Johnson v. Terminal Railroad Assn.

8 S.W.2d 891, 320 Mo. 884, 61 A.L.R. 572, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 700
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 891 (Johnson v. Terminal Railroad Assn.) 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
Johnson v. Terminal Railroad Assn., 8 S.W.2d 891, 320 Mo. 884, 61 A.L.R. 572, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 700 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*886 BLAIR, J.

James E. F. Nexsen instituted this action in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis for damages sustained by him as the result of the alleged negligence of appellant. The jury found for him and assessed his damages at the sum of $30,000. The trial court compelled a remittitur of $15,000. Judgment was then entered for plaintiff in the sum of $15,000, and an appeal was granted to this court.

Upon suggestion that Nexsen had died since the appeal was granted, his administratrix was permitted to enter her appearance in this court and to bo substituted as party respondent. The case fell to Division Two, where an opinion was written affirming the judgment of the trial court. One of the judges of that division dissenting, the case was transferred to the Court on Banc. After argument in this court, the divisional opinion was rejected and the case was reassigned to the writer.

The action was brought under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act. That appellant was engaged in interstate commerce is admitted, and that Nexsen was engaged in such commerce at the time of his injury seems to be conceded in this court. The amended petition alleged that Nexsen was injured in attempting to “chock” a moving freight car which a fellow-servant had negligently failed *887 to “chock.” The alleged negligence of such fellow-servant is tlic sole negligence charged against appellant in the petition. The answer contained a general denial and pleaded assumed risk upon the part of Nexsen and that whatever injuries he sustained were the result of his own negligence. The reply was a general denial of matters set up in the answer.

The facts are developed solely from the evidence offered by the plaintiff, as appellant stood on its demurrer thereto. Nexsen was a member of the switching crew which was at work in the yards of appellant near Sixteenth and Poplar streets in St. Louis. Nexsen wras what was termed a “long field” man, whose duties, as described by himself, were as follows: “I was supposed to make all the couplings of cars that went up over Poplar Street, that were kicked in, see they were tied together and stop them. When they went into the switch track the foreman would give me the number on a car to go back and cut behind that car.”

The “short field” man was one Sherman, whose general duties Nexsen described as follows: “ILe was to watch out ahead of the engine, if they went, around a curve, for signals, and get down and throw the signals. And I would line up the Sixteenth Street yard from there to Thirteenth. And to look out for them.”

Nexsen was a switchman and was thoroughly familiar with the Sixteenth Street yards, where the accident occurred. Poplar Street extends approximately east and west. The tracks pass around a curve south of Poplar Street and cross it and are laid almost directly north from the south side of said street. It was down grade as the tracks approached Poplar Street from the south.

At about 9:40 o’clock at night on October 10, 1922, the switching crew was at work in said yards. It was then raining and quite dark. The engine of Nexsen’s crew “kicked” a freight car onto the east track in the yards. It was Sherman’s duty as short field man to stop the car by chocking' it. By this operation is meant the placing in front of the wheel of a car a block of wood large and heavy enough to arrest the ear’s movement and bring it to a stop without the use of brakes.

Nexsen could see Sherman at work about four hundred feet South at the point where the car should have been chocked. As the car which had been kicked on to the east track proceeded northward down grade toward Poplar Street, Sherman, for some unexplained reason, failed to perform his duty and put the chock under the car. Nexsen was standing at about the south line of Poplar Street and the fourth track from the east side of the yards when he discovered that Sherman had failed to stop the moving freight car and that it had passed him and was gathering speed and would certainly collide *888 with some loaded freight cars standing north of Poplar Street unless it was stopped. The car was about four ear lengths south of Poplar Street when Nexsen first discovered its approach. He picked up a chock and ran toward the ear and got safely across in front of it. He then placed the chock on the east rail in front of the wheel. As he raised up the end sill of the moving car struck him on the left shoulder and knocked him down. His left leg was caught under the wheels and was mangled to such extent that amputation between the hip and knee became necessary.

The only negligence charged against appellant was the negligence of its servant Sherman in failing to chock the moving car, thereby causing Nexsen to attempt to stop it to avoid a collision between that car and the cars standing north of Poplar Street. It is obvious that Nexsen would not have been injured because of Sherman’s negligence had he not undertaken to avert the consequences of such negligence by attempting to stop the car. This act of Nexsen is said by appellant to have been the proximate cause of his injury. It is contended that the negligence of Sherman was not such proximate cause. This defense is available to appellant under the general denial in its answer, because it goes to the heart of appellant’s case and tends to defeat the allegation of the petition that Nexsen’s injury was caused by Sherman’s negligence.

We agree with appellant and think that the negligence of Sherman was not the proximate cause of Nexsen’s injury. Sherman’s failure to chock the moving freight car when it reached him was merely one of the conditions which brought about the situation making possible the accident and injury to Nexsen. [Illinois State Trust Co. Admr., v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. (Mo. Sup.), 5 S. W. (2d) 368.] Nexsen detailed his duties and chocking the car, under the circumstances hero disclosed, was not one of them. As a witness, he volunteered the statement that “I didn’t have no right to chock that car. T wasn’t supposed to chock it.” This statement was stricken out on motion of appellant’s counsel as not responsive to any question asked the witness. However, the entire record discloses that this voluntary statement was quite correct. The only result which could reasonably have been anticipated from the negligent act of Sherman in failing to chock the car was damage to the loaded freight cars standing north of Poplar Street. There is nothing in the record to show that the life or limb of any person was in danger by the failure of Sherman to chock the car. Nexsen’s act in voluntarily exposing himself to danger by going in front of the rapidly moving freight car cannot be justified on the “imminent peril” doctrine. In our decisions that doctrine only applies where it appears that the act was necessary to save life or limb. [Eversole v. Wabash *889 Railroad Co., 249 Mo. 523, 155 S. W. 419; McManamee v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co., 135 Mo. 440, 37 S. W. 119; Hill v. Cotton Oil Co., 202 Mo. App. 478, 214 S. W. 419.]

The case of Bacon v. Payne (Mich.), 190 N. W. 716, cited by appellant, is quite like the ease at bar. Deceased was foreman of a section crew.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 891, 320 Mo. 884, 61 A.L.R. 572, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-terminal-railroad-assn-mo-1928.