Campbell v. St. Louis & Suburban Railway Co.

75 S.W. 86, 175 Mo. 161, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 27, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 75 S.W. 86 (Campbell v. St. Louis & Suburban 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
Campbell v. St. Louis & Suburban Railway Co., 75 S.W. 86, 175 Mo. 161, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 55 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J. J.

— This is a suit for damages under section 2864, Revised Statutes 1899, for the death of plaintiffs’ minor son which they allege was caused by the negligence of the servants of the defendant in running a car on its railway.

Defendant operates a street railway in ,St. Louis; the accident occurred at a point where defendant’s tracks cross "Whittier street. At that point defendant ’s tracks run east and west, and Whittier street north and south. Plaintiff’s son, who was sixteen years old,, was driving a grocery delivery wagon going south on Whittier street, shortly after six o ’clock in the evening-of November 3, 1899, when, as he was crossing defendant’s south track, the wagon was struck by a car with such violence that he was thrown out and instantly killed.

[167]*167The petition states that at that time there was an ordinance of the city which required the servants of defendant in charge of the car to keep a vigilant watch for vehicles and pedestrians either on the track or moving towards it, and on the first appearance of danger to such vehicles or pedestrians to stop the ear in the shortest time and space possible, and that such cars after sunset should be provided with signal lights, and no car be run at a greater speed than eight miles an hour; it then states that the servants of defendant so negligently • managed the ear on this occasion as to cause it to strike the wagon and throw the plaintiffs ’ son therefrom and kill him. Then the petition specifies four acts as of negligence which it alleges defendant committed, tó-wit: that there was no headlight, that the car was running twenty miles an hour, that the man in charge did not keep a vigilant watch and failed to stop the car in the shortest time and space possible on the first appearance of danger to the vehicle and that they failed to ring a bell on approaching the crossing.

The answer was a genéral denial, and a plea that the plaintiffs’ son was negligent in that he drove on defendant’s track without looking or listening for an approaching car and thereby contributed to the accident.

Reply, general denial.

The testimony for plaintiffs tended to prove as follows:

Defendant’s tracks are laid in an alley that runs east and west between West'Bell street on the north and Morgan street on the south. It is an unusually wide alley, being about sixty feet in width, the defendant owning a right of way twenty feet wide through the center. There are two tracks, the north track being used for the west-bound cars and the south track for the cars east bound. Whittier street runs north and south, intersecting the above-named streets, alley and [168]*168railroad tracks at right angles. This is in a residence district in the western portion of the city. The next street west of "Whittier and parallel to it is Pendleton, the next Newstead and the next Taylor avenne. The railroad tracks are on a straight line and level from Whittier street to Taylor avenne and beyond. There is a roadway in the alley on the north side of the tracks twenty feet wide, and one on the south side twenty-three feet wide. In the angle made by the west line of Whittier street and the north line of the alley is a two-story brick stable. There were telegraph poles along the line of the railroad, one of which was just west of Whittier street. There was an are light at the intersection of Whittier and West Bell streets, but no light at the crossing of the tracks. The night was dark and foggy. Whittier street was paved with vitrified brick, which pavement extended down to the railroad tracks. A wagon passing over the pavement made considerable noise. The vehicle in which plaintiffs ’ son was driving was an ordinary grocery delivery wagon, covered at top and sides, except that on each side1 by the driver’s seat, it was open for a space of eighteen inches so that the driver could see to the right and the left as well as to the front. , On this occasion he came , from the north, driving south on Whittier street, without stopping or slacking his pace, crossed the north track and just as he got on the south track, the wagon was struck by an east-bound car and he was thrown out and instantly killed.

It was not a regular passenger car, but a construction or repair car. It carried no headlight, but there were lights inside, and an incandescent bulb in the hood at the front of the car, with a reflection throwing the light upward, designed to enable the operator to see the wire overhead. The plaintiffs ’ witnesses variously estimated the speed of the car at twelve, fifteen and twenty miles an hour. It did not slacken its speed until it struck the wagon and it stopped about one hun[169]*169•dred and twenty feet east of Whittier street. Eonr of plaintiffs’ witnesses heard the car when it was half way between Pendleton and Whittier streets and-recognized by the sound that it was a car approaching rapidly; only one of these was -in a position to see in that diréction and she testified that she saw the car midway between Pendleton and Whittier streets. This witness was' standing in the alley on the north side of the tracks at the back gate of the second house east of Whittier street so that she was about two hundred and fifty feet from the car when she first saw and heard it. Another •one of these four witnesses was in the rear room of the same house, the windows closed;.she heard but did not see it. Another was standing on the front porch of house No. 4206 West Bell street, which is the second house west of Whittier. It was about one hundred and thirty feet from where he stood to the north line of the alley, the house intervening. He was permitted to testify, over the defendant’s objection, that judging from the noise of the car it was running twelve to fifteen miles an hour.

One of plaintiffs ’ witnesses who at the time of the accident was in the employ of the defendant and on this car, testified that it was his duty to put the headlight on the car and that he did so. The headlight was burning when the car left DeHodiamont, but whether it was burning when they reached Whittier street he did not know. This witness and another for plaintiffs’ testified that the car running twelve to twenty miles an hour ■could be stopped in thirty-five to fifty feet.

Over the objection of defendant the plaintiffs read in evidence a duly certified copy of an ordinance of the city, No. 19393, approved June 10, 1898, authorizing the defendant to build and operate a branch of its road through a portion of Union avenue to Forest Park, the conditions of which had been duly accepted in writing by the defendant and one clause of which was as follows: “The St. Louis & Suburban Railway Company, [170]*170in accepting firs ordinance, agrees to comply with, the provisions of all general ordinances and charter provisions affecting street railroads that may be in force or which may hereafter be enacted and applicable to its entire line of railroad or any part thereof.”

Then over the objection of defendant, plaintiffs read in evidence from the volume of’ Revised Ordinances of 1892, section 1275 of Ordinance 17188, which provides that no car shall be drawn at a greater speed than eight miles an hour; that the motorman of each car shall keep a vigilant watch for all vehicles either on the track or moving towards it, and on the first appearance of danger to such vehicle the car shall be stopped in the shortest time and space possible; and that all cars after sunset shall be provided with signal lights.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W. 86, 175 Mo. 161, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-st-louis-suburban-railway-co-mo-1903.