Henry Ex Rel. Henry v. Illinois Central Railroad

3 S.W.2d 1004, 319 Mo. 432, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 661
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 17, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 1004 (Henry Ex Rel. Henry v. Illinois Central 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
Henry Ex Rel. Henry v. Illinois Central Railroad, 3 S.W.2d 1004, 319 Mo. 432, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 661 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*434 GANTT, J.

Action for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff as the result of the negligence of defendant. He was injured at a public crossing in Belleville, Illinois, where defendant’s track, running east and west, crosses 17th Street, running north and south.- . This is the second appeal, and the opinion on the former appeal will be found in 282 S. W. 423. .

The petition contained a number of charges of negligence, but plaintiff went to.the jury on only two of them: (1) failure to give the bell and whistle signal; and (2) the humanitarian doctrine.

. ■ The answer of defendant admitted its corporate existence, its operation of a railroad in the State of Illinois, that on May 15, 1921, plaintiff sustained an injury in Belleville, which resulted in the amputation of his left arm; and denied all the other allegations of the petition. The remainder of the answer attacked the validity of certain ordinances pleaded in the. petition, but those ordinances were abandoned. Judgment was for plaintiff for $15,000, and defendant appealed.

There was evidence pro and eon that the bell and whistle signal was given. Defendant concedes that if plaintiff was standing on the *435 crossing at the time mentioned in his testimony he was in plain view of the engineer and fireman, who testified they were at their post of duty, and that the engine could have been stopped many times before injury to the boy.

Plaintiff contends that at the time he was injured he was standing on the south rail of defendant’s track at the 17th Street crossing, with his back toward the east, and that he was struck by an engine moving westward over said crossing.

Defendant contends plaintiff was not so injured, but that he was injured about ninety feet west of the. crossing as a result pf having been pushed down the bank by his brother Howard against the engine or ear as the train was passing.

The facts are as follows: Plaintiff resided with his parents at 10 N. 15th Street in Belleville. On Sunday, May 15, 1921, Frank Marsh, a friend of plaintiff’s brother, Howard Henry, dined with the Henry family. Immediately after the noonday meal the Henry boys and Marsh started to the Marsh home, about three-fourths of a mile west of the Henry home. Howard was eleven, Frank ten, and plaintiff, Lawrence, eight years old. The older boys .ran west to 17th Street, then south on 17th across defendant’s track, then west up a bank that ran west from the west side of said street and parallel to and near defendant’s unfenced track. From the time the boys left the Henry home plaintiff, though running, could not keep up with the older boys. He testified that when he reached 17th Street he was out of breath and tired, which caused him to slow up as he crossed said street; that he- continued slowly south on the west side of said street to defendant’s track, where he stopped on the south rail to rest; that he stood there with his back towards the east, crying and appealing to the boys to wait for him; that while in this position some part of the front of the engine stirnek the left side of his back, became entangled in his clothing so that he was dragged ninety feet from the west line of 17th Street, and there the hold of the engine upon liis.clothing broke and he fell south of the track; that he arose and ascended the sloping bank, where he was met by Howard and Frank in response to his cries; that they- assisted him to 17th Street, and there two men assisted him to the residence of Mr. Steakhouse, where he was given first aid and then taken to a hospital in Belle-ville, where his arm was amputated that day.

Howard,Henry testified that when he reached the top of the bank west of 17th Street he looked back and saw plaintiff standing on the track at the 17th Street crossing; that he continued west and did not see an engine, train or plaintiff from that time until the engine and train were passing a point directly north of him; that at this time Frank Marsh, who was following, called his attention to the cries of *436 plaintiff, whereupon they went to his assistance, met him about the time he got to the top of the bank and assisted him to 17th Street and turned him over to two men who assisted him to the residence of Mr. Steakhouse; that he and Frank then hurried to the Henry home to inform plaintiff’s parents of his injury. As they went over the 17th Street crossing he found Lawrence’s cap near the south raiL of the track and just a few feet west of the west line of 17th Street.

Mrs. Ethel Eicker testified for plaintiff, as follows: that she resided with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brewer, at the northwest intersection of the railroad right-of-way and 17th Street on May 15, 1921; that on this day and about nóon time she and her mother were cleaning up the dinner dishes, and she went from the kitchen to throw scraps to the chickens in a pen in the back yard. When she reached the south porch she heard plaintiff crying, and, looking across toward the east, saw him standing on the south side of the railroad track right at the crossing; that no train was in sight at that time, and she went to the west end of the lot to the chicken pen, threw the scraps to the chickens and started east toward the house. Just before she reached the porch a train, moving westward, was passing, and she heard loud screams. When the train had passed she saw plaintiff going up the bank south of the right-of-way and saw the older boys coming down to meet him; that she did not see plaintiff when he was injured by the train.

Members of plaintiff’s family testified as follows: that plaintiff’s clothing' at the time of his injury consisted solely of a waist, pair of trousers and cap; that the left sleeve of his waist was torn all the way down and his left trouser leg was torn; that the skin and flesh were torn into strips from shortly below his left shoulder to the tips of his fingers, and his left side was scratched and bruised.

■ David Stein testified that he went to the place where plaintiff was injured and picked up a piece of flesh or skin as big as a penny, hanging' on the edge of the rail about thirty feet west of the west line of 17th Street, and another piece of flesh or skin on the track about forty feet west of said line. “I heard others say, ‘There’s another piece; there’s'another piece,’ but I didn’t pay any attention to that.”

The engineer and fireman testified the train had been cut in two some distance east of the crossing, for the reason the engine could not pull the train up the grade and over the crossing; that as they proceeded west toward the crossing with the front part of the train they were alone on the engine, occupied their seats and were looking westward as they approached the crossing and passed over it; that they did not see plaintiff or anyone on or near the crossing; that they knew nothing' of the injury until they passed over the crossing on their return trip "eastward for the balance of the train.

*437 A number of witnesses called by defendant testified to having gone to the scene of the accident shortly- after t'he occurrence and to having walked up and down the track between 17th Street and the signal box, looking for signs that would indicate where and how the accident occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 1004, 319 Mo. 432, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-ex-rel-henry-v-illinois-central-railroad-mo-1928.