Grant v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.

157 S.W. 1016, 172 Mo. App. 334, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 481
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 1016 (Grant v. Kansas City Southern Railway 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
Grant v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co., 157 S.W. 1016, 172 Mo. App. 334, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 481 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

ELLISON, P. J.

Plaintiff is the administratrix of the estate of Arthur Grant, who was fatally injured by [337]*337being run over by one of defendant’s trains at Mena,. Arkansas, ■which she charges was caused by the absence of an “iron handhold” on the end of the tender-of the engine.

Deceased was in the employ of defendant as head brakeman on a freight train. The train had left a. point sixty miles south and had arrived at Mena where-the engine and crew were to be changed and the train be taken thence on north by another engine and crew. When the- train arrived at Mena a freight train, also-bound north, was standing in on the siding, which made-it necessary that the train involved in this controversy stand on the main track just below the switch, the engine being perhaps 150 feet from the rear of the other-train. There each stood for near an hour, waiting for a southbound passenger train to arrive. When the latter train got in, the freight train standing on the siding began to move'out, making room for the train in controversy to move in and clear the main track so-the passenger could pass on its way. It did immediately begin to move, following closely on the outgoing train but intending to stop at the upper end of the siding, where the engine would be detached and a fresh one and new crew substituted. It was deceased’s duty as head brakeman to be on the front end of the car next to the engine while approaching or moving through a station. Presumably during the long wait, he had left the train intending to board it as it started into the siding. At any rate, as the train began to move forward, the engineer (plaintiff’s witness) saw him about 150 feet up the track walking-back towards the engine on the east side of the track. He walked by the engine as it moved on at about three-miles an hour. He had his lantern and was last seen by the engineer when opposite the rear end of the tender and about four feet east of it. There was a step at the rear end of the tender and there had been [338]*338■above it an iron “handhold.” With the aid of these one conld climb on top ofdhe tender. So there was a “ladder” at one, or the other, end of the car next to the tender. But at this time the handhold was not there, and there was evidence tending to show that it had been missing several days. The train, which was near a quarter of a mile in length, went on into the .siding, stopping with the engine up at the upper end. Deceased was found lying by the side of the track near where last seen, with his arm about crushed off, so •that it was amputated, and from the effect of which he died in twenty-four hours. He being dead, and there being no eyewitnesses, the engineer being the last •one to see him before the catastrophe, the question to be determined, if possible, is what caused his injury .and what part in its .happening did he, himself, take? The theory of plaintiff is, and her case depends upon its correctness and the proof of' it, that in the dark he ■did not see the absence of the handhold and in reaching for it, at the same time attempting to put his foot on the step, he stumbled and fell with his arm under the car. Whatever tendency there was in the testimony of the engineer, was to disprove this, for he last saw him opposite the handhold and four feet to the •east, walking away, and to reach it he would have to 'turn and run back.

Plaintiff was thus brought to depend upon a declaration of deceased, which she claims was a part of the res gestae and therefore proper evidence. Proof •of this declaration, as offered, came through the lips of one W. A. Grant, a cousin of deceased. He says that after he heard of the misfortune he went to the scene, when deceased said to him: “ ‘Hello Bill.’ I says, ‘What’s the matter, Arthur?’ He says, ‘I’ve lost a wing.’ .1 says, ‘How and where did it happen?’ He says, ‘ The hold was gone and I stumbled and fell. ’ I says, ‘That’s too bad.’ ” The trial court refused the evidence and that ruling is the main ground of [339]*339the appeal. The determination of what is a part of the res gestae is generally difficult. If the words of the party interested are the narration or explanation of a past event, they are merely self-serving declarations. They may he the words of a truthful man, but he is frail and subject to the influence of self-interest, and being made without opportunity for those whom they affect to defend themselves, safety only lies in their absolute inadmissibility. But if they are spontaneous exclamations, they are considered a part of the occurrence, and are called verbal acts, and, as such, you may prove them, just as you would prove the man’s physical acts. But to be considered spontaneous exclamations, or statements, they néed not necessarily be simultaneous or coincident with the main fact. Thus, where a physical act has ended, but it caused unconsciousness, a declaration immediately following restoration, explaining or illustrating the character of the physical happening, might well be a part of it — the unconscious blank not, in reality, being a disconnection. We need not say that unconsciousness is the test when time intervenes. It is used here merely as illustrative. If the declaration is so clearly connected with the transaction that it can, in the ordinary course of affairs, be said to be the spontaneous exclamation of the real cause, it is admissible; for, in such case they form a continuous transaction. Disconnection destroys the rule and its reason. Thus, in Leahy v. Cass Ave. & F. G. Ry. Co., 97 Mo. 165, 173, a boy was hurt by a street car. He was picked up and carried to a near-by house and laid on a cot, and within five or ten minutes, in answer to a question as to how he came to-be hurt, said the driver kicked him off the car step. This was held to be the statement of a past event and inadmissible. The case has been frequently approved by the Supreme Court. [Ruschenberg v. Railway Co., 161 Mo. 70; Barker v. Railway Co., 126 [340]*340Mo. 143; State v. Hendricks, 172 Mo. 654; and Redmon v. Railway Co., 185 Mo. 1.

In Dunlap v. Railroad, 145 Mo. App. 215, we held that the statement of an injured party who was injured in a mail car, that the ventilator had been made to fall upon his foot by the rough handling of the car, made, after the injury and after the car had been ■ stopped, was inadmissible on the ground that it was but a statement of a past transaction. On the other hand in the recent, yet unreported, case of Giles v. Railway Co., we held that a statement of the injured party while yet under the car and within two minutes of the accident, was spontaneous and part of the act in controversy and admissible as res gestae.

In Hooper v. Insurance Co., 166 Mo. App. 209, a man fell to the floor of a running street car. The question was whether he fell from a lurch of the car, or sank down by reason of a stroke of apoplexy. He was carried to his own home near-by and put upon a sofa. Within thirty minutes he complained of his arm hurting him and stated that he fell in the- car. This was held not to be a part of the res gestae.

Applying the law as announced in these cases, to the facts shown in support of the offer of the evidence in question, leaves no doubt of the correctness of the ruling of the trial judge. No one saw the accident and consequently, when he made the statement, he had not the restraining influence which comes from the presence of those who have some knowledge of the manner of his injury. The first man to discover him was Thrasher and another man, not named. He made no statement to them.

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 1016, 172 Mo. App. 334, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-kansas-city-southern-railway-co-moctapp-1913.