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 236 S.W.2d 328 (Cable v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy 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
Cable v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 236 S.W.2d 328, 361 Mo. 766, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 568 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

DALTON, J.

[ 328] Action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff when The truck he was operating and one of defendant’s trains collided at a grade crossing. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff for $8000.00 and defendant appealed.

The case of Flint v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, 357 Mo. 215, 207 S. W. (2d) 474, involved a passenger in plaintiff’s [329] truck, but that cause was submitted on different assignments of negligence. Plaintiff’s cause was submitted solely on negligence under the humanitarian doctrine in failing to warn of the approach of the train. Since it is contended that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case, we state the evidence most favorable to plaintiff and will disregard defendant’s evidence unless it aids the plaintiff’s case. A part of plaintiff’s evidence appears to have been identical with the evidence in Flint v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, supra, and as to such evidence portions of the statement in the prior ease have been adopted. Matters affecting the credibility, weight and value of the testimony of plaintiff and his witnesses and cross-examination concerning their testimony in the other case will be omitted.

*771 The collision occurred a mile and a half east of Clark in Randolph county on August 14, 1945, about 1:40 o’clock in the afternoon. The day was bright and clear and the ground dry. The train was traveling in a northwest direction while plaintiff approached the crossing from the south. Plaintiff was driving a 1936 G-.M.C. one and one-half ton truck with a high grain bed. The overall length of the truck was about'21 feet and 8 inches. Defendant’s evidence tended 'to show that the distance from the ground level to the bottom of the windows in the truck doors was 57 inches; that the distance to the top of the windows was 71 inches; and that the outside top of the cab was approximately 80 inches above the ground.

Plaintiff testified,.that the glass in the truck doors had been rolled down and that there was no glass- or opening in the cab of the truck from the back edge of the doors around to the back window of the cab. The back window was completely covered by the grain bed of the truck. Plaintiff was employed by Truesdale Brothers, who owned the truck. He was hauling grain from a field where threshing was being done north of the grade crossing in question. He was seated in the driver’s seat on the left hand side of the truck and his passenger was on the right hand side. Plaintiff had driven east from Clark on a gravel road and had turned north on an open lane immediately east of a fence along the east side of what is hereinafter referred to as the "Ward farm. Plaintiff approached defendant’s right of way from the south at about 15 miles per hour.

The railroad extended in a straight line from the southeast to the northwest for more than half a mile On each side of the crossing: The lape and crossing had been open and used for many years by persons who farmed the lands north of the railroad. ’ It was a little more than 1000 feet from the gravel road to the crossing. The crossing was planked solid and had been built and was being maintained by the railroad company. The railroad right of way was 100 feet wide- and there was a corner post at the northeast corner of the Ward farm.' This post was about 50'feet south of the center line of the railroad track. The right of way was fenced to the west of this post but not to the east. Bast of the crossing the right of way was covered with high weeds. The lane which plaintiff was traveling and the railroad right of way to his right approached each other at an acute angle, since the lane extended north and south and the railroad northwest to southeast. Further, the lane had formerly been to the west of the location of the north and south fence on the east side of the Ward farm, but it had been moved to the side of the fence. The lane made a short S curve around the corner post referred to, curving first to the left (west) and then back to the right and up an incline and over the crossing. One of defendant’s witnesses said that the lane’s turn to the left (west) around the corner post was "possibly between 30 or 45 degrees” and that it might veer to the left as much as 45 *772 degrees. One witness said the lane turned directly west. The railroad tracks were located on an embankment about 4 feet above the level of the surrounding fields, which were flat and level. The crossing was 4 feet higher than the elevation of the lane at the corner post. Ten feet north of the corner post the lane was %o of a foot lower and the incline began near that point [330] and extended to the tracks, making the crossing 4 and %o feet higher than the low point in the lane.

Plaintiff testified that on the right hand side of the lane the weeds on the right of way were 6 to 8 feet high and you could not see through them. Another witness said that on the day following the collision he stood in the dip in the roadway “just as you leave the corner post” and that you could not see through the weeds. The weeds were of different types from 5 to 7 feet high, and they were thick. One of the defendant’s witnesses fixed the height of the weeds at “approximately 4 to 6 feet, probably 7 feet, some of them” and said that the high vegetation lacked about 6 feet of reaching the edge of the ballast. There was also evidence that the weeds on the right of way on the east side of the approach to the crossing had been cut back approximately 10 feet.

Plaintiff had been over the roadway before and was familiar with the crossing. When he reached the corner post he turned to his left, following the roadway, so that his truck was facing in a northwest direction and the right side of his truck was “almost” parallel with the railroad tracks, ‘ ‘ didn’t lack too much. ’ ’ As he reached the depression in the roadway, he slowed down, practically stopped, changed gears, pulled to the right and proceeded slowly up the incline north to the crossing at not over three miles an hour. As he approached the crossing he could have stopped his truck within 2 feet. When the front end of his truck was 5 feet from the south rail of the track his truck was “just about” straightened out facing the crossing; You couldn’t straighten the truck out in the length of the truck and he didn’t know how far north of the depression he would have had to go to get the truck perpendicular with the track. When he was within 5 feet of the first rail he could still have stopped within 2 feet and have avoided the collision. The overhang of defendant’s engine was shown to be approximately 32 inches.

While no issue of contributory negligence is presented, there is an issue as to whether plaintiff was apparently oblivious of'the approach of the train. Plaintiff said he looked for a train when he started up the lane. The railroad embankment was then in plain view along the north side of the field. As he approached the comer post he continued to look for trains, but the weeds on the right of way obstructed a view of the embankment but would not have prevented a view of the train. He didn’t hear a whistle at any time. About the time he got to the corner post, he asked his guest, who was sitting *773 on the right hand side of the truck, if he saw a train coming-, the guest looked to the east and said that “he didn’t see nothing-.” Plaintiff also looked to the east and did not see the train.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W.2d 328, 361 Mo. 766, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cable-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-mo-1951.