Cooperative Ass'n No. 37 v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.

591 S.W.2d 404, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2681
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1979
DocketNo. 10515
StatusPublished

This text of 591 S.W.2d 404 (Cooperative Ass'n No. 37 v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooperative Ass'n No. 37 v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co., 591 S.W.2d 404, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2681 (Mo. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

On November 17, 1973, St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company (Frisco) had three parallel sets of railroad tracks running east and west through Fordland, Missouri. The tracks intersect north-south Center Street at grade. The team track, used for unloading, is southernmost, the passing track is in the middle and the mainline track is northernmost. Plaintiff, per lease agreement with Frisco, maintained a warehouse located on Frisco’s right-of-way just south of the team track and west of Center Street. Per a license agreement with Frisco, Centropolis Transfer Company (Centropolis) carried on a cement unloading operation on the team track east of Center Street wherein cement was unloaded from hopper cars into pits beneath the team track and in turn, via augers, was loaded into tractor-trailer rigs owned by Centropo-lis.

At the time of the casualty in question, three cement hopper cars were standing on the team track east of Center Street and similar cars were on the team track west of Center Street. Depending upon estimates of several witnesses, the first of the three hopper cars was 30 to 100 feet east of Center Street. A six-car work train was standing on the middle or passing track east of Center Street. The first car of the work train was estimated to be anywhere from 30 to 200 feet east of Center Street.

The accident occurred when Frisco’s train, traveling west on the main-line or northernmost track, collided with Centropo-lis’ northbound truck which was traveling on Center Street and crossing the railroad tracks. The ensuing derailment of Frisco’s cars caused damage to plaintiff’s warehouse located at the southwest corner of the intersection of Center Street and the above-de[406]*406scribed railroad tracks. Plaintiff sued Frisco and Centropolis. Frisco counterclaimed on the basis of an indemnification clause contained in its lease with plaintiff and cross-claimed against Centropolis on the basis of the license agreement and on theories of negligence. Centropolis crossclaimed against Frisco alleging it was negligent in several respects. In accordance with jury verdicts, a $34,000 judgment was entered for plaintiff against both defendants, in favor of plaintiff on Frisco’s counterclaim, in favor of Centropolis on Frisco’s cross-claim and in favor of Frisco on the cross-claim of Centropolis. Frisco appealed.

I

Frisco’s first point relied on is that the trial court erred in denying Frisco’s motion for directed verdict made at the close of all the evidence and in denying Frisco’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict with respect to plaintiff’s claim against Frisco for the reason, in essence that a certain provision of a lease agreement dated May 21,1928, entitled Frisco to the relief sought by the denied motions.

The parties agreed that the lease dated May 21, 1928, was in full force ánd effect between plaintiff and Frisco on the date of the collision of November 17, 1973. Paragraph 11 of the lease is set forth marginally.1 Lease provisions of that general nature are discussed in Tri-State Gas Co. v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co., 484 S.W.2d 252 (Mo.1972). There the supreme court stated, at p. 253: “Leasehold provisions by which railroads are exempted from the consequences of their own negligence are valid and binding on the parties.”

Paragraph 11 contains two sentences. Neither is a paragon of brevity.

In the first sentence lessee (plaintiff) agrees to “assume” four enumerated categories of damages. They are:

(1) All damages resulting from want or failure at any time of title on the part of [Frisco] to any part of the leased premises;

(2) All damages resulting from fire communicated from the right of way, locomotives or other machinery of [Frisco], or otherwise, to any buildings, structures, improvements, or other property of any kind or character that may now or hereafter be upon said leased premises, or- any part thereof, and to whomsoever the same may belong;

(3) All damages resulting from death of or injury to [plaintiff], or any of [plaintiff’s] agents, servants or employees, and any and all other persons, while upon said leased premises, or any part thereof;

(4) Loss or destruction of or damage to any buildings, structures, improvements or other property of any kind or character that may now or hereafter be upon said leased premises, or any part thereof, and to whomsoever the same may belong, caused by or resulting in any manner from the operation or maintenance of said railroad.

[407]*407Categories 2 and 4 deal with certain described erections. Category 2 covers damage resulting from fire communicated from the right of way or machinery of Frisco,' “or otherwise,” to the erections. Category 4 deals with damage (or loss or destruction) to the erections “caused by or resulting in any manner from” the operation or maintenance of the railroad.

Category 2 is confined to damage resulting from fire but whether that fire was caused by the operation or maintenance of the railroad is immaterial. Category 4 is confined to damage connected with the operation or maintenance of the railroad but whether the damage resulted from fire is immaterial. Obviously some situations could involve both categories.

The last clause in the first sentence is separated from the preceding portions by the only semicolon in that prolix sentence. That clause provides, in essence, that the plaintiff “assumes” each of the four enumerated varieties of damages whether or not any of them is caused by the negligence of Frisco or its agents, servants or employees.

In the second sentence of paragraph 11 plaintiff releases Frisco from liability for each of the four categories of damages. That sentence also includes an agreement to indemnify.

In the case at bar plaintiff’s warehouse, located on the leased premises, was damaged by reason of the collision between the Frisco train and the truck. No fire was involved so category 2 is not involved. Category 4 is involved if it may properly be said that the damage to the warehouse was “caused by or result[ed] in any manner from the operation or maintenance of said railroad.”

Plaintiff’s petition pleaded, and the jury found, that the negligence of Frisco’s train combined with the negligence of Cen-tropolis’ truck driver to cause the collision. There would be no validity in an argument that category 4 is confined to situations where the damage was solely caused by Frisco’s negligence. That is true because the last clause in the first sentence makes the negligence or non-negligence of Frisco immaterial in determining whether category 4, or any of the other categories, is involved. The fact that the damage was caused by the concurrent negligence of Frisco and Centropolis does not remove the situation at bar from category 4. That category covers damages to the erections “caused by or resulting in any manner from the operation ” of the railroad.

Category 4 applies to the instant facts and Frisco is not liable to plaintiff.

Frisco’s first point is a meritorious one. That portion of the judgment which was in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Frisco on the petition must be reversed. Frisco has not requested any other or additional appellate relief with respect to its counterclaim against plaintiff.

II

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Bluebook (online)
591 S.W.2d 404, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooperative-assn-no-37-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railway-co-moctapp-1979.