Cobb v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Co.

50 S.W. 894, 149 Mo. 609, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 23, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 894 (Cobb v. St. Louis & Hannibal 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
Cobb v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Co., 50 S.W. 894, 149 Mo. 609, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 60 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

SHERWOOD, J.

Action for $25,000 damages, recovery for $11,400. Plaintiff was acting as expressman of the [613]*613Pacific Express Company, and the injury occurred on a car attached to defendant’s train, which car fell through a bridge on defendant’s road. Plaintiff received no wages from defendant company, but was employed as an expressman by the express company, as before stated; and by that company he was paid and to it he was responsible, although it was his duty to take care of the baggage in the baggage car in which the express matter was also kept; and to act as baggage master in handling such baggage without charge therefor, by his employer, the express company.

After making the usual prefatory allegations, the petition, in charging the injury producing negligence, states: “That while plaintiff was on such car, in the exercise of due •care, in charge of such express matter as aforesaid, and being conveyed by defendant over its said line, he was at a point on a railroad bridge over Big Peno creek in Pike county,Missouri, by reason of the car in which he was riding falling through ■said bridge on account of the defects in, and insufficiency of said bridge, wounded and injured in the head, face, and eyes. That the said bridge where he was injured was negligently and •carelessly and defectively made and maintained, and was at said time in an unsafe and dangerous condition, which said •condition was known to the defendant or could have been so known by the exercise of ordinary care, and that his injuries as above set out were caused by the negligence and carelessness of defendant, its agents and servants, in constructing and maintaining such defective,insufficient,unsafe, and dangerous bridge, and in running its said train upon same when in said unsafe and dangerous condition, whereby said bridge gave way and said car in which plaintiff was .being conveyed as the same passed over said bridge was caused to fall through the same to the bottom of said creek, thereby injuring plaintiff as .aforesaid.”

The answer pleads, in substance, a general denial, and then avers that plaintiff was defendant’s servant, and under its [614]*614control in handling the express matter and baggage, and plaintiff was a fellow servant of all defendant’s employees whose duty it was to maintain the bridges along defendant’s line of railroad in a safe and proper condition; that defendant’s approaches and bridge over Big Peno creek were constructed in a safe, and workmanlike manner, and were always kept in a safe, proper, and perfect condition down to the time of the accident, and that on the night of that occurrence, to wit, May 9, 1894, “a heavy, sudden, unprecedented and unexpected fall of rain took place in the immediate vicinity of said bridge, causing Peno creek to become flooded and swollen at said point to an extraordinary, unusual, dangerous, unforeseen and unexpected degree and extent, whereby one of the bents constituting a portion of the southeastern approach to-said bridge was dislodged and washed out by the flood, between said hour of midnight and two or three o’clock on the morning of May 10, 1894, leaving the rails and stringers underlying same intact, and undisturbed; that its nearest station to said bridge is located at Erankford,Mo.,and it is about two and one-half miles distant and that no rain of any consequence fell at. Erankford during said night, and that the train on which plaintiff was at the time of the accident was a south bound train and left Hannibal on schedule time and passed through Erankford about on time and thereafter reached the said bridge about 7 o’clock on the morning of May 10, 1894, and passed on to said bridge and on to the rails covering the space where said bent in the approach to the bridge had been washed away, precipitating the car in which plaintiff was riding into said washed out space.

“Defendant says that it was impossible for it or any of its agents, servants or employees either in charge of said train or those to whom was intrusted the duty of keeping and maintaining such bridge and its approach in -a safe condition to have foreseen the heavy and unusual rainfall and the flood incident to same which occurred the night previous to such [615]*615accident and that it was impossible for defendant, its servants' and employees to have provided full and sufficient safeguards against the effect of said rainfall and the violent flood caused thereby, and that it was impossible for defendant, its servants, and employees to have or acquire any knowledge of said heavy rainfall and flood prior to such accident or to have prevented same by the exercise of the utmost prudence, diligence and care on the part of defendant, its servants and employees.

“Defendant therefore says that said accident was an inevitable one, and was caused by the act of God, and the same together with its results were such occurrences which were beyond the power of human ingenuity and ability to either foresee or prevent and defendant is not liable for said accident or any consequences or results following same nor for any damage which plaintiff may have sustained in consequence of same, and now having fully answered, defendant asks to be discharged with'its costs.”

Eeply, a general denial. On this state of the pleadings the parties went to trial.

The evidence in substance showed this state of facts:

A bridge had been built across Big Peno creek in 1872. It had been swept out a number of times, so far as the “bents” were concerned. There had been a very high rise in Peno in 1875, and prior to that as well as subsequent thereto. It was characterized by the witnesses as a “bad stream;” a “very ■dangerous stream.”

The bridge in question had been rebuilt in December, 1891, after numerous washouts had occurred, and thus given frequent warnings of the necessity for a more substantial bridge, and at the time of the accident had stood some two years and four months without a washout or any of the “bents” which supported the bridge, being swept away.

The superstructure was 249 feet in length from the stone abutment on one shore to the other shore, and consists of, [616]*616first, a Howe truss eighty-six feet long standing upon stone-piers, and second, a wooden structure standing upon a series of “bents” reaching from the Howe truss to the south shore abutment, a distance of 163 feet. The main channel of the-stream flows under the Howe truss nearer the north shore, but at high water covers the entire bed beneath the bridge-from shore to shore. The “bents” which support the south 163 feet of the bridge aré put in at intervals of about sixteen feet apart, being ten in all, and rest upon “mud-sills” sunk into the sand and gravel to an original depth of two or three-feet. The bridge stands about twelve or fourteen feet above-the creek bottom at the south end of the bridge, the depth gradually increasing toward the center of the main channel.

Notwithstanding the creek whén in a turbulent mood had frequently swept out the “bents,” the stone piers which were built upon the solid rock, which was some six to ten feet below the gravelly surface of the creek bottom, although some of them stood in the main channel of the creek and had been subjected to many previous storms and consequent floods had never yet yielded' to their force, but with undiminished strength had withstood the last storm, which resulted in the litigated injury.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 894, 149 Mo. 609, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-st-louis-hannibal-railway-co-mo-1899.