Coffman Ex Rel. Coffman v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

378 S.W.2d 583
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 11, 1964
Docket49976
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 378 S.W.2d 583 (Coffman Ex Rel. Coffman v. St. Louis-San Francisco 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
Coffman Ex Rel. Coffman v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 378 S.W.2d 583 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

PAUL VAN OSDOL, Special Commissioner.

Plaintiff Ernest Coffman had verdict and judgment for $270,000 against St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company, hereinafter frequently referred to as “Frisco,” and James Waterman, defendants, for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff at about eight thirty in the evening of November 27, 1961, when the 1959 Pontiac station wagon, northbound on Rolla Street, in which automobile plaintiff was a passenger and which was driven by defendant James Waterman, was struck by defendant Frisco’s westbound freight train at Frisco’s grade crossing at and through the irregular intersection of Rolla Street and 4th Street in the city of Rolla.

The defendants filed their separate notices of appeal; but defendant James Waterman has filed herein his voluntary dismissal, and this court by order has dismissed his appeal.

Herein, defendant Frisco contends errors of the trial court (1) in failing to direct a verdict for defendant Frisco and in giving plaintiff’s verdict-directing Instruction No. 1, submitting plaintiff’s case to the jury. Frisco asserts plaintiff failed to make a submissible case on his one theory of submission. Also, Frisco contends other errors of the trial court (2a and 2b) in instructing the jury; and Frisco further contends (3) the amount of the jury’s award was excessive.

Plaintiff’s case against Frisco was submitted on the theory the Frisco grade crossing was unusually dangerous and hazardous because the crossing (it was submitted) was heavily traveled; the view of the motorist, traveling northwardly along Rolla Street, was obstructed and confusing toward the northeast due to abrupt change of grade elevation of the crossing above the street, and the location of buildings, trees, bushes, lights and other physical conditions; and that, because of such unusually dangerous conditions, Frisco, in the *586 exercise of 'ordinary care, should have provided a flasher signal, bells, watchman, or some other means or device at the crossing to warn the public traveling northwardly bn Rolla Street of the westbound movement of trains.

(1) In Homan v. Missouri Pacific R. R. Co., 334 Mo. 61, 64 S.W.2d 617, at pages 622-623, this court examined and quoted from the leading case of Grand Trunk R. Co. v. Ives, 144 U.S. 408, 12 S.Ct. 679, 36 L.Ed. 485,. and examined numerous other authorities in reviewing the question of the submissibility of plaintiff Ho-man’s case against- the railroad company. The principles this court recognized and applied in determining the submissibility of plaintiff Homan’s case supply guidance for us in determining the instant question of the submissibility ■ of plaintiff Coffman’s case against Frisco.

Generally stated it is said that where a much traveled railroad crossing is, for any reason, particularly dangerous, it is a question for the jury whether the ordinary care required of a railroad company to guard against accidents at its crossings imposes on the railroad company the duty to take some extraordinary and commensurate precautionary measure or measures such as, for example, stationing a flagman at the crossing. ' Numerous facts, circumstances, and conditions may be considered on the initial factual question — was the crossing unusually dangerous and hazardous ? On this issue, there may be shown supporting- evidential facts, circumstances and physical conditions such as the location of the crossing in an urban area; the shown objects which may obscure the highway traveler’s view; the extent of the use of the crossing by the.traveling public; or, we here add, the physical construction and condition of the-crossing itself, or the curvature of the track at and approaching the crossing. These facts, circumstances and physical conditions, or one of them, or two or more of them in combination, reasonably supported by evidence, as well as other facts conceivably relevant in some given case, may be considered by the jury and found by the jury to be decisive of the issue. And whether in a given case the facts in evidence are such as would mark a particular crossing as one attended by unusual danger is a question solely for the jury, unless only one conclusion may be drawn therefrom by all reasonable minds. See also 24 A.L.R.2d 1163.

And see the more recent case of Jenkins v. Wabash R. Co., Mo.Sup., 322 S.W.2d 788, in which case this court recognized the shown factual factors peculiar in the circumstances and conditions of the rural but frequently traveled grade crossing involved in that case, and which facts, circumstances and conditions were held to be sufficient for the jury to consider and determine unusual danger inhering, and to infer negligence of the railroad company in failing to take the commensurate precaution of passing over the crossing at a reasonable rate of speed.

In treating with the question of the submissibility of plaintiff Coffman’s theory of submission in the instant case, we think it necessary to make an extended statement of the evidence.

The city of Rolla is the county seat of Phelps County. It is a “school town,” the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy being located there. A witness estimated the city’s population is about 18,000 including the students attending the school of mines.

• U. S. Highway 66 (interstate route) passes along and partially through the northwesterly side of Rolla. U. S. Highway 66, city route, passes through the northwestern portion of the city. U. S. Highway 63 passes through Rolla in a general but irregular north-south direction. And State Highway 72, coming from the southeast, passes through the southeasterly part of the city, and intersects north-south Rolla Street approximately six blocks south of the railroad grade crossing involved in this case.

*587 Frisco’s' main line, westwardly from St. Louis to Springfield and to points farther west, approaches the city of Rolla from the northeast and passes through , the northern part of the city and the southeastern part of “downtown Rolla.”,

The downtown or commercial district of Rolla is substantially bounded by 11th Street on the north; by 6th Street on the south; by Elm. street on the east.; and by Rolla Street (two blocks west of Elm) on the west. Rolla Street between 11th and 6th is á one-way southbound street. And Rolla is a two-way street from 6th Street southwardly. The city engineer of Rolla testified that Rolla Street is one of the major streets of the city. It extends from the southerly city limits northwardly to and along the west side of the business district. It collects the traffic in the south part of Rolla, except that collected by U. S. Highway 63, which also extends from the south. The Phelps County courthouse is on the west side of Rolla Street in the second block south of the crossing; and there is a new shopping center on the north side of State Highway 72 between Rolla Street and U. S. Highway 63. The shortest route for vehicular traffic between the new shopping center and “downtown Rolla” is Rolla Street. Fifteen to twenty percent of the population of the city reside in this general southwesterly area.

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378 S.W.2d 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coffman-ex-rel-coffman-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-mo-1964.