DeBolt v. Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis Railway Co.

27 S.W. 575, 123 Mo. 496, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 249
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 25, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 S.W. 575 (DeBolt v. Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis 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
DeBolt v. Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis Railway Co., 27 S.W. 575, 123 Mo. 496, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 249 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

Gantt, J.

— This action was brought in the circuit court of Jasper county, by the plaintiff, as the widow of Prank DeBolt, to recover of the defendant stat[500]*500utory damages for negligently causing the death of her husband.

The action was commenced within six months after her husband’s, death, which occurred June 8,, 1891. The petition states the following facts as tho basis of the recovery sought:

“That on the eighth day of June, 1891, and within six (6) months before the bringing of this suit, her said husband, Pranklin A. DeBolt, was engaged in directing the unloading of a flat car loaded with stone, which ear was standing on the west switch of defendant’s railroad tracks at Webb City, Jasper county Missouri, at the place where defendant’s servants and employees had placed it to be unloaded, and on the track where cars to be unloaded are usually placed by defendant at Webb City; and said Pranklin A. DeBolt had several men and teams which he was then and there directing in the unloading of said car of stone, and he was busy, engaged in said work, and while he was so engaged, defendant’s servants and employees,, in making up a train of freight cars, came upon the switch where the car on which said Pranklin A. DeBolt was at work as aforesaid, was standing, coupled with other freight cars on said switch while so standing, and all of which cars were not part of a train, but were standing on the switch aforesaid used for unloading cars, and coupled the engine to the car nearest the. main track; and there were other cars between the stone car and the engine when the engine was coupled to said cars so standing on the switch, coupled together, and without giving said DeBolt and his men any notice of their intentions to move the stone car, or allowing time to alight from the same, the engine, when so coupled to the cars, under the direction of the conductor and managed and controlled by the engineer, both servants of defendant, pulled the cars from [501]*501the switch out on the main track, including the flat car loaded with stone on which said DeBolt was at work, arifl thereby carried said DeBolt and the men at work on the car under his direction, out on said flat car; and when the cars that were detached from those cars ■so taken from the switch had been placed on the main track, then a ‘flying’ switch was made with the stone ■car and the others yet coupled with it, by which this stone car upon which said DeBolt and the men were all remaining, as they had been taken out from the switches before stated, was with the other cars coupled to it, by the ‘flying’ switch ‘shunted’ or ‘kicked’ in on the switch from the main track with such a force as to drive the cars against other cars that were standing on the switch, and with such force that in striking the standing cars the momentum of the moving cars was ■so great that the striking, the force knocked said DeBolt from the stone car, under the wheels of the moving stone car, and the force of the moving car was so great that when the wheels had run upon and crushed the legs and person of said Debolt, the brake-beam struck his body and pushed him along on the track of said railroad, over a large stone, for the distance of half a car length, or about sixteen feet, and and so badly injured him that he died from the. effects thereof.”

The answer was a general denial,- and a plea of contributory negligence.

After hearing the evidence, the circuit court sustained a demurrer thereto. The plaintiff took a non-suit with leave to move to set the same aside, and in d.ue time filed her motion to set aside, which motion was overruled, and she appeals therefrom.

Objection is made in this court to the sufficiency of the affidavit for appeal. While open to criticism, we think it is substantially sufficient; no point was [502]*502made against it in the trial court, and the objection, here, would not justify a dismissal of the appeal.

The substantial question for our determination is the propriety of sustaining the demurrer to the evidence.

The following undisputed facts appear from the evidence: A flat car loaded with stone belonging to William Blackledge & Son had been placed upon a side track of the defendant, at Webb City, for the purpose of being unloaded by the owner of said stone. This car was coupled at the north end to another car loaded with coal, and the coal ear was coupled on the north with a box ear, to which still another car was coupled. Blackledge & Son were contractors, engaged in building, and plaintiff’s husband was in their employment. On the morning plaintiff’s husband was killed, other laborers were engaged in unloading the stone from the car, and loading it on wagons, and hauling it away. Several loads had been removed from the north end of the car, next to the coal car, leaving that end clear, when Mr. DeBolt, plaintiff’s husband, arrived at the ear, between 9 and. 10 o’clock that morning. His business there was to superintend the unloading for Messrs. Blackledge. When he reached the car loaded with stone, there were three laborers upon it, Perry, King and Marshall, and he, also, climbed upon it. When he got upon the car, he began to talk with Marshall about placing a derrick to unload the remainder of the stone.

About this time, the employees of the defendant’s railroad began to switch in the neighborhood, and Marshall, seeing this, directed one of the teams to drive out of the way. No stone was unloaded after that, before Mr. DeBolt was hurt. It is admitted that it was no part of his duty to assist is unloading the stone. He was there merely to superintend it.

[503]*503A switch engine was moved up from the south and coupled to the stone car, and this car with those attached to it were all pulled out on the main track in order to set out the fifth^car of the group. After passing onto the main track, the fifth car was left on that track, and the other cars, including the stone car, were again moved on the switch or side track and shuntpd or “kicked” north, in charge of a brakeman, toward the place from which they had been moved. Other freight cars were standing on this side track still further north of the place from which they had been moved. When the switching began, Perry, King, Marshall and DeBolt were all on the stone car, on that part from which the stone had been moved. They all saw and knew of the switching, and all remained on the cars, though at least two stops were made while it was going on. After the switching began, Perry and DeBolt left the stone car and crossed over to the coal car and sat down on the end board, with their faces to the stone car and their feet hanging down between the coal car and the stone car. They sat in this position, discussing a school building during the remainder of the switching until immediately before the accident which cost Mr. DeBolt his life. King and Marshall remained standing on the cleared space on the stone car, and some boys had also climbed upon the stone car.

When the cars were “kicked” back, they were sent with such force that they were carried beyond the point at which they had stood when the switching began, and collided with the other stationary cars on the side or western track. The brakeman in charge set up the brake on the coal car, and attempted to set the one on the box car, but for some reason it would not hold and he called to the men on the- stone car to “look out” before the collision. It seems they all anticipated the collision would produce a hard shock. [504]

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.W. 575, 123 Mo. 496, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/debolt-v-kansas-city-fort-scott-memphis-railway-co-mo-1894.