Fox v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

74 S.W.2d 608, 335 Mo. 984, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 290
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 18, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 S.W.2d 608 (Fox v. Missouri Pacific 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
Fox v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 74 S.W.2d 608, 335 Mo. 984, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 290 (Mo. 1934).

Opinion

*986 ATWOOD, P. J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment against the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company for $10,000 in an action for damages for death of Lloyd Fox, deceased husband of Mary Beulah Fox, administratrix, brought in behalf of his widow and two minor children.

The action was based on the death by wrongful act statute of Kansas and on Section 66-227 of the General Statutes of Kansas, 1923, which required railroad companies operating within the State to keep in good repair good and sufficient crossings where such railroads crossed public highways.

After pleading the statute in full plaintiff further alleged in her petition “that on the 4th day of December, 1930, and for more than thirty (30) days'prior thereto, the'Said deféndant carelessly and negligently failed to provide and maintain and keep in good repair a good and sufficient crossing on the public 'highway leading over and across the defendant’s tracks at Greeley, Kansas, as aforesaid; that on/said'crossing as aforesaid, the defendant carelessly and negligently allowed an opening and space to be and exist between one of the defendant’s rails and planks in said crossing'and said plank to be from, ófie-half inch to an inch lower than the rail, which was dangerous for’ the public to travel over and upon; that the space between tke rails was not sufficiently paved or filled with plank and said plank was'not on the' same, grade'as the tráck, which made said crossing as required by the aforesaid Statute of the State of Kansas, and in direct violation thereof; that the defendant carelessly and negligently caused, allowed and permitted a space between the rail and one of the inner planks adjoining said rail to be wide enough for the .heel of a man’s shoe to catch therein, and that on the aforesaid day, the plaintiff'-s deceased husband was walking across said crossing, as aforesaid, and caught, his shoe in said space, described aforesaid, and *987 said shoe and- said deceased became fastened and caught therein and he was unable to remove said shoe or foot, or to extricate same, or to extricate himself therefrom, and while so caught and fastened therein, as aforesaid, one-of the defendant’s trains passed thereover, ran into and collided with and struck said deceased, before he could extricate himself, and, as a direct result of the injuries sustained, he died. ’ ’ A similar charge of negligence was then pleaded as a common-law count.

Defendant’s answer was a general denial. At the close of plaintiff’s case and again at the close of the whole ease defendant filed a general demurrer to the evidence which demurrers were overruled. No withdrawal instructions were requested.

The evidence shows that Main Street, where the accident occurred, runs due north and south, that the railroad track crossed it from the northeast to the southwest, and that this crossing was much used by the public. The testimony of Mary Beulah Fox shows that her husband was thirty-two years of age at the time of his death; that he left surviving, his widow, respondent herein who was about twenty-five years of age, and two infant children of the ages of two and five years, respectively; that he was a farmer and tended a small farm within or near the corporate limits of G-reeley, Kansas; that about seven o ’clock on the evening of December 4, 1930, the deceased, Lloyd. Fox, left his farm home and that she never saw him alive thereafter.

The testimony of Charles Martin tends to show that on December 4, 1930,- and for about forty days prior thereto, he was living with and employed by the deceased, Lloyd Fox; that on the night of the 4th of December, 1930, he last saw Mr. Fox when he left his home about 6:4o p. m. ; that while at supper that evening the deceased said that he had left a singletree at “Jack’s Corner,” and that if it kept on raining the creek would rise and he would have to get it- before it washed away; that “Jack’s Corner” was east and north of the aforesaid crossing near which deceased’s lifeless body was later found.

A. S. Kelsey testified that' he carried the. mail to the. Missouri Pacific depot and from the depot to the postofficé in Greeley, Kansas; that he was at the Missouri Pacific depot at 7:15 p. m., on December 4, 1930; that at that time he saw the deceased at the depot ^platform, which was-’ one block west and one block south of the crossing .in ■question,' and that the deceased was walking east along the railroad-platform, but that the witness never saw him leave the platform and-■did not know which direction he went thereafter. He testified that the deceased-said- “I left a singletree down at Jack’s^ Corner, and I had better go down and get it-before anybody picks, it up.” He further testified that a throug'h passenger train passed-Greeley, Kansas, going southwest due at 7:17 p. m., on December 4th, 1930; that the ■engine headlight was burning and the regular station and. crossing signals were'sounded; -that the deceased-had about enough-time to-go *988 from the depot' to the crossing in question between the time he saw him at the depot and the time the train passed- the crossing. There is no evidence that deceased was thereafter .seen by any one on the evening-of December 4, 1930, nor is there any evidence that any other train passed over that crossing until after the deceased’s mangled body was found the next morning.

The deceased was found dead about five or six o ’clock on the-' morning of December 5, 1930. His body, cold and stiff and minus the right foot, was lying about fifty feet southwest of the railroad crossing in question. It showed abundant evidence of having been struck by some powerful force. The right shoe of the deceased with the foot in it was found wedged between the south rail over the street crossing in question and the first plank inside the rail at a point a little south of the middle of the crossing. The shoe was pointed toward the depot in a' southwesterly direction. .The evidence showed that in order to reach the point where the deceased said' he was going he would have to travel northeast to a point beyond and over the crossing.

A number of witnesses testified that there was a space between the south rail of the defendant’s track and the inner crossing plank next to it which varied, according to the opinions of the witnesses, from two to four and one-half or five inches, that this plank was worn and sloped toward the rail, that it was about an inch lower than the rail and that the weather that night was dark and rainy. There was also evidence that a space of two inches was about the standard space between such inner plank and the rail and all that was necessary for the proper operation of trains over such crossing.' Some of the witnesses testified that the space between the rail and crossing plank was sufficient for the insertion of an ordinary foot without much effort, while others - testified that a foot would have to go in at -an angle. There was evidence that some time before at this same crossing a man passing thereover accidentally slipped his foot between a plank and a rail and had to remove his foot from his boot in order to extricate himself. Also, a horse had been injured on that crossing by- reason of his foot slipping and becoming wedged between one of the planks and- a rail.

The only errors assigned by appellant are that the court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrers to the .evidence and.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W.2d 608, 335 Mo. 984, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-mo-1934.