Jones v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.

108 S.W.2d 94, 341 Mo. 640, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 457
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 108 S.W.2d 94 (Jones v. Chicago, Rock Island & 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
Jones v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co., 108 S.W.2d 94, 341 Mo. 640, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 457 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

On May 29, 1933, plaintiff's husband, John Jones, their daughter Mary Virginia, age thirteen years, and plaintiff were riding in an automobile driven by plaintiff's husband. The automobile was struck by one of defendant railway company's trains, operated by defendant Grover Wright, as motorman, on the crossing of a public road or highway and the railroad track at Settles Station in Platte County. Plaintiff's husband and daughter were killed and plaintiff sustained serious personal injuries. The petition is in three counts. The first count is for damages for the death of plaintiff's husband, the second, for the death of her minor daughter, and the third, for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff. Each count in identical language, charges the defendants with various acts of negligence including humanitarian negligence. The action was instituted in the Circuit Court of Clinton County where, upon a trial, the verdict of the jury, and judgment thereon, was for defendants; from which judgment plaintiff brings this appeal. The first and second counts each pray damages in the sum of $10,000 and the third count alleges damages in the amount of $30,000, hence our jurisdiction.

Plaintiff's instruction submitted negligence, under the humanitarian rule as the sole ground of recovery by plaintiff and liability of defendants. Her given instructions numbered 1, 2 and 3 apply to the first, second and the third counts of the petition respectively. Except as to the direction to find for plaintiff upon the count submitted by the particular instruction the instructions are identical in wording. The jury were told that if they found that defendant Wright (the operator of the "gas electric motorcar" by which the train was drawn) "saw, or in theexercise of ordinary care could have seen, . . . the automobile in a place of imminent danger and peril approaching or on the railroad track . . . in time so that by the exercise of ordinary care and with safety to the train," etc., he "could have thereafter stopped said train before it struck the automobile" but "negligently failed" to do so, etc., the finding should be for plaintiff and against both defendants on the count submitted. (Italics ours.) Purportedly as the converse of these instructions defendants requested and the court gave their Instruction E, as follows: "The jury are instructed that if they believe from the evidence that the defendant Grover A. Wright, motorman on the train mentioned in evidence, did not see the automobile with which said train collided or in the exercise of ordinary care on his part could not have seen said automobile *Page 643 in or going into a place of danger of being struck, in time by the exercise of ordinary care on his part to have stopped said train and avoided striking said automobile, then your verdict will be for both defendants on all three counts of the petition." (Italics ours.) The giving of this instruction on the part of the defendants is the sole assignment of error made by appellant.

It will be noted that defendants' instruction directs a verdict in their favor on a finding alone that defendant Wright "did not see the automobile . . . in or going into a place of danger of being struck in time," etc. It is inconsistent, and in conflict, with plaintiff's instructions requiring a verdict for her if, in connection with the other hypothesized facts, the jury found either: (1) that Wright saw the automobile in time, etc., or (2) that by the exercise of ordinary care he could have seen it, in time, etc. Defendants-respondents say: "The instruction would have been erroneous if there had been any substantial evidence that the engineer could have seen the peril before he actually did see it. We would not contend otherwise." Continuing, respondents' brief, in defending the instruction, states: "But in this case there is no credible evidence that the engineer could have seen the automobile in a position of peril before he actually did see it." Respondents use the term "no credible evidence" and the argument advanced seems to go more to the credibility of the evidence than to its substantiality. If, as is contended by respondents, the evidence, conclusively shows that the motorman actually saw the automobile at the earliest time, at which, by the exercise of ordinary care, under the circumstances, he could have seen it, in a place of imminent peril and danger, there would be no real issue of fact about the matter and the jury could not likely have been misled or confused by the wording of the instruction. This requires an examination of the evidence as viewed in a light most favorable to plaintiff.

At this crossing the public road runs east and west, the railroad track north and south. The automobile in which plaintiff, her husband and their thirteen year old daughter were riding was a coupe; a closed car with one seat. Plaintiff stated that it was an "old second hand" automobile when she and her husband purchased it and that they had owned it four or five years. Plaintiff's husband was driving; plaintiff was seated on the other side of the one seat and their daughter was sitting between them. The collision occurred "about seven o'clock in the evening, May 29, 1933," but "it was yet daylight." They were traveling east, returning from Platte City to their farm home about two miles east of the crossing. The train was traveling south. The train was composed of a "gas-electric motorcar," operated by defendant Wright alone, and seven cars, six freight cars and "a combination baggage car and coach" at the rear. Two of the freight cars were loaded, the other four "were empties." It was one of defendant *Page 644 railway company's regular trains between Altamont, Missouri, and Leavenworth, Kansas. From a point on the road some 125 feet west of the railroad track there is a slight upgrade or incline to the track. Defendants' evidence shows there were clusters of "bushes" at intervals along the west side of the railroad track north of the crossing and some scattered trees and bushes along and near the north side of road west of the track so that the visibility of the road and vehicles upon it was obstructed and obscured at certain points along the railroad track, north of the crossing, and likewise the visibility of trains upon the railroad track was obscured at certain points along the road as it neared the crossing from the west. However defendants' witness, a civil engineer, testified that he made certain tests and measurements as to visibility along the road and railroad track. He stated that from a point in the highway 50 feet west of the crossing there was clear and unobstructed visibility along the railroad track for 297 feet north of the crossing; from 40 feet west of the crossing for 321 feet north; from 25 feet west of the crossing for 363 feet north; and from 15 feet west of the crossing for 472 feet north. Defendants' evidence was also that for about a one-fourth of a mile north of the crossing the view of the crossing, from the front of the train, was unobstructed. East of the railroad track and north of the public road "a half of a box car body" used as a "waiting room" was located, "the north side" of this "waiting room" is twenty-four feet north of the "center" of the road; north of the "waiting room" is a "box car body" referred to by defendants' witnesses as the "freight house," the "north end of it" being eighty-one and one-half feet north of the "center" of the road. The width of the road is not, as the writer recalls, given. The "stock pens" or "stock yards" are north of the crossing. The south side of the "stock pens" is 331 feet and the north side 450 feet, north of the crossing. The "stock chute" or "loading dock" at the "stock pens" is 373 feet north of the crossing.

Plaintiff gave the following account of the collision.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.2d 94, 341 Mo. 640, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-mo-1937.