George v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

125 S.W. 196, 225 Mo. 364, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 196 (George v. St. Louis & San Francisco 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
George v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 125 S.W. 196, 225 Mo. 364, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 13 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

The plaintiff instituted this suit against the defendant in the Cape Girardeau Court of Common Pleas to recover the sum of twenty thousand dollars damages for personal injuries sustained by him through the alleged negligence of the defendant. A trial was had which resulted in a judgment for plaintiff for the sum of ten thousand dollars. After unsuccessfully moving the court for a new trial, the defendant duly appealed the cause to this court.

As no question is raised as to the sufficiency of the pleadings, which are in the ordinary form, they will he omitted from this statement of the case. Most of the facts of the case axe undisputed and are substantially as follows:

[373]*373The appellant at the time of the injury complained of operated a railroad from the city of St. Lonis south through the village of Commerce, Scott county, Missouri, into the State of Arkansas. The road was located in Water street, which runs north and south through said village and is sixty feet in width. At the northeast comer of Water and New Madrid streets there stood near the street lines a two story building, known as the “pottery building.” This building was erected upon private property some thirty years prior to the date of the injury, and was about twenty feet wide and forty feet long.

In the year 1893 the board of trustees of the village of Commerce enacted an ordinance which provides, among other things, the following:

‘ ‘ Section 1. That for the purpose of right-of-way, depot grounds and incline for a river railroad and transfer, the said village of Commerce hereby grants to Louis Houck, and the company be may organize, for the purpose of building a railroad from or near the city of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, to Morley, Missouri, via the village of Commerce, Missouri, the following real estate, rights and privileges, that is to say:
“First: The privilege to lay a track of a standard gauge railroad through the center of Water street, from the northern to the southern city limits, with privilege to build a switch east of said main track at o.r near the Grain Chain Mills and Commerce Grain Elevator, in such manner as not to be nearer than six feet of the east line of Water street between New Madrid and Washington streets.”

Louis Houck, the grantee of said franchise, began the construction of the railroad therein mentioned in the year 1893, under the name of Houck’s Missouri and Arkansas Railroad Company, and completed it in the year 1895. In the year 1902 the road was conveyed to the St. Louis and Gulf Railway Company, and in 1904 the latter conveyed it to the St. Louis, Memphis and [374]*374Southeastern Railway Company. Shortly afterwards, during the same year, it was sold to the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad Company, the appellant, which was operating it in January, 1906, when respondent was injured.

The evidence discloses that the railroad track was not located in the center of Water street, as contemplated by the ordinance before mentioned, hut east thereof, and at the point where it passes the pottery building the east rail thereof runs within a distance of forty-eight inches of the line of the west wall of said building. The location of the track had not been changed, as it passed through. Commerce, from the time of its construction to the date of the injury.

James F. Brooks was the civil engineer who had charge of and constructed the railroad in question, and he remained with the road in that capacity through its various transfers, and remained in the employ of appellant until August, 1905. He testified that in locating the road he got just as close to the pottery building as he could; that the reason for locating the road so close to the pottery building was to avoid a ledge of rock about twelve feet thick located in and on the west side of Water street.

The depot at Commerce was located about seven hundred and fifty feet south of the pottery building-on Water street, and each was plainly visible from the other.

On January 11, 1906, the date of the injury, and for some two or three years prior thereto, the respondent had been in the employ of appellant as a passenger locomotive engineer, running during day time over the road in question, and, consequently, passed in plain view of the pottery building some two or three times a day during those years.

The tender of the locomotive on which respondent was employed was eight feet and six inches in its extreme width, and the sides thereof extended over the [375]*375rails of the track one foot, ten and one-half inches, and the steps of the tender extended outward six inches further, and the distance from the top of the tender platform to the bottom of the handholds thereon is about eight or ten inches, and the handholds extend out some three or four inches and are two feet long. The distance, therefore, was about seventeen and one-half inches from the steps of the tender t'o the line of the pottery building, and about twenty-three and one-half inches from the western edge of the top of the tender platform as it passed said building.

Prior to the date of the injury, the attention of the proper officers of the road had been frequently called to the proximity of the road to the west wall of the building.

In the book of rules issued by the defendant company to its employees, one of which had been furnished to the plaintiff in this case, is rule No. 333, introduced by plaintiff, and it reads as follows: “No. 333. The tops of all freight platforms on side tracks for general use should be three feet ten inches above the top of the rail (conforming to the grade of the track), and the edge of the platform three feet six inches from the gauge side of the nearest rail.

“All buildings, corn cribs, cotton platforms and other structures, erected by private corporations or parties, and all stone, tie and timber piles for the company should not be located nearer than six feet from the nearest rail.”

From time to time the company issued time-tables, copies of which it required its engineers to carry with them on their trips, and at the time of the accident plaintiff had with him on his engine time-table No. 12, which was then in force. In this time-table the following warning is given: “Following bridges will not clear a man on side of car: Whitewater, near Delta; St. Francis, at Hodges Ferry; Black River, at P'oplar Bluff; Current River; Fourche River; Black River, at [376]*376Pocahontas. ’ ’ No mention is made of the pottery building.

About 12:25 p. m. on the 11th of January, 1906, while plaintiff was coming north with his passenger train, both he and his fireman, S. F. Maxwell, heard when three or four miles south of the station of Commerce what they took to he a flat wheel. At the request of plaintiff the fireman got down on the step on his side of the engine while the train was running, to see whether he could locate the wheel, hut failed. When the train stopped at the station plaintiff himself got down from his engine and made an examination, hut was unable to discover the defect.

On receiving the signal from the conductor to go ahead plaintiff started his engine, setting the throttle so the train would move slowly, and, leaving his fireman on his seat box looking ahead and ringing the hell, plaintiff got down on the step of the tender for the purpose of detecting, if possible, the flat wheel before his train got under full headway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 196, 225 Mo. 364, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-mo-1910.