Huckleberry v. Missouri Pacific Railroad

26 S.W.2d 980, 324 Mo. 1025, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 26 S.W.2d 980 (Huckleberry v. Missouri Pacific 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
Huckleberry v. Missouri Pacific Railroad, 26 S.W.2d 980, 324 Mo. 1025, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 435 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

Claud Huckleberry and Anna Huckleberry commenced an action in the Circuit Court of Lafayette County, Missouri, against the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, for the alleged wrongful death of their unmarried minor son, John C. Huckleberry. Upon change of venue and stipulation filed the case was transferred to the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, at Kansas City. Claud Huckleberry died and the action was further prosecuted by the other plaintiff, Anna Huckleberry. At the trial plaintiff suffered an involuntary nonsuit with leave to move to set aside. Her motion to set aside this order and judgment was overruled, and she has appealed.

John C. Huckleberry died of injuries caused by contact with burning vapor from gasoline spilled along defendant's right of way near Dodson, Missouri, July 20, 1921. Plaintiff went to trial on her amended petition alleging that on said date defendant was operating a freight train in an interstate movement over its track about one-half mile southwest of Dodson; that through its carelessness and negligence said train was then and there derailed and wrecked, so that tank cars filled with gasoline were overturned and broken open and their highly explosive and inflammable contents were negligently allowed to saturate and cover the ground and flow along defendant's right of way and become ignited and burn the deceased; that in violation of the terms and provisions of certain regulations prescribed by the Interstate Commerce Commission pursuant to the Act of Congress of March 4, 1909, and Section 15 of the Act to Regulate Commerce, and amendments thereto, it negligently failed to cover said spilled gasoline with dry earth or with any other substance before using its engines in the vicinity thereof, or to have said gasoline collected in available vessels or drained into a hole or depression at a safe distance from the track, and negligently permitted, authorized and encouraged the deceased and other persons to go upon the ground where said gasoline was spilled and carry the same away while its engine and steam derrick were working in the vicinity, and negligently brought its said engines and the fire, sparks and flames in and from the same near said leaking and partially empty *Page 1031 gasoline tanks and engaged with said steam derrick and locomotive and chain slings and other appliances in hooking and lifting a box car in the vicinity of the said tracks, thereby causing sudden shocks, jars and friction producing sparks. The petition also alleged that said gasoline threw off a highly inflammable vapor which spread over the vicinity and with the operation of said engines rendered the position of the deceased one of imminent peril, of which defendant had notice, and that defendant violated its humanitarian and common law duties to the deceased, and also created and maintained a nuisance that caused deceased to be injured under the circumstances pleaded.

Defendant's amended answer was a general denial, and the further plea that the deceased was a trespasser, that he had full knowledge and notice of all hazards and danger of injury to himself, that he negligently failed to exercise reasonable care for his own safety and voluntarily assumed all the perils of the situation, and that the regulations set forth in plaintiff's amended petition were not formulated, adopted or promulgated by the Interstate Commerce Commission, or if so said Commission did not have any power or authority so to do, and that said regulations, if formulated, adopted or promulgated by said Commission, were and are unreasonable and not binding on this defendant in regard to the performance of any acts done by the defendant at and prior to the injury of deceased.

At the conclusion of plaintiff's evidence, defendant offered a peremptory instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which the court indicated would be sustained, whereupon plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave to move to set same aside, resulting in this appeal as above stated.

Plaintiff's evidence, construed as it should be most favorably to the allegations of her petition, tended to show that about 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon of July 20, 1921, defendant's freight train, which included some gasoline-filled tank cars bound from Osawatomie, Kansas, to Kansas City, Missouri, was wrecked south of Dodson before reaching its destination; that gasoline was spilled from some of the derailed tank cars from that time until about seven o'clock in the evening of the same day; that a considerable stream of this gasoline was permitted to flow from the overturned tank cars during all of this time along a ravine running north on defendant's right of way and about twenty feet west of its tracks, which were laid on a fill about fifteen feet above the bottom of the ravine; that defendant's agents, servants and employees dug trenches and holes along the ravine, but made no effort to cover the gasoline with earth or other substance, and many persons thereupon came on defendant's right of way and in the presence of defendant's foreman, agents, servants and employees, without reproof or hindrance, dipped *Page 1032 up and carried away gasoline as it flowed out of said tank cars and down this ravine and collected in these open holes and trenches; that the atmosphere in that vicinity became so saturated with gasoline vapor that the fumes were noticeable for a distance of a thousand feet west of the ravine; that about six o'clock the deceased, who was then between sixteen and seventeen years of age, in company with another boy and a man named Elliott, entered upon defendant's right of way and paused while Elliott called to a man, who from his motions was apparently directing defendant's wrecking crew which had just arrived from the north with a locomotive and steam derrick, that a lot of good gasoline was going to waste, and this man replied: "Help yourselves; there is plenty;" that deceased thereupon stood by and watched his companions dip gasoline from an open pool or basin three feet or more in width and six or eight inches deep filled with gasoline in the bottom of the ravine about a car-length south of an overturned tank car; that within a few minutes thereafter defendant's crew, without warning deceased of his peril, started the engines to work, the locomotive being north and the steam derrick about thirty feet south of where deceased and his companions were situated in plain view of defendant's foreman and crew; that while deceased and his companions were still so situated and engaged, and while gasoline was flowing down said ravine and the air in that vicinity was mixed with vapor therefrom, defendant's wrecking crew, apparently in charge of the man who had told deceased and his companions to help themselves to the gasoline, undertook to lift or move one of the disabled cars by means of said locomotive, steam derrick and chains; that one of the engines thereupon gave several puffs emitting sparks and fire, some of which fell into uncovered gasoline and vapor along said ravine a short distance north of the place where deceased and his companions were, and ignited the same, burning John C. Huckleberry so that he died about nine days later.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W.2d 980, 324 Mo. 1025, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huckleberry-v-missouri-pacific-railroad-mo-1930.