Gray v. Wabash Railroad

137 S.W. 324, 157 Mo. App. 92, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 380
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 2, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 S.W. 324 (Gray v. Wabash 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
Gray v. Wabash Railroad, 137 S.W. 324, 157 Mo. App. 92, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 380 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

— This is a suit for damages alleged to have accrued to plaintiffs through defendant’s negligence. Plaintiffs recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.

Defendant, an incorporated company, owns and operates a railroad through the city of Centralia, Missouri, and plaintiffs are the parents of Leroy E. Gray, a minor, who came to his death through being run over by defendant’s train adjacent to its depot at that place. The suit proceeds at the instance of the parents under section 5425, Revised Statutes 1909, for the recovery of the penalty of not less than two thousand dollars nor more than ten thousand dollars for every such death as shall occur through the negligence of an agent or servant of defendant “whilst running, conducting or managing any locomotive, car or train of cars,” etc., and the court directed the jury that in the event it found •the issue for plaintiffs the recovery should be for not less than two thousand dollars nor to exceed ten thousand dollars, as prescribed in the statute.

Plaintiffs’ son at the time of his death was about eighteen years of age, and it appears he was in the employ of defendant at its station at Centralia, where he was being taught the avocation of railroad station work, but with positive directions from his father to defendant that in no event should he be detailed to duties about moving trains. One Hampton, defendant’s assistant station agent, was the immediate superior of plaintiffs’ son, with power and authority to direct a performance of duties within the scope of his employment, and at the time he was killed, the youth was obeying an order of Hampton to get a hoop. *The hoop referred to [95]*95had immediately theretofore been given by Hampton'to defendant’s brakeman on a passing locomotive as a means of conveying to him an order relating to the progress of the train, and, after so doing, Hampton directed plaintiffs’ son to “get the hoop,” which, it is said, involved the idea that the young man should run after the locomotive and receive the hoop from the brakeman upon his removing the message therefrom and throwing the hoop away from the engine. The train which occasioned the death of plaintiffs’ son was of freight cars with locomotive attached, and passed through Centrada during the day at the rate of about twelve or fifteen miles per hour, and it appears that it became the duty of Hampton, the assistant agent, to deliver a telegraphic train order to those on the locomotive pertaining to its further progress and movements. An appliance, spoken of in the evidence as a “hoop,” is supplied to station agents on defendant’s railroad for the purpose of delivering messages and train orders, when required, to those on trains which pass the station without stopping, and this hoop is constructed from two-strands of light wire coiled together so as to constitute a circular hoop of about two feet in diameter. The station agent, after folding the paper containing the message or train order, inserts it between the two wires thus coiled together and holds the hoop aloft, so that one standing in the gangway of the locomotive may catch it on his extended bended arm while the train is in the act of passing. At the time in question, Hampton had thus performed the act of delivering the message to defendant’s brakeman, who stood in the gangway of the locomotive attached to the passing train and caught the hoop as Hampton tendered it aloft. As the brakeman was in the act of removing the message from the wire, with the purpose of returning the hoop to some one who might be present to catch it or to throw it upon the depot platform, as was usual, Hampton directed plaintiffs’ son, who was standing near, to “get the hoop.” In obedience to this order, the young [96]*96man ran along tlie depot platform near the passing train and followed the locomotive with his eye upon the brakeman, who was removing the message from the hoop, and while thus running collided with a semaphore post, which was erected on the platform, about four feet from the train, in such a manner as to be precipitated under the moving train, by which he was run upon and killed. Defendant’s semaphore arrangement is a substantial post about twelve iuches square, erected immediately in front of and considerably apart from its depot, on the platform, about five or five and a half feet from the rail of the track, for the purpose of conveying signals to trains at night by means of signal light which are maintained thereon about twenty feet above the platform. Plaintiffs’ son, who was a bright, intelligent youth, was entirely familiar with the semaphore post and its location, for he had been in defendant’s service at the depot three or four months, but this is unimportant in the view we take of the case, as it will be unnecessary to consider’the matter of his contributory negligence, if any.

After setting forth appropriate matters of inducement, and averring that plaintiffs negotiated the contract of employment with defendant as to the services of their son, by which it was stipulated and agreed he should in no event be assigned to duties which brought him in contact with moving trains, the petition recites two specifications of negligence on which a recovery is sought. These specifications relate to the conduct of defendant’s assistant agent in carelessly ordering plaintiffs’ son to “get the hoop” at a time and under circumstances when an opportunity for reflection on the mode of executing the order was not afforded, and to defendant’s negligence in maintaining the semaphore post at a position on the depot platform where one engaged in the execution of a sudden and peremptory order was likely to collide therewith. The theory advanced and relied upon for a recovery is, that as plaintiffs’, son was thus suddenly and peremptorily ordered to “get the hoop,” [97]*97which involved the performance of a task outside of the scope of his employment, the relation of master and servant did not obtain with respect to the immediate subject-matter, for the reason the contract of employment, made alone ivith decedent’s parents, excluded it, and the risk appertaining to the performance of such order was therefore an extra hazard. Though this theory be a sound one in some circumstances, it is entirely- clear it avails nothing to plaintiffs in the instant case, under our penal statute, for the negligence relied upon in the petition and disclosed by the evidence, if any, is not attributable to an agent or servant of defendant “whilst running, conducting or managing any locomotive, car or train of cars.” The statute, under which the suit is prosecuted, in so far as pertinent here, operates only to transmit a cause of action as for a wrongful death to the persons named in subsequent provisions thereof, for certain derelictions of duty as therein mentioned, with respect to the different common carriers enumerated, and unless the breach of duty relied upon pertains to one of the several classifications therein stipulated, no recovery of the penalty may be had. So far as relevant on this feature of the case, the statute is as follows:

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Related

Gray v. Wabash Railroad
162 S.W. 672 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 S.W. 324, 157 Mo. App. 92, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-wabash-railroad-moctapp-1911.