Good v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad

97 S.W.2d 612, 339 Mo. 330, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 671
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 20, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 612 (Good v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas 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
Good v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad, 97 S.W.2d 612, 339 Mo. 330, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 671 (Mo. 1936).

Opinions

This cause is pending on rehearing. The action is under the Federal Employers' Liability Act. Appellant, Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company, appeals from a judgment for $10,000 in favor of respondent, Melvin M. Good, as administrator of the estate of Robert M. Good, deceased. We follow the outline of the facts stated in appellant's brief, quoting therefrom in part.

Robert M. Good, deceased, prior to the accident resulting in his death, had been an employee of appellant for many years, serving as foreman over one of its bridge and building crews engaged in carpenter work in connection with building and repairing appellant's line of railroad. The crew lived in bunk cars which were moved from point to point as occasion required the services of the crew. The bunk cars would be set on sidings at or near the point where the crew was working and the foreman was furnished a motor car to transport the crew, their tools, equipment and materials to and from the place of work.

On December 8, 1930, the motor car on which deceased was riding, together with other members of the crew, was derailed and deceased received injuries from which he died on December 21, 1930. At the time deceased was seventy years of age, with a life expectancy of eight years, and was earning $165 a month. He was survived by a daughter, Mrs. Grace Warzel, to whom he had been making contributions, estimated by one witness, of $40 a month or a little better.

The crew had been working out of Walker, Missouri, and on the day in question was to put a cap in a bridge on appellant's main line some miles south of Walker and near Deerfield, Missouri. The crew, tools, etc., were transported to this point by means of the motor car. The work was completed about noon. One of appellant's trains from the south was due about this time, and Mr. Good went south on the tracks to protect against the train while the crew placed the motor car on the track and loaded the tools and equipment.

The motor car in question was of a standard make and type. "The width of the car was four feet eight inches and its length six or six and one-half feet. It was propelled by a gasoline motor which was on the front of the car and the driving machinery extended back through the center of the car. The motor and machinery were housed in and the top of the housing was boarded over, forming a platform upon which the men rode. Along each side of the car and level with the bed proper there were troughs in which the tools and other equipment were loaded. . . . At the rear of the car the evidence shows the troughs were fourteen inches wide and this width was maintained *Page 336 up to within eighteen inches of the front. At this point there was an offset in the motor housing and from there on the troughs were six or eight inches wide. Along the outside edges of the troughs there was an angle iron about three inches high with plates at each wheel to protect against material getting on the wheels. At the ends of these troughs, as a part of the equipment of the car at the time it came from the factory, were wooden blocks about 1½ inches high, which were bolted to the frame. . ..

"The loading of the car on the day in question was supervised by the assistant foreman of the gang, one Lawrence Aiken. The larger portion of the tools and other materials were placed on the right side of the car and on the trough on the left side were loaded the following articles: two S wrenches, a timber bar, a tool box and a tank stave. The tank stave was a timber" two and one-half "inches by eight inches by sixteen feet, which was placed on edge on the outside of the trough and extended beyond the car on each end. The tool box was loaded in the back end of the trough and between it and the tank stave the timber bar in question was laid. In front of the tool box and inside the timber bar the two S wrenches were placed. The timber bar in question was a steel bar hexagonal in shape and one and one-fourth inches in diameter. One end was pointed and the other flat. The bar was five and one-half feet long and fitted nicely into the trough with a few inches to spare on either end." Under ordinary loading conditions, the customary and usual method of loading the bar was to lay it in the trough of a properly equipped car. After loading, the car was backed down to where Mr. Good was, he got on, and they proceeded north toward Walker.

The crew had places assigned to them on the car — three on each side. The seats, with the exception of the driver's, faced the sides of the car. The driver's seat was a board extending from the housing or platform out over the trough on the left-hand side, permitting the driver to sit facing the direction the car traveled. Foreman Good's position was on the front left corner, which he occupied on the trip in question. There was testimony that it was part of Mr. Good's duty to watch ahead along the track for crossings, etc.; and that he rode sitting sideways, with one foot on the tank stave and the other on a bar along the front of the car, leaning forward on a rod above and across the front of the platform, so he could look ahead down the track. Aiken, the assistant foreman, sat on the driver's seat immediately behind Mr. Good, facing the direction the car was going. Another of the crew sat immediately behind Aiken, facing the rear. Mr. Morarity was on the front right side of the car, across from Mr. Good, and the other two to the rear of him.

"When the car had proceeded about 1¾ miles from where they picked Good up, a stop was made and Good got off and went to a *Page 337 telephone to find out about the train which was coming behind them. . . . The journey was resumed but at a point about one mile from the scene of the accident the car was again stopped while the brake on the left side was fixed. This consumed about four or five minutes. The timber bar was in its proper place at that time. After the journey was resumed and as the car was going up a slight grade at a speed of about twenty miles an hour a jolt was felt and the car seemed to raise up and leave the track. Good was thrown off at the time of the derailment and received the injuries from which he died." The derailment occurred about one hundred yards after the car had passed a crossing.

"No one of the witnesses know what caused the accident. Afterwards, the timber bar was found back near the point where the car had left the track, bent in an S shape. About this point there was a fresh hole in one of the ties as though some sharp instrument, such as a timber bar, had been jabbed in it. This hole was a few inches on the inside of the west rail. The timber bar was lying about two feet west of the track and about six feet north of this hole. A pipe which extended across the front of the car, level with the bed, at a point eight inches from the left side, was bent and that portion of the platform upon which Good was sitting was splintered and had been pulled loose from its hinges. The sprocket wheel on the motor was found to be broken upon an examination made following the accident.

"The theory upon which the plaintiff's petition proceeds is that the timber bar heretofore mentioned `was caused to shake and fall off said motor car' causing the derailment, and that the defendant's agents and servants other than Robert M. Good negligently violated one of the defendant's rules requiring that `tools and other loose objects must be placed (on motor cars) so they cannot fall off' and negligently violated a custom not to place tools and other loose objects on motor cars so that they are likely to fall off, and negligently failed to keep a proper watch upon the timber bar in question and negligently allowed and permitted the bar to fall off.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W.2d 612, 339 Mo. 330, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/good-v-missouri-kansas-texas-railroad-mo-1936.