Jackson v. Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis Railroad

58 S.W. 32, 157 Mo. 621, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 30, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 58 S.W. 32 (Jackson v. Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis 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
Jackson v. Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis Railroad, 58 S.W. 32, 157 Mo. 621, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 51 (Mo. 1900).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This is an action by tbe widow of Samuel Jackson, deceased, to recover of defendant tbe sum of five thousand dollars for tbe death of her husband, which occurred June 12, 1895, at West Plains, Missouri, through being struck by one of defendant’s passenger trains as he was walking across the railroad track in its yards at that place.

The petition alleged “that on said day and long prior thereto there was duly passed and in force an ordinance in the said city of West Plains, regulating the speed of railroad trains and cars within the corporate limits of said city, and prohibiting and making it unlawful for trains and cars to be run within said corporate limits at a greater rate of speed than six miles per hour; that on the said twelfth day of June, 1895, the said Samuel Jackson started across defendant’s said railroad track near its depot in said city of West Plains and within the corporate limits of said city, and at a point where divers persons ever have and do cross said track, and while so crossing said track and just as he was across and leaving the same, he, the said Samuel Jackson, was struck .and instantly killed by one of defendant’s passenger trains, then and there being run and operated by defendant’s agents, servants and employees; that the said Samuel Jackson was, .at the time of his death, eighty-eight years of age, and feeble and infirm in body and in mind; that at the time said •Jackson was struck and killed as aforesaid by defendant’s train of cars as aforesaid, the said train was being run negligently and carelessly at a great rate of speed, and far in excess of six miles per hour. Plaintiff says that by reason of the negligence and carelessness of defendant’s agents, servants and employees, in running and operating said passenger train at a great and rapid speed and in violation of said ordinance in said city of' West Plains, the said Samuel Jackson [628]*628was struck and killed, by reason of which plaintiff says she is damaged in the sum of five thousand dollars, for which she-prays judgment.”

The defenses were a general denial, that deceased was a trespasser upon defendant’s tracks, that his death resulted from his own negligence, and negligence upon the part' of plaintiff in permitting her husband to wander away from bis home unattended, and to walk along and upon defendant’s track at the time and place where the accident occurred.

Deceased was far advanced in life, being at the time of his 'death over eighty-eight years of age, and very feeble in body and mind. His disposition was to wander away from home. His mental weakness was such that he could not remember localities, and after being absent from home a few hours upon being returned thereto he would not at times recognize it. On the morning of the accident, the plaintiff after washing the breakfast dishes, went to a grocery store to purchase something for dinner. When she left, deceased was sitting outside of the house, but during her absence he had gotten up and gone elsewhere, and she started out to find . him. She had gone but a short distance when she was informed that he had been struck by a train.

At the time of the trial she was seventy-two years of age. They were poor people and lived alone.

It does not appear where deceased was or went, after his wife left him outside his house, until he was seen walking-westerly between defendant’s tracks in its yards at West Plains north of its stock yards and between the public crossings of two streets, Lincoln and Washington avenues, which .are about 800 feet apart.

Defendant’s main track runs through West Plains in an easterly direction, crossing a bridge or trestle as it approaches from the west on a slight curve, running thence-about 300 feet to the crossing of Lincoln avenue, just west [629]*629of which a sidetrack branches off on the southern side of the main line. Prom Lincoln avenue the tracks run in practically'a. straight line through the railroad yards, past the stock yards, coal house, a warehouse and the freight depot, a distance as has already been stated, of about 800 feet, to Washington avenue. About 130 feet east of the Lincoln avenue ■crossing, another sidetrack branches off on the north side of the main line and runs easterly. It was near this point of divergence of the north sidetrack (just west of it) that deceased was struck by the train, which was a regular passenger train coming from the west. The west end of the passenger station is about 150 feet east of Washington avenue crossing, and therefore about 820 feet east of the point of collision, about 950 feet east of the Lincoln avenue crossing and about 1,250 feet east of the bridge or trestle referred to.

When first seen about the railroad yards, deceased was-walking between defendant’s main track and the south sidetrack in a westerly direction and was some 200 feet east of Lincoln avenue. There was a wide space between the tracks of some six or eight feet, filled up with cinders, making a sort of path from Lincoln avenue crossing eastward to Washington avenue.

Mr. Jackson was walking along slowly between these tracks in a place of perfect safety, facing west, with the train approaching him from the west, and, when only about thirty feet, or at the outside, sixty feet from the train, he turned at right angles to the north and stepped upon the track on which the train was approaching. The engineer immediately applied his air-brakes, sounded an alarm, and did everything possible to stop the train, but before he could accomplish it the engine struck the old gentleman and knocked him off the track on the north side. When the train stopped he was about three car-lengths behind the engine, that is, the train had not entirely passed his body.

[630]*630The evidence shows what the engineer did, as soon as- and after deceased started to step upon the main track, and there is no suggestion in the testimony that anything else could have been done to stop the train quicker than it was stopped, or that anything could have been done by defendant’s employees, which would have prevented the collision.

Over defendant’s objection the city’s mayor was allowed to read, from what he said was the journal of the proceedings of the board of aldermen, a section of an alleged ordinance as follows:

“Section 2. No locomotive engine or train of cars shall be run within the corporate limits of this city at a greater rate of speed than ten miles per hour; provided further, that the rate of speed of such locomotive engine or train when crossing any street crossing, shall not exceed the rate of six miles per hour.” And said witness was also permitted to testify orally that the ordinance was “passed and approved February 16, 1894.”

There was evidence tending to show that at the time of the accident the train was running at a greater rate of speed than ten miles per hour, but upon this question the evidence was conflicting. The engineer testified that he saw Jackson when in about thirty or forty feet of him, and that he then applied the air brakes and reversed the engine’s power, and that he judged in passing over Lincoln avenue he was running eight or nine miles per hour.

At the close of all the evidence- defendant interposed a demurrer to the evidence, which was refused, and it duly excepted.

Then, at the request of plaintiff, the court, over the objection of defendant, instructed the jury as follows:

, . “1.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W. 32, 157 Mo. 621, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-kansas-city-fort-scott-memphis-railroad-mo-1900.