Ford v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad

196 S.W.2d 163, 355 Mo. 362, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 459
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 9, 1946
DocketNo. 39694.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 196 S.W.2d 163 (Ford v. Louisville & Nashville 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
Ford v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad, 196 S.W.2d 163, 355 Mo. 362, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 459 (Mo. 1946).

Opinion

*369 TIPTON, J.

This is an action brought under the Federal Employers ’ Liability Act by Flossie Ford, administratrix of the estate of Bert F. Ford, who was run over and killed by appellant’s freight train on which he was head brakeman on November 15, 1940, at Pinesville, Kentucky. The jury was required to find that the engineer negligently caused the train to move at an excessive rate of speed at the time when deceased was preparing to alight therefrom, and at the time when, under the circumstances and conditions prevailing, the engine and train should have been stopped or its speed so slackened as to afford deceased ¿ reasonably safe opportunity to alight therefrom. A judgment of $45,000 was entered in respondent’s favor in accordance with the jury’s verdict.

Respondent has filed in this court a motion to dismiss appellant’s appeal for the reason that appellant’s statement of facts in its brief violates Rule 1.08 (a) and (b) of this court in that appellant has not made a fair and concise statement of facts without argument. This motion was taken with the case. We have examined it and have concluded that while it is not a model' statement, it complies sufficiently with our rules; therefore, respondent’s motion to dismiss is overruled.

Appellant’s first assignment of error is that respondent failed to make a submissible case under pleadings and evidence and, therefore, its motion for a directed verdict should have been sustained.

Deceased was head brakeman of the crew of appellant’s train known as ‘ ‘ 1864 South. ’ ’ The other members of that crew were the engineer Scalf, the fireman Livesay, the conductor Peace and the rear brakeman or flagman Montgomery. This train was being operated from Corbin, Kentucky, to Page, Kentucky.

In ruling upon the question of whether respondent made a submissible case for the jury we must disregard appellant’s evidence unless it aids respondent’s ease, and consider the evidence most favorable to respondent and favorable inferences therefrom. Bootee v. Kansas City Public Service Company, 353 Mo. 716, 183 S. W. (2d) 892. With this rule in mind, we will state the facts most favorable to respondent and omit appellant’s evidence, except where it aids respondent.

Pineville, Kentucky, is one of the- stations on appellant’s line from Corbin to Page. At Pineville the train in question was proceeding in a southward direction and consisted of 61 freight cars and caboose. At this station 50 of the cars next to the engine were to be cut off and placed on the interchange track; then the train was to proceed south to Page. It was deceased’s duty to-outline the details of the switching movements.

*370 The first track east of the station at Pineville was the southbound main track on which this freight train was being operated. The next track east of the southbound main was the passing track, and east of the passing track was the northbound main track. Between the southbound main track and the passing track was a concrete platform 15 feet wide and a like concrete platform between the passing track and the northbound main track. The passenger station was 165 feet in length and these concrete platforms extended 170 feet north of it and 215 feet south. The passing track extended 530 feet south of these concrete platforms and 300 feet north of them. At the south end of the passing track there was a crossover connecting the southbound main track and the passing track, and nearby the northbound main and the passing track came together. At the north end of the passing track crossover tracks connected it with the southbound main track and the northbound main track. Still further north there was a crossover connecting the northbound main and southbound main .tracks, and there was a trestle over Straight Creek north of this connection. North of the trestle was a track running in a northeast direction known as the interchange track. It was upon this track 'that the 50 cars in this freight train were to be placed.

When the engine got to a point approximately opposite the north end of the passenger station, deceased got up from his seat in the cab of the engine and went to the rear, preparatory to getting off. He passed through curtains at the rear of the cab, and that was the last time the fireman saw him. The engineer saw him after he had passed through these curtains when he was at the top of the steps holding onto the hand rails. He had a fireman’s lantern and a red fuzee with which he intended to signal. Due to a slight curve in the track the engineer could not see signals from the rear, so deceased got off, or attempted to get off, the engine on the fireman’s, or east, side. When the engine had proceeded two or three lengths south of the south end of the station the engineer told the fireman to look back and see if he could see Ford. The fireman reported that he could not see him and that the train should be stopped, which was done in about two or three car lengths. The fireman went north along the east side of the train almost to the north end of the station, then crossed over to the west side of the train and went further north, but did not see deceased. He then proceeded south, and the train suddenly started forward. He caught on to the first or second ear from the engine and when he reached the cab he asked the engineer why he had started. The engineer told him that he had moved over to the fireman’s side of the cab and started the train on a signal he got from deceased.

The signal on which the engineer moved the train had, in fact, been given by Montgomery, the rear brakeman. When the' train first-stopped the caboose was blocking the highway north of Straight Creek and 'the conductor told Montgomery to signal the engineer to *371 move ahead. After deceased’s disappearance the 50 cars were placed upon the interchange track and the members of the train crew went to look for him. His body was found about 30 feet south of the south end of the passenger station, jammed between the east rail of the southbound main track and the concrete platform. About 25 to 30 feet north of where his body was found there were footprints in the snow and ice on this platform, and skid marks leading from the footprints to the east rail of the southbound main track. From the point where the skid marks ended to the place where the body was found the snow was pushed and shoved up.

The accident happened about 4:30 a. m. and it was very dark. It was snowing and the platform and station grounds were covered with ice and snow.

Montgomery testified that the natural and customary thing for the head brakeman to do was not to ride down south to the clearance point, but to get off in front of the passenger station. He could then observe the lights on the caboose and see that it passed the switchstand on the west side of the main track at the north end of the passing track in order to give clearance at that point, after which he could make the cut off, in this ease 11 cars, and leave them in front of the station. Then the conductor could go back from the caboose and throw the switch at the crossover at the north and he, Montgomery, could line up the switches for the interchange track. The head brakeman could then get on the rear of the 50 cars and go south to the switch and there throw this switch which would enable the 50 cars to be backed from the southbound main track onto the passing track.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W.2d 163, 355 Mo. 362, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-louisville-nashville-railroad-mo-1946.