Dunlap v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.

129 S.W. 262, 145 Mo. App. 215, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 444
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 262 (Dunlap v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific 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
Dunlap v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co., 129 S.W. 262, 145 Mo. App. 215, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 444 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiff, as the administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, John Dunlap, [218]*218sued to recover damages for the death of her husband which she alleges was caused by the negligence of the defendant. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of sixty-five hundred dollars, but afterward the court sustained a motion for a new trial on the ground “that the court should have peremptorily instructed the jury to return á verdict for the defendant,” and the cause is before us on the appeal of plaintiff.

The question argued in the briefs of counsel is whether the evidence in its aspect most favorable to plaintiff tends to show that the death of her husband was the direct result of an injury of which negligence of defendant was the proximate cause. The trial court first answered the question in the affirmative and submitted the case to the jury, but, later, took a different view of the evidence and, concluding that the verdict could be nothing but the product of conjecture and speculation, set it aside. We shall confine our discussion of the case to the single issue thus presented by counsel. John Dunlap died, October 10, 1906, at the age of sixty-eight years, from an attack of pneumonia. Plaintiff contends that the disease was traumatic and was the direct effect of an injury to his left foot inflicted six days before his death. .

Mr. Dunlap was a mail agent whose “run” was on a passenger train operated on defendant’s branch line between Herington and Salina, Kansas. While on duty, he occupied a compartment twelve feet long by nine feet wide in a combination mail, express and baggage coach. He left his home at Salina on the morning of his injury, sound and in good health, and made the run to Herington. He attended to some duties at Herington and returned to his car some time before the train was scheduled to leave on the return trip. In returning, he stopped at another mail car and left some mail with the agent who observed that he was in good health and uninjured. A few minutes later an[219]*219other witness (the baggageman on his.train) observed him sitting in his compartment near the door on the east side and noticed an expression of pain and suffering on his countenance. He complained of being hurt and the attention of the witness was directed to his left foot. The top of the shoe showed fresh marks “as if something apparently had struck the top of the shoe.” The witness then noticed a transom, or deck sash, lying on the floor and, looking úp to the ventilators just below the ceiling, observed that one of the transoms was missing. The transom was nine by twenty inches, had square corners and edges and the glass was unbroken. When in place it was one of the ventilators and opened and closed on a hinge. Nothing else in the car was disturbed or out of place. At Salina, the witness noticed Mr. Dunlap leave the car and walk homeward. He limped as though lame in his left foot. When he reached home his wife had difficulty in removing the shoe from his left foot, the top of the member being swollen so badly. That night he had a severe chill and in the morning another. A physician was called and found great tenderness and soreness. The swelling continued to increase in area, the patient suffered from nervous shock and exhibited all the symptoms of traumatic pneumonia. In his deposition the bagageman was asked to state what Dunlap said at the time the witness found him sitting in the car at Herington, apparently in great pain. The witness ansAvered: “He told me that the transom of the car was knocked down by rough handling of the train, it struck him on the foot, the transom struck him on the foot.” This evidence was excluded on the objection of defendant. There was no other evidence of rough handling of the car on this occasion, but a witness testified that frequently in being switched, the cars were roughly handled.

We have stated the facts as they appear in the evidence most favorable to plaintiff. In disposing of [220]*220the demurrer to the evidence, it is not necessary to refer to defendant’s evidence further than to remark that it puts in issue the salient facts on which plaintiff founds her cause of action. On behalf of plaintiff the court instructed the jury as follows:

“The jury are instructed that if you find from the evidence that on October 4, 1906, John Dunlap was in a car of the defendant, at Herington, Kansas, in the ordinary course of the performance of his duties as a postal clerk or route agent, and that the defendant was then a" common carrier of passengers for hire, and that while he was so in such car a deck sash in said car fell on his foot and produced injuries directly causing his death, then you are instructed that the fall of such deck sash raises a presumption of negligence on the part of the defendant to rebut such presumption and to show that the fall of such deck sash (if it fell) was not thé result of negligence on the part of the defendant; and if defendant fails to rebut such presumption (if any), and if. you find from the evidence that said John Dunlap died as the result of such negligence, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff, provided you further find from the evidence that at the time of his death said John Dunlap left surviving him this plaintiff, Margaret E. Dunlap, as his widow, and that as such widow she has suffered a pecuniary loss by his death, and that prior to the commencement of this action the plaintiff became,-and still is, the administratrix of the estate of said John Dunlap.
“The jury are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that on October 4, 1906, John Dunlap was in a car of the defendant, at Herington, Kansas, in the ordinary course of the performance of his duties as a postal clerk or route agent, and that defendant was then a carrier of passengers for hire, then the duty and obligation of the defendant was that of a carrier of passengers, and it was bound to exercise the highest practicable degree of care that would have been used [221]*221by prudent railroad men under the same or similar circumstances to handle said car and the appliances thereof, and the failure to exercise such care would constitute negligence on the part of the defendant.
“If your verdict is for the plaintiff then you should find in such sum not exceeding ten thousand dollars, as will in your judgment, considering all of the evidence presented to you, fairly compensate the widow (if any) of John Dunlap for any benefit, service or advantage of pecuniary nature or value which you believe from the evidence she would have received from the deceased, Dunlap, during his lifetime, but for his death; but not for any feeiings of sorrow or loss on account of his death. The loss (if any) to be compensated is a pecuniary loss and does not include considerations of sentiment or affection.”

Since, at the time of the alleged injury to his foot Dunlap was a postal clerk at his post of duty in the mail car, the relation he sustained to defendant was that of passenger and defendant owed him the duty due from a carrier to a passenger. [Railway Co. v. Jellison, 124 Ill. App. 652.] In solving the questions of whether or not the evidence of plaintiff shows that negligence of defendant was the proximate cause of the injury, we eliminate from consideration, as did the trial court, the testimony of the baggageman relative to the statement of Dunlap that the injury to his foot was inflicted by the fall of the ventilator produced by rough handling of the car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 262, 145 Mo. App. 215, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-moctapp-1910.