Holland v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

109 S.W. 19, 210 Mo. 338, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 17, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 109 S.W. 19 (Holland 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
Holland v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 109 S.W. 19, 210 Mo. 338, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 62 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

BURGESS, J. —

This suit was instituted by plaintiff to recover the statutory penalty of five.’ thousand dollars for the death of her husband, John Holland, who was killed by one of defendant’s engines through the alleged negligence of defendant’s servants in operating said engine.

The deceased was run over and killed on February 25, 1904, about 8:10 p. m., by one of defendant’s engines attached to a passenger'train going south on Fifth street, in the city of St. Joseph. This street ran north and south, and the Burlington Railway Company had its tracks laid thereon for a distance of seven or eight blocks, and the defendant, under a contract with the Burlington company, operated its trains over the same tracks. The street, while occupied by railroad tracks, was also used as a public thoroughfare by pedestrians. There were two main tracks on Fifth street, the east track being used for north-bound trains, and the west track for south-bound trains.

Cedar street crosses Fifth street, and north of Cedar street is a cross-over track connecting the two main tracks, which cross-over track connected with the west track at a point about 225 feet north of Cedar street, and connected with the east track at the north line of-Cedar street. All passenger trains going south took this cross-over, passing from the west to the east track, but all freight trains going south did not do so, but kept on the west track. There was a switch at each end of said cross-over' track, and switchmen to operate them.

John Holland, the deceased, was about sixty years of age, and was a section hand in the employ of the Burlington railroad at the time he was killed. He was walking north on Fifth street between the two main tracks, and was struck by the engine of the train when he reached the cross-over track, while the engine was ■crossing from the west to the east track. , The head[344]*344light on the engine was shining brightly at the time, and there was no obstruction to prevent deceased from seeing the approaching train.

A. H. Rehard, who was fireman on the engine in question, testified that he saw Holland walking north between the tracks. The last time he saw him before he was struck Holland was at‘ about the south frog between the two tracks,” and was still coming north. As the engine had at this time entered the cross-over track, and was headed in a southeasterly direction, witness, who was on the left side of the engine, was unable to see Holland after that, the engine obstructing his vision. He did not think deceased was at the time in a position of danger, and he gave no warning to the engineer. He said he rang the bell continually from the time the train left the Union station up to the time deceased was struck; that the train was running about five miles an hour at the time he last saw deceased between the tracks; that a train going at that rate of speed could be stopped in twenty or twenty-five feet by use of the air brake; that from the time he last saw the man before he was struck the train did not run more than fifteen or twenty feet before the air brakes were applied, and that the train ran twenty-five or thirty feet after the application of the air-brakes. This witness also testified that the train stopped or almost stopped at Oak street, which was one block north of Cedar street, for the reason that the east track was blocked by a Burlington train which was standing at the water tank south of Cedar street, the rear car of the Burlington train being about on a line with the north line of Cedar street, and that the engine on which witness was did not cross over till the Burlington train had pulled out.

Witness Frank Hahn, testifying for the plaintiff, said that he was a laborer and had been around railroads all his life. He lived on the corner of Fifth and [345]*345Cedar streets, and on the night in question he was going up town on 5th street. When within about fifty feet of Sycamore street, which was the fourth street north of Cedar, a Missouri Pacific passenger train passed him going south, which he said was running at a speed of twenty-five miles an hour. There was no bell ringing on the train as it passed by him. Just as he reached the other side of Sycamore street he heard the train whistle several times in quick succession, from which he understood that there was a man or some obstruction on the track. He looked back and saw the train standing near Cedar street. • Going back to where the train was he found that Holland had been removed from under the engine, the front end of which, he judged, was opposite a switch stand on the north side of Cedar street. The next day witness examined the place on the track where deceased was run over, and noticed that some object had been dragged along the track which made an impression in the ground about half an inch deep for a distance of about forty feet. The dragging, he said, had been done along the west rail of the east track, and commenced at the frog or point where the cross-over track converged with the west rail of the east track. Witness did not know what had made this impression, but thought it was made by a sack of coal which deceased had with him. He did not see any train standing south of Cedar street as he got on the track that evening, as testified to by witness Rehard, nor did he think that the Missouri Pacific train which passed by him and killed the deceased made any stop after it passed by him until deceased had been killed.

Plaintiff in her petition pleaded, and also introduced in evidence, over'the objection of defendant, section 2 of a special ordinance of the city of St. Joseph granting the Burlington Railroad the right to lay and maintain tracks on Fifth street, which section provided:

[346]*346“Said railroad company shall not have the right to run their cars over the right of way herein granted at a greater rate of speed than five miles per hour, and the city council may by ordinance prescribe the penalty for violation of this section.”

Plaintiff also pleaded in her petition, and introduced in evidence, sections 1 and 6 of a general ordinance of the city of St. Joseph, which are as follows:

“Section 1. No locomotive engine, railroad joassenger car or freight car shall be driven, propelled or ran upon or along any railroad track within said city at a greater speed than the rate of five miles per hour. ’ ’
“Section 6. Bell to be Bung. The bell -of each locomotive engine shall be rung continually while running within said city.”

The defendant offered no testimony, but at the close of plaintiff’s case asked for a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant, which was by the court refused, and defendant excepted.

The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $5,000', and judgment was rendered accordingly, from which judgment, after ineffectual motions for a new trial' and in arrest, defendant appeals.

Defendant insists that there is no evidence whatever to support the verdict of the jury.

There were but two witnesses whose testimony tended to show how the accident occurred, both being-introduced by the plaintiff, one of said witnesses, A. PI. Rehard, being fireman upon defendant’s train at the time of the accident, the other witness being Frank Plahn, a laborer,, who lived at that time at the northwest corner of Cedar and Fifth streets. The latter’s testimony was that when the train passed him at Fifth and Sycamore streets it was, in his judgment, running at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 S.W. 19, 210 Mo. 338, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1908.