Church v. Chicago & Alton Railroad

23 S.W. 1056, 119 Mo. 203, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 121
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 23 S.W. 1056 (Church v. Chicago & Alton 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
Church v. Chicago & Alton Railroad, 23 S.W. 1056, 119 Mo. 203, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 121 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Black, P. J.

The plaintiff, Kate Church, brought this suit to recover damages for the death of her former husband, Charles Dixon. Since that time she married William Church. The case was here before on an appeal from the ruling of the trial court, sustaining a demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence (109 Mo. 413). On the last trial the defendant produced much evidence, and at the close thereof, asked the court to give an instruction that on the pleadings and all the evidence the plaintiff could not recover, which the court refused, and this ruling is now assigned as error, the claim being that the undisputed evidence shows contributory negligence on the part of the deceased.

Dixon, the former husband of plaintiff, was run over and killed by a west bound passenger train on the defendant’s road. He was, at the time, in the employ of the defendant, assisting in operating a rock crusher. The defendant’s road runs east and west at the place of the disaster. The rock crusher was located on the north side of the railroad-track, and the rock quarry on the south side. An incline plane track ran down from the upper part of the crusher to the north rail of the railroad track, thence south across the railroad track by what is called a strap track, and thence on south some eight feet to a turntable, where tracks radiated out into the quarry pit. Small cars holding about twenty bushels were loaded with rock and then run out to the turntable, where they were adjusted to the incline track and then pushed north to the south side [209]*209■of the railroad track. They were then drawn over the railroad track and np the incline to the crusher by a wire cable attached to a drum in the crusher. The cable was attached to the cars by means of a clevis. It was the duty of Dixon to attach the cable to these small cars when ready to be drawn up, to detach it when they came back unloaded,- and to keep the cable off the railroad track.

The railroad track, looking east from the crusher, runs on a curve to the south, close to and around a bluff on the south of the railroad. At the time of the accident the quarry had been worked out some fifty feet from the railroad track south into the bluff, and some fifty feet east and west of the turntable. A person standing on the railroad track where crossed by the strap track, could see east along the railroad for a distance of 1,035 feet, but standing on the turntable. he could not see east so far. For a more detailed description of the surroundings, reference is made to the statement of facts in the former opinion.

The charge in the petition is, that defendant maintained a whistling post one hundred and fifty yards east of the crusher, at which persons in charge of west bound trains were required to sound the steam-whistle for the protection of passengers and employees, and that on the occasion in question the engineer neglected and failed to give the signal, by reason of .which Dixon was killed. The plaintiff produced some evidence tending to show that there was a post with a whistling board on it-just east of the crusher; and she produced much evidence to the effect that it was customary for the trains going west to whistle at that point, to give warning to the men at work at the crusher. She also produced evidence of a positive character that the whistle was not sounded or the bell rung on the occasion in .question, and this evidence was supported by the testi[210]*210rnony of persons employed at the quarry, who say they heard no whistle or bell. On the other hand the' evidence of the fireman and engineer is quite positive that they sounded the whistle and rang the engine bell.

The evidence having a more direct bearing upon the issue of contributory negligence is as follows: Mr. Boyett, a witness for the plaintiff, testified: “I was working in the quarry at a point thirteen or fourteen feet south of the south rail of the railroad track and about thirty feet east of the turntable; did not hear or see the train coming from the east until it was at my side; I did not see Dixon right at the time the engine passed me but I saw him just after it passed me; I-then saw him on the track about the center of the crossing; he was standing with his head down, pointing to the northwest.” On cross-examination he said: “The engine was forty or fifty feet from the strap track when I first heard it; I then looked to see what Dixon was doing; he seemed to be' trying to clear the track; he seemed to be in a grasping position, grabbing at the cable or something that was on the track; I did not see him go on the track; I did not see him when the engine struck him; the engine cut off my view of him; the engine was very close to him when he made the grab— right on him — I can not give the exact distance; I can not say whether any of the little cars were standing by the side of the railroad track or not; the moment the train caused me to look up, I saw him on the track, and I do not know what he was doing before that time; he was grabbing at the cable when I first saw him.”

The evidence of Mr. O’Brien, the foreman of the crew operating the crusher and quarry, is to the effect that Dixon, in attaching and detaching the cable, usually stood in the center of the main track with his back to the east; that he saw Dixon immediately after the train passed; he was then lying on the north side [211]*211of the main track about forty feet west of this strap track. Other evidence shows that these small cars went up the incline track and back to the railroad brack once in every five or eight minutes.

The witnesses for the defendant testified as follows:

Pat Moore: “1 was working in the quarry twenty or thirty feet southeast of the cable; I heard the train before I saw it; it was three hundred or four hundred feet off when I first heard it, and it was about two hundred feet from me when I first saw it coming; I saw the cable on the track, and then looked for Dixon; he was then twelve ‘or fourteen feet southwest of the cable. I saw him throw his gloves and a piece of board used for gauging tracks, and run across to the main track; he checked up and made a scrape or kick with his foot at the cable; that was the last I saw of him; the cow-catcher shaded me and I could not see him; he was looking to the east when he threw down his gloves and this board; it looked to me like he was looking at the train coming; he ran as hard as he could; can- not say how far he was from the engine when he started; he was moving when I -saw him kick at the cable; at the time Dixon was killed the small rock cars were all being loaded, except one empty car, which was standing on a track which runs due south of the turntable.” .On cross-examination the witness stated: “The last car came down the incline five or six minutes before Dixon was killed; he had his face to the east when in the act of kicking; his left foot was over the north rail, and he scraped or kicked with his other foot, and was in a stooping position; the engine was about fifty feet from him when he started, and he had about twenty-five feet to run; when he got on the main track the engine might have been ten or fifteen feet from him.”

Thomas Griffin: “I attended to the cable in the [212]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 S.W. 1056, 119 Mo. 203, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-v-chicago-alton-railroad-mo-1893.