Garrett v. Mo. Pac. R.R. Co.

267 S.W. 91, 216 Mo. App. 21
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 267 S.W. 91 (Garrett v. Mo. Pac. R.R. Co.) 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
Garrett v. Mo. Pac. R.R. Co., 267 S.W. 91, 216 Mo. App. 21 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

* (1) Railroads, 33 Cyc, p. 1099 (1926 Anno), pp. 1104, 1105, 1111; (2) Death, 17 C.J., Section 167; (3.) Railroads, 33 Cyc, p. 1099 (1926 Anno); (4.) Death, 17 C.J., Section 167; (5.) Appeal Error, 4 C.J., Section 2938. This action is brought by plaintiffs, the parents of an unmarried minor son seventeen years of age, to recover from the railroad company the statutory penalty for causing the death of said son on June 7, 1923. The suit was instituted in Butler county, and upon application of defendant the venue was changed to the Cape Girardeau Court of Common Pleas in Cape Girardeau county. The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiffs for $3500, from which the defendant appeals.

The negligence charged in the petition, and upon which the case went to the jury, is that the defendant negligently and carelessly ran its train over this boy while he was on a public crossing, in the night time, and while running at a high and dangerous rate of speed without keeping the electric headlight on the locomotive lighted, and, secondly, in failing to give any signal of the approach of the train by sounding a whistle or ringing a bell eighty rods from the public crossing, as required by statute.

The answer is a general denial. *Page 26

The defendant operates a railroad from within the State of Arkansas through Missouri to the city of St. Louis. The accident occurred at a public crossing at Neelyville, Butler county. This crossing is referred to as the Berry crossing. At this point the railroad runs north and south and the public road intersects same, running east and west. The lands on either side of the railroad are improved farms. However, on the east side of the right of way fence north and south of this crossing there is a small strip of wooded land.

It becomes of importance to note the location of the homes of two of the witnesses. It appears that slightly over a half mile south of this crossing, east of the railroad and within fifty or sixty feet of the right of way, is located the residence of Henry Kent, and witness John Roberts resides a mile and a half south of the crossing and a quarter of a mile east of the railroad. On June 6, 1923, the deceased and another boy of about the same age, one Grimes, had gone to the town of Neelyville, where they remained until midnight. A storm approached that vicinity, which was so severe as to arouse the entire neighborhood. The boys started home, and both were found dead the next morning at Berry crossing.

Defendant ran a train over this point after midnight of this day, which was a passenger train known as number six. It appears that the Berry crossing was reached by this train at 12:53 A.M., June 7, 1923, and was then running at a rate of speed of fifty-five miles an hour. When the train reached Popular Bluff, further north, by reason of a peculiar odor, the engineer and fireman were attracted to make an examination to see if they had not run over something, and found upon the pilot of the engine blood and tissue, indicating that they had struck some live creature. Another employee of defendant looked at the engine and saw blood and brain substance scattered upon it.

There is another dirt road besides the Berry road leading from Neelyville south, and east of the home of *Page 27 young Garrett, and crosses the road running cast and west over the Berry crossing a quarter of a mile east of the Berry crossing and between this crossing and the home of young Garrett. The bodies were discovered about 7 o'clock in the morning of June 7th by some small boys. Witnesses congregated, and several testified that they found that Garrett's head was practically decapitated and that his intestines and liver were torn from the body and strewn along the tracks north of the crossing. It is in evidence that the cattle guard and wing fence on the north of the railroad crossing at this point had been bespattered with blood and that tissue and brain matter had been thrown on the cattle guard and wing fence, and that teeth and parts of a skull were found near the north cattle guard. Just north of the crossing, and within a few feet south of the north cattle guard, were trails of blood, the body of the son of plaintiffs being found at that point. The body of the other boy was found on the east side of the track, between the railroad crossing sign and the body boards of the crossing. His head was entirely cut off and the body otherwise mangled.

Witness Kent, together with his wife, testifying for plaintiffs, stated that they were up, being fearful of the storm, and that they saw the train pass their door. They said they were so located that they could observe the passenger train as it passed their house and approached the crossing. Kent testified that he stood a few feet from the right of way fence and had before him an unobstructed view of the track to the Berry crossing. Mrs. Kent was standing on the porch, which was fifty or sixty feet from the right of way, and her view was also unobstructed, although she could not see up the track quite so far as could Kent. Each testified that when this train approached they were struck with the fact, and clearly observed, that it was a passenger train traveling at an unusual rate of speed with no illuminating headlight on the front of the locomotive; *Page 28 that it was a dark, stormy night, and that they remarked to each other about the unusual occurrence, and then they watched the train as it passed. Kent says he saw the train until it passed over this crossing; that Mrs. Kent watched it for some distance up the track, but that the train was obstructed from her view before it actually arrived at the crossing. However, they both were very clear in their statements that when the train passed their house there was no light burning on the front of the locomotive. Kent, himself, testified that he watched the train until same reached the crossing. These questions and answers appear in his direct examination:

"Q. From the time that the train passed you, was there a reflection of a headlight at any time between when it passed you and when it passed over this road crossing? A. If there was I didn't see it.

"Q. Could you have seen it? A. Yes, absolutely could.

"Q. And you say there was not? A. There was not."

It is in evidence that the reflection from a headlight on this kind of a train can be seen from the side of the track for probably a mile and a half, and if in looking at the light it is on a straight line one can see same for five or six miles. It is also in evidence that one standing where Kent stood on this occasion could see the light thrown from the headlight of a passing train at least as far north as the Berry crossing.

Witness John Roberts testified that he saw the train about a half mile south of the crossing, and that the light was not then burning on same.

Witness Thomas Dowdy testified that the light was not burning when the train passed him a half mile south of the crossing.

The defendant produced the engineer, who stated that he sounded the signal crossing at the whistling post eighty rods south of Berry crossing, and the fireman, while not positively, in effect corroborated this. The wind was blowing from the north or northwest. *Page 29

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Related

Thompson v. St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Co.
69 S.W.2d 936 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 91, 216 Mo. App. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrett-v-mo-pac-rr-co-moctapp-1924.