Crecelius v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.

205 S.W. 181, 274 Mo. 671, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 13, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 205 S.W. 181 (Crecelius v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul 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
Crecelius v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co., 205 S.W. 181, 274 Mo. 671, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 44 (Mo. 1918).

Opinions

FARIS, J.

This is an action brought by plaintiff, as the administratrix of one Walter Crecelius, deceased, against defendant, under the Federal Employers’ Lia,-bility Act, for the alleged negligent killing of plaintiff’s decedent. Upon a trial in the circuit court of Grundy County plaintiff had judgment for the sum of $25,000, from which judgment, after the conventional procedure, defendant has appealed.

As stated, plaintiff brings this action as the ad-ministratrix of said Crecelius, whom we. shall, for brevity, hereinafter call deceased. The deceased, a.t the time he lost his life, was in the employ of defendant as a timekeeper for a gang of Bulgarian and Armenian laborers, who were engaged at or near the little village of Morley, in the State of Iowa, in repairing the main line track of defendant, and in constructing a temporary track, thereafter to be used for main line traffic, pending the lowering of the grade of defendant’s main interstate-railroad track. Deceased was killed at about the hour of 6:30 in the evening of March 14, 1913. At this time the gang of laborers of which deceased was1 timekeeper had quit work for the day and had returned to the boarding cars and eaten their suppers. It was the duty of deceased as timekeeper to make a record of the number of laborers engaged in work, of the hours worked by each laborer, of the nature of the work done by the gang, of the number of ties laid, th'e amount of steel put in, and various other details, showing the progress of the work .and the material used therein. It was also the duty of deceased to make daily reports showing the above facts, as well as monthly reports, once each month. The reports, which deceased was required to' make daily both by wire and by mail, were made to the division roadmaster at Marion, Iowa. He was accustomed to malte out these reports after work hours, since this was the only time at which it was possible [676]*676for him to have the information which, he was required to include in them. He was in the habit of preparing these reports between 6:30 o’clock and 7:00 o’clock in the evening of each day, and of transmitting same both by mail and by wire as early as possible thereafter.

On the day that deceased was killed, and after he with the gang of laborers had returned from work upon the main track and the said temporary track, he ate his supper and made out his daily report for transmission by wire to the roadmaster. A few minutes (one witness said two to five minutes) before he was killed, he left the car in which he kept his desk, with the remark that he was going to send his message. After going out of his office car he went into the car occupied by the interpreter of the gang. He remained in this car but a moment, and then came out and started across the tracks of defendant toward the depot, wherein the telegraph office was maintained. In the meantime, a freight train of defendant, called in the testimony a way-freight, had come up to the depot, and had stopped there apparently for the purpose of discharging freight. As deceased went across the tracks of defendant toward the depot, he stopped in the middle of what is called the passing-track, at a point some ten feet from the locomotive .of the way-freight, and stood at this point apparently looking at this train. After'he had been standing in this position for some twenty-five seconds, he was run down and killed by a car attached to the work-train, which was used in hauling the material for this gang of laborers. At this time the work-traiu was doing certain switching in the yards at Morley, for the purpose of making up the, train to return to Marion, Iowa, which was a division point, and a station upon defendant’s railroad some eighteen or twenty miles from Morley.

At the time deceased was killed he was in gpod health, except that he was very hard of hearing, and about thirty-five years of age. His wages at this time were $60 a month. He left surviving him a wife and [677]*677one child six years old, for whose use and benefit, the wife, as administratrix, is here suing.

There are keen contradictions in the testimony. The statement of the facts as made by ns is taken largely from the testimony of witnesses -adduced by plaintiff. This is done because a demurrer to the testimony was offered, and because the point here chiefly relied on for reversal is that there is not sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury; particularly, upon the. point that deceased, when he was killed,, was not engaged in the performing of such labors or duties as to bripg him within the purview of the F'ederal Employers’ Liability Act.

While upon the law- applicable to such a contention, present defendant’s negligence, the countervailing testimony as to the manner in which deceased lost his life is scarcely important, except as a matter of curiosity, we may yet say in passing that if the testimony of the witnesses for the defendant is to -be believed, defendant was wholly without negligence, and deceased lost his life by his own gross lack of care and contributory negligence. Upon this sharply contradicted phase of the case the testimony adduced by plaintiff tended to show that it was dusk, approaching dark, and spitting snow slightly at the moment deceased was struck; that the work-train which struck him was running with an old gondola car in front of the engine; that this car prevented the engineer and fireman from getting a clear view of the track in front; that this work-train was running at a1 prohibited rate of speed, to-wit, about twelve miles an hour; that there was no brakeman, or other person on the front of the train to keep1 a lookout, and that deceased could have been seen and the train stopped in time to avoid striking him had defendant’s servants, agents and employees kept a proper look-out, such as the situation demanded.-

Touching this situation it further appeared - that there were some hundred or more laborers engaged in this work and composing this gang; that all of these persons were housed in some boarding cars, which were [678]*678set. upon a side track. This side track was separated from the town of Morley, and the depot, by the main track and the passing-track. It was necessary for all of these persons who were in this gang or engaged in work about these boarding cars to cross both the main track and the passing-track at all hours, and that defendant’s crew in charge of this work-train knew this fact, and that it was the duty of defendant to exercise in all its switching operations a care commensurate with the dangers existent.

The testimony on the part of defendant tended to show that .at the time the' deceased was killed the work-train was running only some six or seven miles' an hour; that the gondola oar, which was in front of the locomotive, was a small one, so that both the fireman and engineer could see over it, and that there was maintained a look-out at the time of the accident; that a brakeman was standing at the ’brake-wheel on a small platform on the front end of the car which struck and killed deceased.

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205 S.W. 181, 274 Mo. 671, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crecelius-v-chicago-milwaukee-st-paul-railway-co-mo-1918.