Kame v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

162 S.W. 240, 254 Mo. 175, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 240 (Kame v. St. Louis & San Francisco 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
Kame v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad, 162 S.W. 240, 254 Mo. 175, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 204 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Robert Kame, a minor, sues by prochein ami in the Jasper Circuit Court counting on negligence. He recovers $10,000 damages, and defendant appeals. Below, in its motion for a new trial, defendant complained of an excessive verdict; but the grave and permanent injuries to the boy, clouding his hopes and disabling him, from the innocent gaiety of youth as well as the sober duties of mature-life, are of such sort that it is to the credit of defendant’s counsel that they assign no error on that score; hence, that element drops out of the case above.

Error is assigned on instructions alone, and herein of two demurrers to the evidence, one at the close of plaintiff’s (and the other of the whole) case.

[184]*184The ease is this: It was alleged in the petition and denied generally in the answer, bnt conclusively shown at the trial, as follows: Robert was a minor nearly fifteen years of age and resided with his father. At midnight in September, 1909, a fire broke out in defendant’s yards at Monett in some bad-order cars hard by its freight depot and cars laden with merchandise. Defendant at once raised a great clamor of distress by engine fire-alarm signals in said yards, calling for salvage aid from the inhabitants of Monett, a considerable town. Plaintiff and his father were awakened from their slumbers by that alarm and, with many others in like fix, hurried in straggling procession to said fire in response to said fire-alarm invitation. Their way there was blocked by a string of dead freight cars standing on a track, say, fifty or seventy-five feet away. This crowd swarmed through, over and on this string of cars in answering said signals for help, as well as calls for help by defendant’s servants engaged in salvage. Plaintiff, bent on said mission, saw people on and passing hurriedly through said string of cars on a like mission,"to which cars no engine was then attached. Plaintiff following the crowd through, at that instant of time, without warning from bell, whistle or otherwise to him, suddenly an engine and cars were backed by defendant against said dead cars, ramming them with such violence that persons were knocked down, and, among them, plaintiff, whose leg was thereby cut off by car wheels. As said, there is no dispute in the foregoing particulars. Also, as we view it, the evidence was all one way in proving the following allegations of the petition, the gist of the matter, viz.:

“Plaintiff further states that he was at the time in the exercise of ordinary care, considering his age and the circumstances surrounding him at the time, and that the immediate cause of plaintiff’s said injuries was the carelessness and negligence of the agents [185]*185and servants of the defendant in managing and controlling said engine and trains of cars as aforesaid and in failing to use ordinary care to protect the plaintiff, and the great crowds of people thus assembled at the invitation and urgent request of the defendant to render all assistance possible to save the property of the defendant, which presence of the plaintiff, together with said concourse of people, and that plaintiff and others were crossing between and over said standing cars, was known to the defendant and the agents and servants of the defendant or could have been known by the exercise of ordinary care by the agents and servants of the defendant in time to have avoided injury to the plaintiff.”

The siding track on which said dead cars stood runs east and west and is called track one. North of said yards lay the main residence district of Monett and plaintiff’s father, who was a section man working for defendant, lived north a short distance from the yards. As said, there was no other way for the people from the north to reach the fire and help except to get over or through the dead cars on track one. The west end of track one (a stub track) was used to store cars for repairs. Some such cars were there, and at the east end of them was a car known and used as a “trash car,” a coal car with a projecting floor as a platform. This car was used to carry away refuse, hence its name. It was on this car platform, projecting twelve inches or so beyond the end gate, that Robert attempted to cross. Here was the brake rod and wheel and, leading up to it from the ground, was a stirrup to mount and a handhold to help mount. It seems there was neither need nor intention in the emergency to move this trash car; but east of it, and apparently not coupled to it, were cars of merchandise on track one, thus making a string of a dozen or more cars, all of which it was planned to move. This track one headed into a “lead track” east a ways, as did sid[186]*186ing tracks two, three, and four, presently mentioned. South of track one, at the point in hand, were some freight sheds running for several hundred feet at about the height of a box car. There were also some freig’ht platforms and a freight depot. Still south of them were tracks two, three and four, on which stood loaded cars to the east and disabled cars to the west. The fire was on the west end of track four among these disabled cars and consumed twenty-five of them. It seems there was urgent need of help to save freight and the very switch engine causing the accident took part in giving the distress whistles to assemble aid. As the fire progressed, there came a -time when the loaded cars on tracks two, three, and four had been pulled out. The last cars pulled out on track two were not detached from the switch engine, but, pxfior to the accident, being pulled east to the lead track, were then backed west on track one to “tie to” the loaded cars stored there. The grade on track one was down to the west. The switch engine doing the work, without any bell sounding or whistle blowing, backed its cut of cars rapidly into these stored on track one, ramming the trash car to the west, some say twenty feet and some eight, some speaking of the jolt as “tremexxdous. ’ ’ At the px’ecise time, north of, south of, on, between and about these cars and on the freight sheds and platforms were several hundred people. The employees and other helpers, all working on the south side of the dead cars on track one, were at that time hustling freight into them. Plaintiff, coming in from the north looked and could see or hear no engine on track one, and it does not appear that the engineer could see him; but there is no testimony indicating that he (the engineer) did xxot know of the presence of the composite unit, to-wit, the crowds his signals had helped assemble, and which, as indicated, were south of, on, and north of the cars. The presence of these people seems to have been a conspicuous fact [187]*187intentionally brought about, and a necessary result of present conditions. Singularly enough, the engineer and fireman did not testify at the trial. So, whether the train was run back by signals from switchmen or brakemen on the ears or ground, does not clearly appear; but there were such employees moving about on the south side of track one with lanterns at different points; and Hogan, the foreman in charge, had ordered the cars pulled out. Said foreman, so in charge of yard operations that night, at the time of the crash stood south of track one and close to this trash car, and, while he did not see the boy, did see people climbing over at that favorable place, and gave no warning to them. This foreman, Hogan, knew the plan was to run the engine in “to pull track one,” but did not expect it so soon. A bit of his testimony is helpful. He puts himself close by at the time of the crash and says:

“A. I saw men all through the yards. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 240, 254 Mo. 175, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kame-v-st-louis-san-francisco-railroad-mo-1914.