Clark v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co.

77 S.W. 882, 179 Mo. 66, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 77 S.W. 882 (Clark v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas 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
Clark v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co., 77 S.W. 882, 179 Mo. 66, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 394 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

— This is an. action for personal injuries» The plaintiff recovered twenty-five hundred dollars damages, in the circuit court, and the defendant appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, where the judgment was affirmed, but as one of the. judges of that court was of the opinion that the decision therein was in conflict with certain previous decisions of this court, and of the Courts of Appeals, the cause was certified to this court for determination, pursuant to section 6 of the amendment of 1884 to article 6 of the Constitution, and by that section it is made the duty of this court to rehear and determine the cause “as in case of jurisdiction obtained by ordinary appellate process.”

The respondent has filed a motion to remand the cause to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, because he claims that an analysis of the cases with which the decision of the Court of Appeals in this case was deemed by said judge of said court to conflict, shows that no such conflict exists. But this motion must be overruled, because the jurisdiction of this court in such cases does not depend upon the fact that there is in reality any such conflict, but depends solely upon the fact that one of the judges of the Court of Appeals deemed such conflict to exist. This court may be fully satisfied that there is no such conflict, but it can not remand the- case, because the Constitution makes it the duty of this court, in such cases to rehear and determine the cause as in case of jurisdiction obtained by ordinary appellate process.

The injury complained of was received near Marthasville, in Warren county, on May 10, 1897. The plaintiff was a section hand in the employ of the defendant. A freight train of the defendant was wrecked. One of the cars contained Texas steers. That car was broken open, the steers escaped, and the section gang, of which the plaintiff was a member, was summoned to the wreck. Some of the steers remained near the wreck, most of them went towards the east, and one went to[73]*73wards the west. The section gang in charge of the part of the road where the accident occurred, was composed of Otto Housman, foreman, his two sons Jim and George, and the plaintiff. When the plaintiff reached the scene of the wreck, he and Jim Housman, were ordered to go with the station agent, Walker, and gather up the cattle, and put them in the cattle pens at Marthasville. They first put up those that remained near to the wreck, and then took horses, and went after those that had gone east, and found them and put them in the pens. Then the foreman told his two sons, Jim and George Housman, and the plaintiff that one of the steers had gone west, and directed them to go after it and drive it back to the pens. They obeyed the order and went. This preliminary statement is made to facilitate an understanding of the nature of the negligence charged against the defendant.

The negligence charged in the petition is this:

“That one steer known as a Texas steer was very wild and vicious and very dangerous to handle and by. reason of having been in said wreck, and being bruised and otherwise injured, and greatly frightened and excited, its wild, vicious and dangerous character was greatly increased; that plaintiff had no experience in such work and was uninformed as to the danger attendant upon it, and was wholly ignorant of the dangerous, wild and vicious character of said steer, or of the circumstances aforesaid, which had greatly increased the same; that all of said facts were well known to the officers and servants of the defendant, under whose control this plaintiff was at the time, or by the exercise of ordinary diligence said facts might have been known to them. That, nevertheless, the said servants of the defendant, in charge of said work, negligently, carelessly and wrongfully ordered and directed plaintiff to drive said Texas steer into the pens of defendant at said station of Marthasville; that being so ordered and required to [74]*74do said work, and being ignorant as aforesaid of the danger attendant npon the same, and relying npon defendant, that it would protect plaintiff and not expose him to unnecessary danger, this plaintiff undertook to assist in said work; that while doing so and without any fault on plaintiff’s part, this plaintiff was viciously attacked and set upon by said Texas steer, whereby plaintiff’s life was greatly endangered, and that in attempting to escape from said animal and save his life, he fell over a steep and precipitous bank and was greatly injured,” etc.

The answer admits the wreck, the escape of the cattle, the plaintiff’s relation to it as section hand, and that after the wreck the plaintiff was engaged in clearing up the wreck and in looking after and caring for the cattle, and avers that such work was within the line of the plaintiff’s ordinary duty as a section hand.

The answer then proceeds as follows:

“Defendant farther states that a large part of its business is the transportation of Texas cattle from Texas to points in Missouri, and elsewhere, and defendant admits that all Texas cattle are, by nature, wild and vicious and dangerous to handle, and that such qualities of Texas steers as a class, is a matter of general notoriety and of common knowledge among all persons.
“Farther answering, defendant says that there is always more or less risk and hazard connected with the duties of a section hand, and especially in and about the work necessary to be done in cases of wreck, and in the matter of collecting and restraining Texas cattle which may have escaped therefrom, all of which is, and at the time mentioned in the petition was, a matter of general notoriety, and of and concerning which, the opportunity to know was open to all persons alike.”

The answer then pleads assumption of risks, a general denial of all matters alleged and not admitted, and contributory negligence, in that, the plaintiff unnecessarily, carelessly and recklessly assaulted the aggra[75]*75vatecl steer mentioned in the petition, and in like manner placed himself in front of and near the steer and refused to move, when he could easily have done so and have averted the injury.

The reply denies all the allegations of the answer, not admitted, and then pleads specially that when he was directed to drive the steer into the pens, it was dark .and not yet daylight, that he had not seen the steer, and was ignorant that he was a Texas steer or that he was ■dangerous and vicious and had been injured and was ■excited and made wild and dangerous by the wreck, but that the defendant well knew such facts; that when he was directed by the foreman to go after the steer he ■obeyed without any knowledge that the duty required was attended by any danger, and that immediately upon ■discovering the steer it charged upon the plaintiff and he had no opportunity to escape; that he made no attack upon the steer but only attempted to ward off the attack ■of the steer upon him, and that the animal’s attack upon him was instantaneous upon plaintiff’s discovery of the animal and the flight of the plaintiff.

In addition to the facts set out in the preliminary statement, supra, the trial developed the facts to be as follows:

When Jim and George Housman and the plaintiff started on foot, west along the railroad track, to look for the steer that had gone in that direction, the plaintiff armed himself with a club, concerning which the plaintiff testified as follows:

“Q. What did you take the club for? A.

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.W. 882, 179 Mo. 66, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-missouri-kansas-texas-railway-co-mo-1903.