Dutton v. Kansas City Terminal Railway Ass'n

292 S.W. 718, 316 Mo. 979, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 839
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 718 (Dutton v. Kansas City Terminal Railway Ass'n) 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
Dutton v. Kansas City Terminal Railway Ass'n, 292 S.W. 718, 316 Mo. 979, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 839 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*983 WHITE, J.

The plaintiff brought suit against the defendants for injuries received by him in Kansas City, in a collison of his truck with an engine of the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence at the close of the plaintiff’s case, and he appealed.

The collision occurred March 31, 1920, early in the forenoon. The track upon which it took place belonged to the defendant, the. Terminal Railway Company, and the defendant Chicago & Alton Railroad Company operated its trains upon it under a lease-. The incident occurred in the yards at what was known as the Penrod crossing, an approach to the plant of the Penrod Corporation plant on the north side of the railway tracks. It is described in the petition as a highway, and the photographs in the record show it to be a plain, well constructed road across several railroad tracks. In the evidence it seemed to be assumed -without objection that it was a public crossing over a number of tracks running east and west. From the south it crosses a railroad track of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad. One hundred and twenty-three feet further north it crosses the Terminal Company’s switch track. This switch track, immediately to the right of the crossing towards the east, branches off into what is described as a "maze of tracks” extending east for a long distance. Twenty-two feet north of the center line of the switch track was the center line of the eastbound main track used by the Railroad Company, and fifteen feet further north was the center line of the westbound main track on .which the collision occurred.

Photographs introduced in evidence show the- surrounding buildings and other objects as they appeared to the plaintiff in his approach from the south to these crossings. He was driving a truck, and his father, W. C. Dutton, was sitting at his right in the same seat. The plaintiff drove across the switch track, across the eastbound main track, and on to and across the westbound main track where the extreme rear part of his truck was struck by a westbound train. Both the plaintiff and his father were severely- injured. The plaintiff was rendered unconscious for several days. He was unable to recollect any incident in relation to the collision, or anything that occurred after he reached a point several hundred feet before he got to the tracks. The plaintiff’s father testified and had a definite recollection of all that occurred up to the time that he was knocked insensible. As they drove northward on the Penrod crossing, the tracks to the west, at their left, were obscured by a number of obstructions, which it is unnecessary to describe, and their purpose was to discover first if a train was approaching from the west, because *984 the eastbound main track was the one which they must cross first after the switch track. As they reached the switch track the truck stopped and the elder Dutton looked east and could see along the westbound track, upon which the collision afterwards occurred, for a distance of sis or seven hundred feet. He said his son also looked. There was considerable movement in that section of the yards at that time. Eight or ten tracks -which branched off from the switch track to the right, were south of the main tracks, and one or more engines were switching around on those tracks. Dutton did not complain that they obstructed his view. He saw no train approaching from the east. The truck then started up and he continued to look to the east until he got well up on the switch track. Then his truck was approaching the eastbound track upon which he might have trouble with a train coming from the west. Therefore his attention and that of his son were directed towards the west. They did not look any further towards the east until the truck got upon the. eastbound main track, where they could see there was no danger from the west. By that time the front of the truck was almost upon the rail of the westbound track upon which the train was approaching, and he suddenly discovered a train bearing down upon them from the east, about a hundred feet distant. He called to his son who accelerated his speed and' got the truck across the westbound track when the engine struck the rear end of it. The evidence of the elder Dutton upon that point is as follows: .

‘ ‘ Q. Now then, as you approached this switch track, did you give any attention to learn whether there was any sound of an approaching train of any kind! A. Yes sir.
“Q. What did you do? A. Stopped to .look and listen to see if we could see anything from the east.
“Q. And where was it, with reference to this switch track, that you came to a stop there? A. Just as w\A came up to it.
“Q. Did you hear any whistle or other warning signal of an approaching train? A. We heard nothing of any whistle or anything of that kind.
“Q. What do you mean by that, a warning signal? A. Yes.
“Q. Who was it who was driving the truck and brought the truck td a stop at that point ? A. The boy.
“Q. You are referring to your son, the plaintiff? A. Yes sir.
“Q. After you heard no signal of any approaching train, then what did' you do? A. We started ahead across the tracks.
“Q- I will show the jury first Exhibit H which the photographer says is a photograph taken from the center of the roadway over the north rail of the switch track looking east. Now when you came on over the switch track when you left the point where you stopped to listen, and continued north, how long did you continue to look, if *985 at all, to the east? A. Until we got well up on tbe switch tracks so we could see around the cars.
“Q. How far down to the east could you see when you last looked at that time to the east? A. I would estimate about 600 or 700 feet.
‘ ‘ Q. Now then, when you last looked down to the east, when you were up there on the switch track, did you see anything of an approaching train coming from the east? A. No sir.”

He then stated that they looked west to see if a train were coming from that direction upon the eastbound track; that they were driving approximately three miles an hour, “maybe not that fast;” that the seat of his truck wás eight feet from the front end and the truck had a total length of nineteen feet.

One W. Atwell testified for the plaintiff. He had been an employee of the Terminal Eailway Company; at the time of the occurrence he was working in the switch yard east of the point of collision; he saw the train coming and estimated its speed at at least twenty-five miles an hour. It passed him about a hundred feet east of the Penrod crossing. "When he saw the train about a hundred feet from the crossing the truck was about two-thirds of the way across the track. The time at which it occurred was about 8:14 a. m. The track was dry. He testified further that a passenger coach extends over the rail on each side 2 feet and 6 inches; that a freight engine extends over the rails about the same as a passenger coach, and that applied to Engine No. 9, which was drawing the train that morning.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 718, 316 Mo. 979, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutton-v-kansas-city-terminal-railway-assn-mo-1927.