Ginnochio v. Illinois Central Railroad

134 S.W. 129, 155 Mo. App. 163, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 212
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 24, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 134 S.W. 129 (Ginnochio v. Illinois Central Railroad) 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
Ginnochio v. Illinois Central Railroad, 134 S.W. 129, 155 Mo. App. 163, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 212 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit for damages alleged to have accrued to plaintiff, administrator, for the use and benefit of the widow of his deceased, under the wrongful death statute of the State of Illinois. Plaintiff recovered a judgment in the amount of $5000' and defendant prosecutes the appeal.

Before looking into the merits of the controversy, it is essential to first dispose of a matter preliminary to the right of the court to review the appeal. It is argued by plaintiff that as defendant’s abstract of the record on file here omits to recite the fact of the judgment given against it in the court below we are precluded from reviewing the merits of the case for the reason defendant has not complied with the statute by filing in this court an abstract of the entire record. It is true the printed abstract is deficient in the matter suggested. But the appeal is in the short form authorized by the statute and a duly certified copy of the judgment itself together with the order granting the appeal [167]*167is on file here. The certified copy of the judgment and order referred to appear to have been filed in due time and the filing of such judgment and order conferred jurisdiction on this court in the first instance. This being true, we ought not to decline to review the merits of the case because of the omission of the printed abstract to recite the fact that a judgment was given in. the cause when it conclusively appears from the record on file that such judgment was had. It has been ruled several times that though the abstract of record omits to recite the fact of the judgment, the court will look to the short transcript on file and" supply the deficiency by reading it into the abstract in the interest of justice. [Bank v. Hutton, 224 Mo. 42, 51, 123 S. W. 47; Coleman v. Roberts, 214 Mo. 634, 114 S. W. 39; Booth v. St. Louis, I. M., etc., R. Co., 217 Mo. 710, 117 S. W. 1094; Alt v. Dines, 227 Mo. 418, 126 S. W. 1035. See, also, Stone v. St. Louis Union Trust Co., 150 Mo. App. 331, 130 S. W. 825.]

The suit is prosecuted by the administrator of one, Finnazzo, deceased, who came to his death while in the employ of defendant as a section hand, engaged in the performance of his duties in defendant’s switching yards at DuQuoin, Illinois. It proceeds under the wrongful death statute of the State of Illinois, which was pleaded and proved in the case, and authorizes a suit by such administrator for the use and benefit of the widow of decedent, who it appears resides in Italy. Decedent, was a resident of the State of Illinois where he entered into the contract of hire with defendant and afterward came to his death. In view of these facts, it is argued by plaintiff the question pertaining to the reciprocal duties of defendant and the decedent touching the right of recovery, aside from the wrongful death statute itself, is •to be considered and determined under the adjudicated law of the State of Illinois pertaining to the relation of master and servant and especially reflecting the view’ of the courts of that state as to the reciprocal rights and [168]*168duties of section men and railroads when the injury or death occurs in circumstances similar to those involved here. The proposition is entirely sound when it is made to appear in the case what the adjudicated law of the foreign state is. Such was the case relied upon by plaintiff in support of the argument put forward. [See Fogarty v. St. Louis Transfer Co., 180 Mo. 490, 79 S. W. 664.] In that case the reported decisions of the Supreme Court of Illinois were introduced in evidence at the trial and therefore were properly before our own Supreme Court for consideration. But in the case now in judgment, though plaintiff introduced in evidence the wrongful death statute of the State of Illinois, to the end of showing the transmission to the administrator of a right of recovery in circumstances where the deceased himself might have maintained, an action had death not ensued, he omitted to introduce any evidence of the state of the law of Illinois touching the reciprocal duties of the deceased and his employer, to the end of disclosing under what circumstances a cause of action might have accrued to the deceased had death not ensued from his injury. In this situation, the question of liability or non-liability is to be determined as it arises under the law of the forum defining and fixing the rights and duties of the parties, for we are not permitted to take judical notice of the law of a sister state. If a party relies upon the law of a sister state for his right of recovery or defense, such law and the adjudicated precedents thereon are a matter of fact which the rule of practice requires to be both pleaded and proved. [Morton v. Supreme Council, etc., 100 Mo. App. 76, 89, 73 S. W. 259; Garrett v. Conkling, 52 Mo. App. 654.] Unless it.be where it is known as a historical fact that the foreign state was peopled by countries other than the source of the common law and were subject to organized and civilized communities emanating from jurisdictions other ■than those from whence the common law obtained, the presumption goes to the effect that the law of a foreign [169]*169state is identical with that which obtains in Missouri except as to statute. In this view, nothing appearing in evidence to the contrary, the law of Illinois touching the rights and obligations of defendant and deceased, aside from the statute referred to, is presumed to be the same as that of this state. [Tennent v. Ins. Co., 133 Mo. App. 345, 112 S. W. 754.] The case will therefore be disposed of and determined in accord with the decisions of our court which purport to interpret and apply the principles of the common law pertaining to the relation of master and servant and the reciprocal duties entailed when the contract of employment involves, and the injury is received while performing, the service of a section hand on a railroad.

Under the more recent decisions of our Supreme Court, it is obvious that plaintiff may not recover in this suit for the reasons, first, there appears no negligence on the part of defendant available as a cause of action to deceased had he survived his injury, and second, his own conduct was such as to preclude the right on the ground that it contributed to the injury. As before stated, deceased was a section hand in the employ of defendant and engaged in performing the duties of such •occupation on its track at DuQuoin, Illinois when he came to his death. DuQuoin is, a small station at which are maintained several switch tracks by defendant and the locomotive_which occasioned, decedent’s injury and death was engaged in switching cars in the yards at that' point. The time of the injury was about eight o’clock-in the morning and besides being in broad daylight, the view was open and unobstructed either way on the tracks for a long distance. Decedent and several of his associates were engaged in driving spikes into the ties adjacent to rails of the track and the locomotive with three cars attached passed by them to the north. As the-locomotive approached, decedent and his companions stepped aside from the track in order to permit it to-pass immediately after the passing of the locomotive: [170]*170and cars, the foreman, Morris, ordered the men to resumetheir work and walked away to another part'of the yards. It appears the locomotive with cars attached proceeded north of where decedent and others were working only about 100 feet and stopped, at which point it disconnected two of the cars and returned to the southward with one car only, which was pushed before it.

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.W. 129, 155 Mo. App. 163, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ginnochio-v-illinois-central-railroad-moctapp-1911.