Crawford v. Kansas City Stock Yards Co.

73 S.W.2d 308, 228 Mo. App. 673, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 142
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 308 (Crawford v. Kansas City Stock Yards 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
Crawford v. Kansas City Stock Yards Co., 73 S.W.2d 308, 228 Mo. App. 673, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 142 (Mo. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinions

Plaintiff, on September 17, 1929, while walking upon Tenth Street near Main Street in Kansas City, Missouri, was severely injured. Her injuries were caused by a steer, which had escaped from the stock yards of the defendant Kansas City Stock Yards Company, running against and falling upon her. She brought this action against the Kansas City Stock Yards Company and William M. Liggett to recover damages for her said injuries. A trial of the cause resulted in verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant Liggett and verdict and judgment in the sum of $5000 against the Kansas City Stock Yards Company. The Kansas City Stock Yards Company, hereafter called defendant, has appealed.

On the day plaintiff was injured seventy-four head of cattle consigned to Liggett were shipped into the yards, received, unloaded and driven by defendant into a pen which had been allotted to Liggett. The gate of the pen was locked at night and unlocked by defendant in the daytime when Liggett was "selling cattle." Neither Mr. Liggett nor his employees had a key to the lock.

Later in the day on which the cattle were received Mr. Liggett and two of his employees drove fifty head of them from the pen into an alley, intending to take them to scales 9 and 10. While on the way the steer which struck and injured plaintiff became unmanageable, "jumped" by its drivers, ran along the alley and escaped through an open gate at the southwest corner of the defendant's Exchange Building and onto a public street in Kansas City. The gate when closed "cuts off the whole stock yards from the street."

Mr. Smith, a witness for Liggett, testified:

". . . that ordinarily and customarily the manner of taking fifty head of grain fed steers from Mr. Liggett's pens to the scales is as follows: one man is sent ahead and one man behind and the man ahead, equipped with a club or whip, turns the cattle south from the main east and west alley to scales 9 and 10; that the number of cattle handled in the yards varies from a few hundred to over 50,000 a day; that he supposed the Stock Yards Company maintained the outer gate; that his guess was that the distance from the east end of the east-west main alley to the gate was 200 feet and from the scale outside the yards to the gate, fifty feet; that he had once closed the outer gate himself to prevent a steer getting out; that he knew of but two steers getting out in twenty-nine years; that they never holler for help until after a steer gets by."

Mr. Jackson, Liggett's employee, testified that:

"After I fought this steer as long as I could and saw he was clear away from me, that I could not do anything more to stop him, I hollered to hold him up as Mr. Smith testified this morning was the first thing we do. *Page 676

"Q. Is that the way you always do? A. Yes, `hold him up' or `shut the gate.'

"Q. Did you yell that? A. Yes.

"Q. How loud. A. Plenty loud, so anyone anyways near could hear me.

"Q. Was it loud enough for the gate man down there to have heard you? A. Yes, sir.

"Q. Did you observe anybody on to the east of you take up the shout? A. Oh, yes, there were several fellows along the fence there and as I testified this morning when anything starts to get away that is the cry everybody raises `shut the gate' or `hold him up.'

"Q. Did you hear those cries made there ahead of the steer? A. Several places.

"Q. Then, what did you do? A. Instead of following the steer, I ran south.

"Q. In this east alley of the double alley? A. Yes.

"Q. How far south did you have to run until you were on a line with the gate? A. Just forty-three steps.

"Q. Then, what did you do? A. Climbed upon the fence to see if the steer had turned south at the Exchange Building or north. I saw he was turning north and I hollered again to shut the gate.

"Q. Did you see what the gate man did then? A. He was starting towards the gate.

"Q. When you got up there you saw him start toward the gates? A. Yes, he had already started.

"Q. Did you jump down and run over? A. Yes, to the south side of the fence, and crawled over.

"Q. And when you got there, what happened? A. The steer had already gone by Mr. Silby."

Mr. Silby, known as the gate man, was an employee of the defendant and his place of work was at or near the gate.

Mr. Liggett testified as follows:

"My recollection is that about one-third of those steers started south going to the scales and something scared them and they surged back and of course we had quite a fight there. They got pretty badly scared. People on the fence and going through the cattle and they began to mill around and around and around. We had quite a battle there with them and finally got them off into the scales — the bulk of them. . . .

"Q. You knew if a steer did get away and get through that open gate it would be out on the streets? A. Naturally.

"Q. And you knew that would be a pretty dangerous thing if one of those steers broke out of the stockyards and went running up and down the sidewalks of Kansas City, didn't you? A. Yes, sir.

"Q. As a matter of fact, Mr. Liggett, a steer from the country *Page 677 loose in that way on the sidewalks of a populous city where there are women and children and people walking along, would be about as dangerous a thing as you could imagine? A. Rather dangerous.

"Q. Rather dangerous. And you, of course, as a cattle man recognize that fact? A. Yes, sir.

"Q. And as a cattle man through your years of experience you have learned to know that cattle being driven and herded and held together are likely to mill? A. Yes,

"Q. And once milling, you are likely to have to fight them, is that right? A. Yes.

"Q. And once you have to fight them some of them are apt to get by you, that is true, isn't it? A. Yes."

Mr. Elrod, a witness for defendant Liggett, testified that he was a member of a commission firm operating in the stock yards; that in his experience, covering a period of thirty-two years in the yards, he had known of very few escapes "out through the main gate," and that the defendant "keeps a man at some scales near that gate; that a few times the gate has been shut to keep cattle in; . . . that usually the gate man shuts it but that anyone that happened to be near the gate and saw the cattle also did." The witness further testified "that formerly pens were allotted by a pen committee appointed by the Live Stock Exchange and the Stock Yards Company, but that recently the Stock Yards Company had taken it over."

In plaintiff's additional abstract it is shown that Mr. Smith testified that an ordinary steer taken to the stock yards with a bunch of steers "and things strange to him, they are liable to break away;" that he had seen the gate closed "in time to stop cattle;" that he had heard of steers getting away from other commission men "and it is common knowledge that they do break away and get out."

The defendant contends that the court erred in refusing to direct verdict in its favor for the following reasons: (1) That the defendant had neither custody, control nor possession of the steer at the time of its escape; (2) that the negligence of defendant, if any, was not the proximate cause of plaintiff's injuries, and that (3) there was a fatal variance between the allegations and the proof. In determining the question, plaintiff is entitled to have the evidence in her favor taken as true and to have the benefit of every reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom. [Roan v. Wells, 14 S.W.2d 488; Morris v. Atlas Portland Cement Co., 19 S.W.2d 865, 872.]

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 308, 228 Mo. App. 673, 1934 Mo. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-kansas-city-stock-yards-co-moctapp-1934.