Hanlon v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

104 Mo. 381
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 104 Mo. 381 (Hanlon v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) 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
Hanlon v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 104 Mo. 381 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Macfarlane, J.

— This is a suit for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff under the following circumstances :

Plaintiff was in the employ of John O’Brien, who was a manufacturer of boilers and sheet-iron goods in St. Louis. On December 13, 1887, plaintiff, with Murphy and Dickson, two other employes of O ’ Brien, were [385]*385sent with a smokestack about twenty feet long and three feet in diameter, from the factory on the corner of Main and Biddle streets to the depot of the Iron Mountain railroad*

The smokestack was loaded upon a wagon drawn by one mulé; Murphy drove, Dickson rode on the front end of the .wagon with the driver and plaintiff on the back end of the smokestack. Along the levee running north and south are located the tracks of the Iron Mountain railway, four in number. Poplar street runs east and west and intersects the levee. The next parallel street south of Poplar is Plum, the second, Cedar, and the third, Gratiot. The distance from Poplar to Gratiot street is about one thousand feet. Spruce street runs also east and west, and intersects the levee north of Poplar street. Poplar street extends west to the Union Depot and upon this street defendant company has a track connecting its road with that of the Iron Mountain and the elevators on the levee. The Iron Mountain depot or platform is east of the tracks on the levee. The mule and wagon were driven down Spruce street to the levee and had proceeded to within about twenty feet of the north line of Gratiot street, when an engine on one of the railroad tracks was observed meeting them from the south. The wagon was stopped, and the engine also stopped a short distance in front of the wagon.

At Gratiot street it was the intention of those in charge of the wagon to cross the tracks of the railroad, that being the most direct route to the point to which they were going. The wagon was kept standing either on or very near the west track, a few minutes, to see if the engine in front of it would get out of the way. The engine remaining stationary, the driver of the wagon concluded to change his route and turn up Gratiot street. The distance between the curbing on the corner of Gratiot street and the first rail of the railroad track to the east was five feet. The wagon had been standing on this space, with possibly one wheel over [386]*386the rail. Owing to the projection of the smokestack to the rear of the wagon, the driver thought it necessary, in order to make the turn into Gratiot street, to pull first a little to the left, which brought the wagon over the first rail of the track.

Plaintiff, sitting on or in the rear end of the smokestack, had been giving his attention to the engine in front of him, as also had the two men in the front end of the wagon. While standing, none of them had looked back north to ascertain whether engines or trains were approaching from that direction. About the time the wagon passed over the rail, some one in front of the wagon called to plaintiff and the other two men on it to jump or they would be killed. On looking back an engine drawing a train of twenty freight cars was discovered coming south on the first track, nearly upon the wagon. Plaintiff jumped about the time the train collided with the wagon, from which he received the injuries for which he sues. Plaintiff and his companions all testify that the bell on the engine that struck the wagon was not ringing. The evidence tended to prove that, when the freight train turned from Poplar street onto the levee, the wagon was noticed by the engineer in charge, standing close by or upon the track; that the train was running at the rate of three miles per hour and could have been stopped within the space of two hundred feet. The engineer and fireman both testified that the bell on the engine was ringing continuously, from the time it started on Poplar street, until the collision.

The petition charged negligence in the manner in which the engine and cars were managed and moved. It also charged negligence in its failure to have a watchman stationed at the intersection of Gratiot street and the-levee ; in its failure to display proper signals at the intersection of said streets; in running said train at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour ; and in its failure to ring the bell on its engine continuously, [387]*387all alleged to be in violation of the requirements of certain ordinances of the city. Defendant’s answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The reply denied contributory negligence.

I. At the close of all the evidence defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that the evidence was not sufficient, under the pleadings, to authorize a verdict for plaintiff. This the court refused, and defendant now insists that it committed error in not doing so.

There was no evidence that the train which collided with the wagon was running at a rate of speed in excess of six miles per hour, nor that the collision occurred by-reason of a failure to keep a watchman at the intersection of Grratiot street with the levee, and, therefore, the charges of negligence in regard to the speed of the train and the duty to keep a watchman and give signals at street intersections were not sustained, and are eliminated from the case. No instruction was asked, or given, on the hypothesis of negligence in these particulars, and we may assume that these charges were abandoned.

We are then only to determine whether there was evidence tending to prove the remaining charges, and if so whether there was such concurring negligence on the part of plaintiff as would defeat his recovery notwithstanding the negligence of defendant.

The ordinance required the bell, on a moving engine, to be rung continuously, and it is well settled that a failure to observe such reasonable and wholesome requirements constitutes negligence in itself. Karle v. Railroad, 55 Mo. 477; Murray v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 236. Such negligence alone will warrant a recovery when it appears that obedience to the requirements of the ordinance would have prevented the injury, but not otherwise. Karle v. Railroad, 55 Mo. 482; Zimmerman v. Railroad, 71 Mo. 476; Barkley v. Railroad, 96 Mo. 367; Hudson v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 18; Henry v. Railroad, 76 Mo. 293.

[388]*388Two or three witnesses who were in a situation to hear, and who were in a position that should have caused them to listen, testified either that no bell was rung, or that they heard none ring. On the other hand two or three witnesses, who should have known, testified positively that the bell was kept ringing continually. While the testimony of these witnesses, testifying positively to the fact of which their situation at the time gave them positive knowledge, entitles their testimony to greater weight, in the absence of discrediting circumstances, than those testifying negatively to the same fact, still the circumstances surrounding the collision, the situation of the witnesses, the remoteness in time of the occurrence, and the credibility of the witnesses, were all to be taken into account to determine the fact whether or not the bell was rufig. Under such conflict in the evidence, the court could not pronounce upon its conclusiveness, or weight even, as a matter of law. We must, therefore, conclude that there was evidence that the bell was not- rung as required by the ordinance. Murray v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 236.

Neither can it be said as a matter of law, that the injury might not have been prevented had the signals been given.

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104 Mo. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanlon-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1891.