Haehl v. Wabash Railroad

24 S.W. 737, 119 Mo. 325, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by101 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 737 (Haehl v. Wabash 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
Haehl v. Wabash Railroad, 24 S.W. 737, 119 Mo. 325, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 128 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Brace, J.

This is an action to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s husband, Jesse Haehl, alleged to have been wrongfully assaulted and-killed by defendant’s servant, James W. Hill, on the seventeenth of March, 1891, .on its railroad bridge ■ at St. Charles, Missouri. The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment for $5,000 in the court below, and the defendant appeals.' The answer admitted defendant’s corporate existence; that the said Hill at the time was in its employ as watchman of said bridge, and denied the other allegations of the petition.

The suit was instituted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis on the seventeenth day of September, 1891, returnable to the October term of said court. [331]*331The answer was filed Oetobér 5,' 1891, and the cause set for trial in court room number 5 of said circuit court before Hon. Leroy B. Valliant, judge of said room, on Monday, the fourteenth of December, 1891. After-wards, on Friday, the eleventh of December, 1891, Judge Valliant not holding court on that day, the defendant presented, without any notice to plaintiff or ■ her attorneys, to Hon. James E. Withrow, judge of court room number 3, an application for a special jury accompanied with a deposit of $75, which on .the same day was overruled by Judge Withrow.

On the fourteenth day of December, 1891, the cause, coming on in regular course in room number 5 before Judge Valliant, was called for trial, and the parties by their respective attorneys announced themselves ready, and remained subject to the orders of the court until the sixteenth of December, 1891, when a jury was called, duly impaneled and sworn, the evidence heard and the court, after refusing one instruction asked for by the plaintiff, and several asked for by the defendant, among which was one in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, submitted the cause to the jury upon the following instructions given ■ on its own motion:

1 ‘It appears from the evidence and the admissions in this case that the St. Charles bridge, on which the plaintiff alleges that her husband was killed, was a railroad bridge only, and not a public highway for foot passengers. The defendant had the right to keep foot passengers off the bridge, using for that purpose whatever force was reasonably necessary. But in the effort to keep foot passengers off the bridge, or to expel them from it when they were on it, the defendant had no ' right to use any more force than was. reasonably necessary for that purpose.
“If you believe from the evidence that the plain[332]*332tiff’s husband, on the day he is alleged to have been killed, was on the bridge in question, and that James W. Hill was at that time acting in the performance of his duty as bridge watchman for the defendant, then the said watchman would have been justified in using a reasonable degree of force necessary and proper to accomplish the removal of the plaintiff’s husband from said bridge, but if you believe from the evidence that the said Hill, in exercising his authority to remove the plaintiff’s husband from said bridge, used more violence than was necessary, and willfully shot and killed said Haehl, plaintiff’s husband, when it was unnecessary in order to remove him from said bridge, then the defendant is liable in this action, and your verdict should be for the plaintiff; but unless you do so find, your verdict should be for the defendant.
“If you find for the plaintiff, you should assess her damages in such sum as you deem fair and just to compensate her for whatever actual injury you may find from the evidence she has sustained resulting from the death of her husband.
“And if you believe from the evidence that the said killing was wanton or malicious, you may, if you see fit so to do, add to the sum you may assess as the plaintiff’s actual damages such further sum, by way of punitive or exemplary damages, as you may believe from the evidence would be right and just, by way of punishment to the defendant, and as an example to the community, not exceeding, however, $5,000 in the total amount of your verdict.”

On the trial it was admitted that the St. Charles bridge “was a railroad bridge and a part of the Wabash railroad, and is not a wagon bridge, nor a bridge crossed by foot passengers,” and “that the' length of the trestle of the St. Charles bridge on the St. Charles side, ending with the first overhead span, [333]*333rock pier, is one thousand, four hundred and forty-five feet and eight inches; that that portion of the bridge between the rock piers designated as overhead spans, and which crossed the river proper is a distance of two thousand, one hundred and seventy-seven feet and six inches; the trestle on the St. Louis county side, from the last rock pier to the dump or end of the bridge, of the St. Louis county side is two thousand, eight hundred and ninety-six feet by actual measurement; by ‘trestle’ is meant the approaches on either side.” The defendant offered no evidence.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove that the deceased at the time he was killed, was about thirty-two years of age, five feet and eight inches high, slightly built and weighing about one hundred and forty pounds; that he was a cigar maker by trade, having constant employment and earning from thirteen to fourteen dollars per week; that he resided with his family, consisting of the plaintiff and one child, a little girl aged about five years, in the city of Indianapolis; that he was a quiet and peaceable citizen of good reputation ; that for some time before his death he had not been in good health and thought a change of climate would do him good, and on the morning of the seventh of March, 1891, he left his home in Indianapolis to go first to Decatur, Illinois. That was the last time his family and friends saw him alive, although his wife heard from him afterwards during his absence.

On the morning of the seventeenth of March, 1891, about 8 o’clock, he was seen crossing the St Charles bridge going from the St. Louis county side towards St. Charles; he had gone over the approach on the St. Louis side, the main bridge and a part of the approach pn the St. Charles side, when he was met by James W. Hill, the defendant’s bridge watchman and his brother. Hill, the watchman, motioned to him to go back; the [334]*334deceased not going back immediately, but remaining standing, Hill went up to him and spoke to him and some conversation passed between them, but what was said was not heard by any witness; it resulted however, in the deceased starting back, when Hill struck him on the back or shoulder twice with a club or billy, and the deceased commenced running back towards the St. Louis side, followed by Hill. They liras proceeded until the deceased had recrossed the trestle on the St. Charles side, the whole of the main bridge, and about one-half the approach on the St. Louis side, pursued by Hill, when they two being thus alone on that approach, Hill in the rear of deceased and distant about fifteen feet from and pursuing him,, a pistol shot was fired, the ball striking the deceased in the back of the neck a little to the left of the median line and on a line with the base of the ears; passed “inward, downward, then upward through the foramen magnum into the base of the brain, producing death.” Immediately after-wards Hill was seen running back, as fast as he could across the bridge towards the St.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 737, 119 Mo. 325, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haehl-v-wabash-railroad-mo-1893.