Cox v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad

31 S.W. 3, 128 Mo. 362, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 3 (Cox v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe 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
Cox v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad, 31 S.W. 3, 128 Mo. 362, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 35 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J. —

This is an action to recover double damages for killing two cows, the property of plaintiff, by the locomotive and cars of the defendant. Two questions were presented for review: First, the constitutionality of the act of 1891, providing for the selection of petit jurors in counties containing more than fifty thousand and less than three hundred thousand inhabitants; secondly, the action of the trial court in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant upon the testimony.

I. If defendant is right in its claim that a demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained, then the constitution of the jury will be immaterial.

The plaintiff offered evidence of his ownership; that the cows were in his pasture near the railroad track; that they tore down the fence about two hundred yards from the track; that the road was unfenced where they got on the defendant’s track; that the cow was reasonably worth $75 and the heifer, $50. Indeed, [366]*366there is very little conflict in the evidence, except upon one point, and that was whether or not defendant could have erected and maintained fences and cattle guards any nearer Courtney station than they were erected at the time of the injury to plaintiff’s cattle, and at the same time have avoided endangering the lives of its employees operating its trains.

Plaintiff testified on direct examination:

“I noticed some cow tracks coming up on the railroad right of way. I detected it very plainly. There had been a rain and you could see where they went down on that dirt, that top dirt where they had been walking in the fresh fill. That was uninclosed land; some in cultivation and some of it in weeds. I found one of the cows lying on the south side of the track and the other was dragged right up here” (indicating on plat). ‘‘It is a quarter of a mile, I guess, from the station of Courtney down there, very nearly — somewhere along there. I could not say exactly, but it is a long ways. And right about here” (indicating on the plat) “the roaá. put in cattle guards since the cattle were hilled. There were no streets or public crossings at the point where the cows were killed. The cows were killed in Blue township, Jackson county, Missouri.”

On cross-examination, plaintiff testified:

“There is a pit dug out, I suppose it is a cattle guard, on the east at Mr. Stewart’s, where the fence begins. They are not cattle guards; they are just ditches. A dug out place, mayhe, for cattle guards, I rechon; I don’t hnow what you call it: it is a dug out place — a sinh hole. The cows were not struck by the train inside the switch. Courtney has three houses in it. They have no mayor. There are two families living there besides the depot. There are no streets crossing the track at Courtney. The public road crosses here, and at the stock yards is a little place to cross — a man fixed it up [367]*367himself. If there are any streets laid out,.they are not opened. There was no scale track at Courtney, and the yards were not built when my cattle were hilled. The cattle were killed a few feet east of where the end of the house track now is. It was not there when they were hilled.”

On redirect examination plaintiff testified:

“ The tracks were found by me going on the railway right of way east of the switch, and the cattle were found about one third the way from the terminus of the switch to the cattle guard or sink hole on the east. It is about one hundred and forty yards from the terminus of the switch to where the fence begins. The land where the tracks were seen is open. There is open land between Stewart’s and the switch; there is a big place in there — farmers use it; it is not fenced. They came up here before they got to the track. This is the place” (indicating on plat) “where they come along; blood was sprinkled on the rails. The old cow was lying across the south side. You could see the blood on the ties. It looked like they dragged the heifer; she was up over there on the north side. We traced the blood before we reached the long switch. I had a contract with Mr. Courtney. I rented his farm.”

B. F. Bush testified for plaintiff, on direct examination, as follows:

“I know something about the circumstances of the killing of the two cows belonging to Q-. L. Cox.
Q. Is this a correct plat of the location of the ground of the railroad switches, etc., around Courtney? A. That seems to be pretty correct.
“Q. Whereabouts was it, with reference to the railroad track, you found those cows? A. The one that was dead was lying on the left hand side of the track, right about where the switch here sets in. The [368]*368other one was lying just between the house switch and the main track on the side.
“Q. Just indicate where you found the old cow; make a litle mark, so that it can be identified after-wards? A. The cow was lying on that side. I don’t know whether she was knocked off from the road; she was lying there, dead. The other one was just inside the house track. She was lying right there,” (indicating). “It is probably fifty or sixty yards from the terminus of the long switch to the cattle guards on the east. It is all open land from the cattle guards on the east. I got there one half or three quarters of an hour after the cattle were killed, and Mr. Cox was there. We went to see where the cows had been killed and where they had been walking and everything. There had been a rain a short time before that and the ground was soft and we saw the tracks where they had walked up the railroad track and where they had got on the railroad track on the south side of the track. They had got on the ground where there was not any fence enclosing. We could see where they walked through the weeds and through the brush. They had come out and got on the railroad track and were walking on the railroad track up towards the depot.”

On redirect examination, B. F. Bush testified:

“There is no other street or alley across the railroad track, except the main road that comes into Courtney — the county road — that crosses at the station, right at the end of the platform. There are now four houses in Courtney and inhabitants not to exceed twenty. They do not ship anything from Courtney, unless it is wood from the river. The business done there is simply their own business — switching cars — railroad business.”

Barney Doyle, witness for defendant, testified on cross-examination:

[369]*369“I am section foreman of the Santa Ee at Courtney. It is three thousand feet, I guess, from Courtney station to the east cattle guards. It is nearly three thousand feet from Courtney to the terminus of the long switch. It is about four hundred feet from Courtney station to the terminus of the house switch. I found the heifer about three hundred and fifty feet from the station and the old cow about four hundred feet from the station, about the end of the house switch. There is no public crossing on the railroad track between the crossing at the depot platform and the terminus of the switch. There is a blind crossing used by farmers; it is not a public crossing. The cows were, killed about two hundred feet west of the public crossing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 3, 128 Mo. 362, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-atchison-topeka-santa-fe-railroad-mo-1895.