Hammontree v. Payne

246 S.W. 915, 296 Mo. 487, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 915 (Hammontree v. Payne) 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
Hammontree v. Payne, 246 S.W. 915, 296 Mo. 487, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 175 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*492 DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

Action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act for wrongful death of plaintiff’s decedent. Judgment below was for plaintiff in the sum of $10,000 and defendant has appealed.

Respondent was the wife and is now the adminis-tratrix of the estate of Robert P. Hammontree, deceased. On November 24, 1919, Hammontree suffered such injuries through alleged negligence of a train crew in the switch yards of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company at Springfield, Missouri, that he died two days thereafter. Deceased was a clerk in the bridge and building department of said railroad at Springfield. While returning from his lunch on said day he was fatally injured in passing between two cuts of freight cars through an opening left therein for the passage of employees from one side of the yard to another. An engine Avith one- car was attempting to couple onto a string of four cars. The coupling was not made at the first effort, and a second and more forceful effect was made, which caused the four cars to move backwards quickly and close the gap of five or six feet through which deceased was passing. He was caught between the couplers of the cars and his death resulted.

Deceased had worked in the same office for about ten years and, according to some of the witnesses, habitually crossed through the switch yards, rather than go around the public streets. There was a much-used path through the yards where employees crossed from one side of the yard to the other in going to and from the yardmaster’s office. The string of freight cars standing on the transfer track had been cut, and an opening left convenient for crossing the track at this pathway. Shortly before one o’clock and in broad daylight, the switching crew of defendant, consisting of an engineer and fireman, a brakeman and foreman, was engaged in *493 the switching movement above referred to. The engine was not over two hundred feet from deceased as he came along the path near the corner of the yardmaster’s office. No obstruction cut off his view of the engine or any part' of the switching movement. He was an experienced man and, by freqilent observation at least, familiar with the work the switching crew was attempting to do.

The foreman of the switching crew testified that he caught a glimpse of the deceased fifty or sixty feet from the track as he came around the. yardmaster’s office walking in the direction of the transfer track.. He did not see him again until after he was injured. None of the other employees connected with such switching movement saw the deceased at all.

The defendant operates a railroad through Missouri and into adjoining states, and a large portion of its business is interstate commerce. Deceased was a clerk in the bridge and building department, which had to do with the building of bridges and culverts for said railroad, over which both intrastate and interstate trains passed.

The petition charged negligence of the switching-crew in the following language:

“That when the agents, servants and employees aforesaid first attempted to make the coupling with the four cars aforesaid, they saw the deceased going towards said passway and saw his perilous or apparently perilous position in time to have warned him of the danger in trying to cross said track through said passway, or by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence could have seen him and warned him of the danger in trying to cross said track through said passway or could have placed a watchman at said passway, while they were attempting to make the coupling aforesaid, or they could have waited until he crossed said track before making the same effort to couple said cars, and knowing the dangerous position and peril of the deceased, or -which by *494 the exercise of ordinary diligence could have known, they, the said servants, agents and employees of the defendant, without giving him any signal or warning and without waiting for him to cross said-track, caused the engine and car attached thereto aforesaid to strike and run against the four cars aforesaid with such force that they were pushed or shoved across the passway aforesaid and against the cars standing on the west side thereof.”

Defendant offered no evidence and stood on its demurrer.

The-first question which naturally suggests itself is whether or not the defendant company was guilty of negligence. By reason of his long employment deceased was more or less familiar with railroad operation and particularly with the movements of switching cars in the switch yards, which the evidence shows he crossed very frequently. He knew how switching operations were performed. The members of the switching crew must also have known that deceased was familiar with the manner in which such work was performed. The foreman caught a glimpse of deceased near the corner of the yard house fifty or sixty feet away, apparently approaching the transfer track. He was not seen thereafter until he was injured. If the foreman had continued to observe him and the other members of the crew had seen him approaching the track, they would only have seen a man familiar with switching operations and an old employee of the railroad company approaching the track. They would have seen him clearly because it was broad daylight and they must be regarded as knowing that deceased could plainly, see them and see the engineer attempting to couple on to the cars. They had no reason to think, with such knowledge on deceased’s part, that he would not seasonably stop. [State ex rel. v. Reynolds, 233 S. W. 219, l. c. 222.] They had no reason to think that he would negligently attempt to pass through the opening between the cars until it *495 was apparent there was no danger in doing so. The deceased was himself guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to pass between cars when, in plain sight, and not over two hundred feet away, an engine was attempting to couple onto them. It was his business to look to see what switching movements were being made. To have looked would have been to have seen. But, if the case comes within the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, contributory negligence of the deceased is not a complete defense, and at this stage of the case we are only considering the negligence of the defendant.

We think the rule governing liability for injuries to section men and others working on or near the track applies in the present case. At least, the reasoning which governs the rule laid down in that sort of cases applies here. An engineer is under no duty to slow up his engine when approaching section men working on the track. [Degonia v. Railroad, 224 Mo. l. c. 592; Evans v. Wabash, 178 Mo. l. c. 517; Cahill v. Railroad, 205 Mo. l. c. 408.] The reason for the rule laid down in these and similar cases is that section men are supposed to know the time schedules of the various trains and to be familiar with their movements and to look out for' themselves. The same rule has been applied to a yard clerk whose duty took him to all points of the switch yards. See Rashall v. Railroad, 249 Mo. 513, wherein it was held that the railroad company owed no duty to look out for an employee, unless he was actually seen in a perilous position.

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72 S.W.2d 988 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)
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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 915, 296 Mo. 487, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammontree-v-payne-mo-1922.