Fitzgerald v. Thompson

184 S.W.2d 198, 238 Mo. App. 546, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 229
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 198 (Fitzgerald v. Thompson) 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
Fitzgerald v. Thompson, 184 S.W.2d 198, 238 Mo. App. 546, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 229 (Mo. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the sum of $3500, and defendant has appealed.

The facts show that plaintiff was injured on July 1, 1940, when the automobile, in which she was riding, ivas struck by one of defendant’s eastbound trains, at First and Main Streets, in Ottawa, Kansas. Plaintiff, with the object of possibly purchasing the automobile, which she was driving, had procured it from the dealer and had driven it about six blocks prior to the collision. She had owned an automobile before and was an experienced driver. She was well acquainted with the streets and street crossing of the city. The collision occurred about noon. The day was clear and the streets were dry. Defendant’s single track railroad runs upon First Street, an east and west street in Ottawa. Plaintiff was driving south on Main Street, a north and south street in said city. Main Street is 100 feet wide between the property lines. First Street is eighty feet in width. The track runs parallel with, and near the center of, First Street. It is 37.3 feet from the north rail to a flasher light warning signal at the west side of Main Street located on the north property line of First Street. First Street *551 is straight and approximately level for 2000 feet west of Main Street. There is a rise of ten inches from the property line of First Street to the railroad track.

The first street west of Main Street is Walnut Street where the Santa Fe Railroad crosses First Street. It is 350.2 feet from Main Street to the Santa Fe crossing. According to defendant’s evidence the flasher light is set in operation when the engine of a train reaches an electric switch 574.5 feet west of the west line of Main Street.,

Plaintiff testified that, as she neared the railroad crossing, she noticed the flasher lights were working; that she knew a train was coming, but did not know from which direction; that when she reached First Street she did not look for the approaching train but proceeded on toward the tracks at a rate of speed of about fifteen miles per hour; that when she reached a point about fifteen feet from the tracks she stopped her car and killed her engine; that she tried to start the motor by pushing down on the starter with her right foot; that the car lurched forward coming to rest on the track; that at this time she looked up toward the west and saw the train coming and fainted; that she did not regain consciousness until she reached the hospital; that she made no effort to get out of the car.

Defendant’s witness, Scott, testified that he was at his place of business at the northeast corner of the intersection when he saw'the automobile stop just north of the tracks; that it then started forward in a series of jumps and lurches; that the automobile stopped almost in the center of the track.

Plaintiff testified that when she looked up and saw the train, it was, she presumed, about 300 feet from her. She was asked if there was any fixed object that “you could place the train by”, and she said: “There is the other crossing, the Santa Fe, at Walnut Street and it was beyond that”. She was unable to say at what rate of speed the train was approaching, but there was other evidence that its speed was fifteen miles per hour and that the train did not slow up prior to the collision. She further testified that she first saw the flasher light working as she came south on Main Street, she imagined, about a block from it. “Q. Now, is a block 300 feet, 600 feet or what? A. I am sure I couldn’t tell you”; that, “I imagine every town block is about 300 feet; ’ ’ that 'she would say she was about 300 feet from the flasher light when she first saw it; that it was then in operation and she knew by this fact that a train was approaching.

Defendant introduced the deposition and a statement of plaintiff taken by him in both of which she said that she stopped at the flasher light, which the evidence shows was 37.3 feet from the north rail of the railroad tracks. In her statement she said she stopped about even with the flasher light; that she remembered seeing a train coming from the west at that time; that it was coming awfully fast; that she then stepped on the starter; that she did not know why she did so.

*552 According to plaintiff’s evidence a train, under the circumstances, could have been stopped, by an emergency stop, in approximately 125 feet, and by a service application of the brakes, within approximately 300 to 350 feet. According to evidence on behalf of the plaintiff the train did not slow up before striking the automobile and pushed the latter along the track for a distance of approximately 100 feet, when the automobile went off to the left; that the train proceeded about 800 or 900 feet after it hit the automobile and before it stopped.

The fireman testified, by deposition, that he was on the north side of the engine; that the engineer was on the south side; that the witness could see an obstruction on his side, or at the left of the rail of the track, for a distance of 600 feet before the engine reached the crossing in question; that he first saw the automobile when he was about 150 feet from the crossing; that at that time the.automobile was about thirty feet from the track; that, “it apparently was making arrangements to stop ’ ’; that when it came up to within fifteen feet of the track it stopped; that at that time he was about at the edge of the crossing; that, ‘ ‘ Of course, we were at the edge of the crossing then and it commenced to kind of jump along and the first thing we knew, it was so close to the engine and I said, ‘We are about to hit a car’ and about that time we did hit the car or they did hit us”.

The engineer testified: “Q. Did you see any automobiles passing in front of the engine as you were approaching Main Street? A. Yes, they cross there all the time. Q. You are speaking of cars? A. Yes, are always crossing there. Q. How far away or to the west was the engine when the last car appeared? A. Well, I don’t recall that. Q. From your side, did you ever see any part of the automobile on the track? A. No, sir.”

The ease was tried and submitted on the Last Clear Chance Doctrine of the State of Kansas. The Last Clear Chance Doctrine of that State is made up of the following elements:

“(1) Plaintiff, by his negligence, places himself in a position of danger: (2) that his negligence had ceased: (3) that defendant seeing plaintiff in a position of danger, or by the exercise of due care should have seen him in such position, by exercising due care on his part had a clear chance to avoid injuring plaintiff: (4) that defendant failed to exercise such due care, and (5) as a result of such failure plaintiff was injured.” [Goodman v. K. C. M. & S. Rld. Co., 137 Kas. 508, 512.]

In that ease the court,- also, said, 1. c. 511, 512, quoting from another Kansas case: ‘ ‘ This doctrine can be invoked in negligence cases only where the party relying upon it has by his own prior negligence gotten himself into a predicament from which his subsequent diligence will not avail to extricate him without injury or damage through the act or delict of another party, but where such other party has a fair opportunity — a last clear chance — to avert or minimize the accident, in *553

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 198, 238 Mo. App. 546, 1944 Mo. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-thompson-moctapp-1944.