Eversole v. Wabash Railroad

155 S.W. 419, 249 Mo. 523, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 8, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 419 (Eversole v. Wabash Railroad) 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
Eversole v. Wabash Railroad, 155 S.W. 419, 249 Mo. 523, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 85 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Action for personal injuries. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $10,000, from which the defendant has appealed. P1a.iut.iff is an experienced railroad man, but was not an employee of the defendant. The negligence complained of is best stated in the following extract from the petition:

“On or about the 20th day of August, 1906, and at about the hour of 3:30 p. m., the defendant company, through a crew of engine men and switchmen, was operating a train consisting of an engine and about fifteen or twenty freight cars from the north, on to and south through, across and beyond the tracks of said Union Depot Company. The engine was on the north end of the train pushing the cars southwardly. At about the time said engine was entering upon the tracks of said Union Depot Company the speed of said en[526]*526gine was slackened for the purpose of slackening the speed of said train as same proceeded over said Union Depot Company’s tracks. Upon said engine being slackened, the momentum of said cars caused same to strain against the coupling device connecting said engine and the nearest of said cars thereto, and said strain caused said coupling device to part and separate, because said coupling device was at such time, and for a long time theretofore had been, through negligence of the defendant, in an unsafe, defective and improper condition, so that same was not reasonably sufficient for the purpose of holding such cars to such engine and under the control of such engine under ordinary course of switching and moving such cars by means of such engine, all of which was known to the defendant, or could have been known to tbe defendant by the exercise of ordinary care. Upon said cars being so separated from said engine, going, as the same were at such time, at great speed and momentum and on the down grade, there ceased to be any substantial means of controlling and checking the speed of such train as same should pass over and along parts of the track of said Union Depot Company where such train at such speed and with such lack of control was likely to endanger human life and limb, unless through the means adopted by the plaintiff as hereinafter stated. When said cars separated from said engine, said cars proceeded with increasing speed, and said engine with diminishing speed, so that the space between the same was widening. Said engine was provided at the front end thereof with a foot-board for the purpose of enabling switchmen to ride thereon and if necessary operate said coupling device while said engine and cars to which same was to be coupled were in motion. The plaintiff at such time was an experienced switchman in the employ of another railroad company. As said engine and cars were moving and [527]*527separating as aforesaid, they were passing the plaintiff, and plaintiff observed said lack of control, and, recognizing the danger to human life and limb existing and the best available means of averting danger to human life and limb and as a most prudent and expedient thing to be done in the emergency, stepped toward said footboard on said engine and gave to said engineer a signal indicating to said engineer that the plaintiff, as a switchman, would ride upon said foot-board and that such' engineer should increase the speed of such engine so as to quickly overtake said cars, enable the plaintiff to readjust such coupling device and catch and hold said ears as quickly as possible, which signal said engineer understood and answered, rightfully accepting such tender of assistance by plaintiff, so that plaintiff stepped upon the footboard of said engine, prepared' to re-connect such coupling device as soon as said engine with increased speed should overtake said cars, and said engineer did increase such speed, but not promptly and sufficiently and with ordinary care and prudence, hut negligently and with unnecessary delay and decrease of speed, so that the said engine did not overtake said cars so as to enable plaintiff to re-connect said coupling device until about the time that said string of cars so drifting down and along said Union Depot tracks, struck and collided with another engine and train thereon, whereby said engine was brought into violent contact with the north end of said string of cars to which plaintiff was about to make such coupling, and said engine and coupling so broken, damaged and pressed together with said cars as to injure the plaintiff as hereafter stated.”

Answer was a general denial and plea of contributory negligence.

Defendant insists upon its demurrer to the testimony, and this requires a more detailed statement of the situation. On the day in question the defendant [528]*528was making a transfer of a train of cars from its yards to the yards of some other company. In doing so the cars were pushed rather then pulled by the engine, although the engine was and had to he coupled to the cars. To get these cars to their destination the defendant had to push these cars over a Burlington track, and from thence over a track known as track No. 9 running through the Union Station grounds dr Union Depot yards at Kansas City. This track No. 9 is the track on the extreme south in these yards, and is usually used for the making of such freight transfers, although other tracks, 7 and 8, were sometimes so used. In passing along on the Burlington tracks this transfer train had to pass under the Fifth street bridge. The engine was on the north end of the transfer train of about fifteen cars. When the north car in the train reached the point of this bridge the' engine became detached from the train and separated therefrom by a car-length or more. The cars were moving eight to ten miles per hour, and the track slightly down-grade. Three brakemen were on the cars, and the engineer signaled them to put on brakes. As the engine reached the bridge an employee or watchman in a signal tower near the bridge, which is called in the evidence the north signal tower, gave notice to the watchman at the signal tower in front of the baggage room at the Union Depot, and this watchman, seeing a Bock Island engine and its crew standing upon track No. 9, went down out of his tower and notified the engine crew to get off their engine because the transfer train was coming down their track detached from the engine.

As stated the plaintiff was an experienced railroad man. At the time he was a watchman for the C. B. & Q. Railroad and was near this bridge when the defendant’s engine reached that point. Seeing the situation and hearing some “hollowing” near the depot, he got on the moving engine for the purpose of [529]*529coupling the engine to the train of ears running in front of it. Whilst in this position the south car of the train collided with the Burlington engine on track No. 9, and the engine upon which plaintiff was riding ran into and collided with the north car of the train, in which collision the plaintiff was seriously injured. Further details will be left to the opinion. This sufficiently outlines the case.

Instruction: On Theory of Case. I. The court of its own motion gave the instruction which presented the case to the jury for the plaintiff. So far as the record shows the plaintiff requested but two instructions: (1) an instruction upon the measure of damages, and (2) one defining the term “ordinary care.” The first above named the court modified and gave and the other was given without modification. The plaintiff’s theory of his case must be left in the dark, so far as instructions are concerned, because he asked none covering t¿he case. This burden for some reason seems to have been cast upon the court.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 419, 249 Mo. 523, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eversole-v-wabash-railroad-mo-1913.